Gallup poll; The doubts of Muslim nations about America’s alleged motives in the region.
A Gallup poll, 20 years after the US invasion of Iraq, showed that Iraqis and the nations of 12 other predominantly Muslim countries are skeptical about Washington’s alleged goals, including the establishment of democracy and the people’s right to self-determination.
The results of the Gallup poll, which was conducted twenty years after the American invasion of Iraq, showed that Iraqis and the nations of 12 other countries with mostly Muslim populations do not consider the United States serious in encouraging the establishment of democracy in their region and believe that Washington does not allow the people to determine their own destiny. .
Slightly more than one in four Iraqis polled in 2022 agreed that the US is serious about encouraging the establishment of democratic systems in their region. In Afghanistan, which was attacked and occupied by America two years before Iraq, only 14% believed in the seriousness of America in this matter.
According to the Gloop polling institute, the lowest percentage of adults who shared this opinion were in the Palestinian territories and the countries of Tunisia and Iran, where less than one in ten believed that the United States was serious about encouraging the establishment of democracy.
Adults in 13 countries were also asked whether they believed the United States would allow people in the region to shape their own political futures, and a majority were skeptical.
It was also less likely that the people questioned throughout these countries would confirm America’s seriousness in improving the economic situation of the people. A majority of Gallup poll participants in 11 countries disapproved.