Apa punca dan asbabnya 9 buah negara ni benci teramat sangat kepada Amerika boleh ikuti sehingga habis.
Tulisan asal tersiar dalam sebuah portal luar negara.Jika tak bersebab,tak kan mereka benci.
Jangan benci dibibir saja,dihati lain pulak,nanti susah pulak nak faham siapa sebelah siapa bila bergaduh.
International approval of U.S. leadership improved last year, rising from of 41% in 2012 to 46% in 2013. This ended a downward trend in U.S. approval ratings, which had consistently declined since 2009.
Tulisan asal tersiar dalam sebuah portal luar negara.Jika tak bersebab,tak kan mereka benci.
Jangan benci dibibir saja,dihati lain pulak,nanti susah pulak nak faham siapa sebelah siapa bila bergaduh.
International approval of U.S. leadership improved last year, rising from of 41% in 2012 to 46% in 2013. This ended a downward trend in U.S. approval ratings, which had consistently declined since 2009.
While people around the world
tended to have positive opinions of U.S. leadership, residents of some
countries had a negative impression of the United States. In five nations, more
than two-thirds of those surveyed disapproved of the current administration,
according to the latest U.S.-Global Leadership Project, a partnership between
Meridian International Center and Gallup.
Last year represented a major improvement for U.S. leadership,
Ambassador Stuart Holliday, president and CEO of Meridian International Center,
told 24/7 Wall St.
There were several reasons for this, including a wind-down of America’s role in
armed conflicts abroad. As a result, “The view that we are the major shapers of
the world and our image as being the world’s policeman are fading,” Holliday
said. An ongoing return to normalcy in the global economy, in which the United
States plays an outsized role, has also helped, he added.
The United States has long-running
political tensions with many nations that disapprove of the U.S. leadership.
Among these is Iran, which has not had diplomatic relations with the U.S. since
1980, and whose nuclear ambitions and human rights violations are points of
contention for the United States. In Pakistan, the U.S. has launched attacks
against terrorists and insurgents inside the country. Most notable was the 2011
raid and killing of Osama bin Laden, which led to heightened tensions between
the two nations.
Another potential reason for high
disapproval of U.S. leadership is the relationship with Israel. The U.S. State
Department notes America was the first country to recognize Israel in 1948, and
that “Israel has become, and remains, America’s most reliable partner in the
Middle East.” Countries with long-running disputes with Israel — such as
Lebanon and the Palestinian territories — also disapprove of U.S. leadership.
Ambassador Holliday noted the
situation in the Middle East is also influenced by a lack of clarity over U.S.
policy goals and, to some extent, perceptions of the U.S. government’s support
of Israel. This is driven in large part by a 24/7 news cycle that chronicles
every twist and turn of the peace process, Holliday added
Several of the countries that dislike American leadership the most have also
undergone recent political upheavals. Mass demonstrations in Tunisia, for
example, set the tone in 2011 for what came to be known as the Arab Spring.
There has also been considerable political upheaval in Egypt following the
forced resignation and trial of President Hosni Mubarak in 2011. Mubarak was
long considered a stable ally of the United States.
However, while it may be easy to
conclude disapproval of U.S. leadership is largely limited to the Middle East
and North Africa, this is not always the case. Most notably, in Slovenia, 57%
of residents disapproved of U.S. leadership — despite the fact that the country
is both a major ally in NATO and a member of the European Union.
But what Slovenia has in common
with a number of other countries that disapprove of American leadership is the
citizens’ negative opinion of their country’s government. In 2012, less than
one-quarter of Slovenians had confidence in their own government, and a similar
number lacked faith in their judicial system, lower than in the vast majority
of the countries in the same region. Similarly, less than one-third of Pakistan
and Iraq residents had confidence in their governments.
America’s strong economy may also
provoke resentment among residents of these countries. According to Jon
Clifton, Managing Director of the Gallup World Poll, residents of many of these
countries experience hardship and do not enjoy the kind of broad economic
benefits seen in more developed countries. As a result, residents equate “U.S.
leadership and the leadership of whatever the current economic order represents
for them.”
GDP per capita in four of the nine
countries that hate America the most was less than $10,000 last year. By
contrast, U.S. gross domestic product totaled more than $50,000 per capita in
2013.
Limited access to basic needs may
also add to the misery of the citizens in many countries that disapprove of the
United States the most. Just 31% of Iraqis were satisfied with the quality of
their drinking water in 2012, less than any of the 16 other peer countries in
the Middle East and North Africa. In Slovenia, only 24% of residents said they
were satisfied with the availability of good, affordable housing. This was less
than in all but one other OECD nation.
To determine the countries that hate America most, 24/7 Wall St. relied on data from The U.S.-Global
Leadership Project, a partnership between Gallup and the Meridian International
Center. Gallup also provided data from a number of other indices it produced
through polling in 2012. Additional economic information and estimates,
including unemployment data, came from the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF)
2013 World Economic Outlook. IMF figures on GDP per capita are given at
purchasing-power-parity in order to show real differences in wealth. Data on
life expectancy was provided by The World Bank.
These are the countries that hate America most, according to 24/7 Wall
St.:
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