Time Of The Tough Guys
A global leadership poll finds a crisis of confidence—and real support for strongmen.
As President George W. Bush limps through his lame-duck year, it won't surprise you to read that he's hugely unpopular. Now a new poll taken in 20 countries by WorldPublicOpinion.org and released exclusively to NEWSWEEK confirms the world's low opinion of the president—but adds a twist. No other major world leader enjoys significantly greater trust abroad. In a sense, they're all Bushes now.
Just as striking are the leaders who do best, albeit by a slim margin: Vladimir Putin, Gordon Brown and Hu Jintao. That's one democrat and two dictators. In other words, the bosses of what are often cast as the biggest, baddest authoritarian states—China and Russia—are among the planet's most trusted officials. That should seriously alarm the leaders of the West, and particularly President Bush and Condoleezza Rice, his secretary of State, who have made the export of democracy a centerpiece of U.S. foreign policy.
While it might be exaggerating to call this the year of the autocrats, the fact is that the poll found most of the world now seems to have more confidence in undemocratic than democratic leaders. The war of ideas may not be over, and a close reading of the poll suggests there's still room to turn things around. But at this point, the West clearly isn't winning the battle for influence—and freedom, to borrow Bush's phrase, is not reigning.
The WorldPublicOpinion.org survey, which is managed by the University of Maryland's Program on International Policy Attitudes (PIPA), asked 19,751 people in 20 countries how much confidence they have in each of seven key leaders "to do the right thing regarding world affairs." On average, only 23 percent of foreign respondents express "a lot of " or "some" confidence in Bush, and only Iran's Mahmoud Ahmadinejad does worse (at 22). Ban Ki-moon—the U.N. secretary-general—gets 35 percent (but because he's not a national leader, he belongs in a different category). Then comes Putin at 32 percent, Brown at 30, Hu Jintao at 28 and France's Nicolas Sarkozy at 26. The results aren't much different if you tally them country by country: in only two states (Nigeria and India) do a majority of people express at least some confidence in Bush. Putin and Hu each come out ahead in just five nations, and Brown in just six. (Ban gets nine.) Moreover, virtually every leader's standing slipped slightly in the past year (though WorldPublicOpinion.org didn't conduct the same poll in 2007, Pew's Global Attitudes Project, which asked the same question, can be used for comparison).
What explains this universal vote of no confidence? The short answer is a serious bout of global pessimism: most people polled seem very unhappy about the state of the world. Ivo Daalder, a former staffer on the National Security Council who's now at the Brookings Institution, argues that the numbers, as much as they measure confidence in individual officials, are also a more general "reflection of how people feel about their own conditions." Richard Holbrooke, U.N. ambassador under President Bill Clinton, says the survey shows "people's dissatisfaction with the way the world leadership is addressing the current crop of problems."
The general malaise becomes especially clear if you look at our national "crankiness index"—which shows how each country responded to all the leaders as a group. All but two of the nations were relentlessly critical. Americans were extremely negative, giving the seven leaders in the survey an average confidence rating of just 29 percent, and their own leader 42 percent. That's probably a reflection of the slumping economy and the burden at home of two wars, plus an ongoing terrorist threat and high anti-Americanism abroad. Overall, the crankiest responses came from the Arabs—the Palestinians, Jordanians and Egyptians—all of whom live in moribund economies with corrupt, ineffective governments that tend to blame their condition on outsiders.
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Member Comments
Posted By: Glenno @ 09/22/2008 7:17:29 PM
Comment: I need a dictionairy to read American news:
Dictator = leaders that challange the American empire by not doing what they are told
International community = NATO
The West = countries that support american dominance
Democracy = countries that support US foreign policy
Pre-emptive wars = expanding the empire
I really love this sentence: "Moscow has blocked U.S. diplomatic efforts on Kosovo, Mideast peace, arms control, missile defense and Iran"
Diploatic effort on Kosovo= bomb Seriba for 78 days and illegally proclaim independence for Kosovo
Mideast peace =Arm Israel with nukes and give them green light to attack anyone, no punishment (biased?)
Missile defence = getting first strike capabilities and bringing war to space
Iran = Russia having a dialog with Iran (as opposed to US) and avoiding another Iraq
Yes, Russia is truly the enemy of freedom, democracy and peace. God bless America
Posted By: Trooper101st @ 07/03/2008 8:56:49 AM
Comment: Pilipino, he STOLE that 1st election. Then 9/11 happens, and the Repukes count on fear to get Georgie elected again. Well, we have Florida and Ohio to thank for the 2nd term. I wonder how many jobs were lost in Ohio in the last 4 years? Wat did people expect when they elected an oil man, and his VP, with his connections to many of the contractors in Iraq? Theres a long list, Iraq is about oil, and since those oil companies got thier drilling rights, Dubya can break out the "MISSION ACCOMPLISHED" banner. Bunch of liars. That list is long too. LIARS!!!!!
Posted By: Trooper101st @ 07/03/2008 8:45:39 AM
Comment: Putin is no friend to the US. Bush must feel like a real jerk after saying, "I looked into his eyes and I could see he was my friend". Hardy har har!!!! Yeah, well ur buddy Vladimir is supplying our NEXT victim, Iran with state of the art air-defense systems to shoot down US pilots. Face it, negotiation is going NOWHERE. If the US/Israeli's, don't strike thier nuclear sites soon, they will have a bomb, they will most likely try and mount a warhead on a missle. Wonder where they got that technology? Yes, our "friends" the Pakistanis. AQ Khan really upset the apple cart, and Iran minced no words when they spoke of thier intentions. It will take more than the IAF to wreck thier nuclear program, it will take a massive air-strike, involving more nations and warplanes. Who cares wat Putin says the day after? He helped them along the way. The Russians are re-arming. Germany is a no-show in A-stan, and I'll be damned if I protect them again. COWARDS. THANX GERMANY, FOR NOTHING.