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Iraqi Opinion and the Western Media

asa | 16.03.2004 17:05 | Anti-militarism

The national survey of Iraq conducted this February by Oxford Research International hit the news on the 16th of March. The poll of well over 2000 Iraqis was sponsored by the BBC in the UK, ABC in the US, ARD of Germany and the NHK in Japan. A news bulletin on the BBC's Radio 1 claimed that "most Iraqi's think their lives are better than before the war a year ago" according to the poll. In the US, the New York Times also covered the story, but gave it less prominence (1). They write that the poll finds "an upbeat sense among most that their lives were better than before the war" although "other questions about the invasion provoked more negative reactions". The BBC news website headlined with the story (2), musing that the poll will "make good reading for US President George W Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair". This is no doubt true when viewed through the ideological bias of the New York Times and the BBC. A cursory look beyond their 'liberal objectivity' at the actual facts of the survey suggests very different conclusions.

The poll question that the media have most focused on is also the most vague one: "compared to a year ago, I mean before the war in spring 2003 [sic], are things overall in your life [better or worse]?". Although it is true that 35% replied with "somewhat better" to this question, 36% said it was "about the same" or "somewhat worse". Considering that one of the worst dictators the world has seen in modern times was still ruler of Iraq a year ago, these should be astonishing figures to those (such as the BBC) who expect gratitude from Iraqis. It seems the majority of respondents think the occupation is at best only "somewhat better" or "about the same" as the dictatorship of Saddam Hussein. Seen in this light the brave face that the liberal media have tried to put on this starts to melt away. A basic examination of the rest of the poll tells us even more about the imperialist ideology of Western media, considering the figures they have chosen not to discuss.

It should tell us something that Iraqi support for a war that has led to the toppling of such a tyrant is extremely shallow. The respondents were split, with 39% saying the invasion in March 2003 was wrong and 49% right. The reasons for this should be seriously considered by anyone in the West who cares about the conduct of their government. The western media often try to imply that Iraqis are somehow naturally inclined towards dictatorship. The BBC Online article continues: "Dan Plesch, a security expert at Birkbeck college in London said that the poll was good news for the leaders of countries who began the invasion a year ago this week. 'This poll indicates that Iraqis strongly support a unified country with strong leadership' " (3) who will run the country with the same discipline as Saddam Hussein that "presentable young man" with an "engaging smile," who we can "do business" with according to the British Embassy in Baghdad in 1969 (4). The New York Times article takes a similar view: "the largest share of respondents - 47 percent - said what their country needed most in 12 months was a 'single, strong Iraqi leader'. Twenty-eight percent said an Iraqi democracy was most important, and 10 percent said the priority should be 'a government made up mainly of religious leaders' ". This result is for the question "What do you think Iraq needs in 12 months time? Five years time?". The results of the part of the question that takes a five year perspective are reversed: 42% prioritised democracy, while 36% mentioned a strong leader. Note the selection of facts: the second aspect of the same question is unmentioned by the New York Times. The BBC omits the entire question. This only serves the imperialist ideology that views Iraqis as irresponsible Arabs who need to be led by enlightened Western powers. Unsurprisingly, Iraqis overwhelmingly disagree with this point of view. In fact the support for a broad, indigenous, representative democracy seen in the poll is striking when the actual figures are viewed without the ideologically tinted sunglasses of the Western media. In fact, 72% agreed with the statement that Iraq needed a democracy. Again; out of fourteen options of political configureation, the most popular was a "democracy" run by "democrats" (42%) with "an Islamic state and religious politicians" receiving only 11%.

The BBC too implies that Iraqis actually want to be dominated: "[the US government's] favoured son Ahmed Chalabi had no support at all, while Saddam Hussein remains one of the six most popular politicians in the country". True enough in relative terms, though it conveniently omits the simple truth that the respondents had no trust in any politicians: 58% said they trust none in the offered list or gave no answer. Saddam Hussein only scored 3.3% of the trust vote, with former CIA man Ahmed Chalabi accruing a mere 0.2 of a percent worth of trust.

The respondents overwhelming concern for the next 12 months is for security in the country (64%). When presented with a variety of parties from which to choose who should take care of securitry, the vast majority mention an Iraqi government and the people of Iraq, not the occupying powers. Thirty three percent say an Iraqi government while 17% reply "the people" (the two highest figures). Only 8% said the USA should take care of security and only 5% chose the "coalition forces" (even less chose the UN at 1%).

The BBC News Online article tries to present itself as an exploder of received truths claiming that the poll "suggests that the reporting of the daily attacks on the occupying forces in Iraq could be obscuring another picture", one of Iraqis "adjusting to life with an occupying force" (5). Once again, the facts tell a different story. Most respondents (59%) still oppose the presence of the occupying forces, with 15% saying that they should leave the country immediately and 17% accepting armed attacks on "coalition" troops. Thirty percent even said that the immediate departure of coalition forces would be "very effective" as regards the security of the country, although 35% think that they should stay until an Iraqi government is in place.

Perhaps the most telling poll question answer of all lists several organisations and asks how much confidence respondents had in each. A quick look at the responses will tell you all you need to know about why neither the BBC nor the New York Times mention the question at all. An overwhelming 42% of respondents said they had "no confidence at all" in the US and UK occupying forces, with 24% saying "not very much" and only 25% expressing any sort confidence at all in the occupiers.

Whatever arrangements are made for self determination in Iraq, we should not delude ourselves that the current occupiers are trusted by the population, for reasons which by now should be too obvious to point out. Nor should we delude ourselves that the Western media are anything other than deeply indoctrinated in the service of great power.


(1) New York Times, 16 March 2004, "Ambivalence From Iraqis in Poll on War",
 http://www.nytimes.com/2004/03/16/international/middleeast/16SURV.html (accessed 16/3/2004)
(2) BBC News Online, 16 March 2004, "Survey finds hope in occupied Iraq",
 http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/3514504.stm (accessed 16/3/2004, 01:17 GMT version)
(3) Ibid.
(4) Biographic sketch of Saddam Hussein by British Embassy Baghdad, November 15, 1969. Telegram from British Embassy Baghdad to Foreign and Commonwealth Office, "Saddam Hussein," December 20, 1969. Public Record Office, London, FCO 17/871. Available online from the National Security Archive, George Washington University:  http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB107/index.htm
(5) BBC, "Survey finds hope in occupied Iraq", Op. cit.



by Asa Winstanley, 16/3/2004. Copyleft article. You are free to made verbatim copies.

asa

Comments

Hide the following 8 comments

Not following the plan are they ?

16.03.2004 17:57

Not quite what you wanted to hear was it ?

I wondered what sort of liberal left spin was going to be put on this poll when I heard it this morning and now we know. You may not like it, you may not agree with but you are going to have to face the facts that life in Iraq is improving and the Iraqi people and by and large grateful for what is happening.

I spoke at length on Sunday to a recently returned NGO worker fresh from six days in Basra and five in Bahgdad he also spoke of an Iraq very different to what is portrayed in the media (both mainstream and Indymedia). He mentioned the popularity of the Britsh Royal Engineers and their building programme, the fact that power cuts are now rare rather than a daily occurence under Saddam. The availability of fresh water in Baghdad as a result of the US Army pipe laying work has been universaly welcomed. He was surprised to see how much US Army parolling in Baghdad is done by foot patrols with lightly armed soldiers not the Tank patrols we only ever see on the UK news. These foot patrols are done in conjunction with the new Iraqi police units and are welcomed by the vast majority of the population.

New Iraq - a better country free from tyranny and Britain can be proud of the role, we are playing in creating it.

Richard Andrews


Iraqis disagree just like real people!

16.03.2004 18:04

Doesn't fit pro nor anti war spin, but the truth is opinion on the war is as deeply divided in Iraq itself as anywhere else. Iraqis, amazingly, have different opinions.

kurious


reply to Richard Andrews

16.03.2004 18:50

No doubt that Iraqis in the particular part of Iraq that your NGO worker friend was in are greatful for anything done to improve their situation, no matter who it is done by (incidentally, you might want check the figures about electricity supplies in the survey). From the rosy image you are trying to project across the whole country, one would perhaps expect support for the invasion to be much higher, when the truth is that opinion is split. The intention was not any particular spin but a fresh perspective from the monolithic one you see in the western media, which conveiniently ignores uncomfortable truths, as you are. If Iraqis are so pleased about the presense of occupation forces then how come 42% of respondents to this poll said they had "no confidence at all" in them?

When you look at the facts behind the headlines the truth is almost always different.

asa


Proud to be British...

16.03.2004 19:05

Nice one Richard! It's amazing how you can speak with such authority on the situation in Iraq on the basis of having a chat with some NGO worker who spent less time in Iraq than many people spend on some sun washed beach during their summer holidays.

Less than two weeks (in two different cities no less) and you feel able to paint a picture of improving daily life (which doesn't match with the survey results, the mainstream picture or the 'indymedia' picture).

I wonder how much time your NGO friend spent with ordinary people rather than hanging out with the British Royal Engineers. I wonder if his/her hotel happened to be in an area given higher priority for electricity than perhaps areas not full of occupiers and tourist NGO types. I wonder if the reason he saw so many patrols on foot was because he/she never left these secure uptown districts.

> New Iraq - a better country free from tyranny and Britain can be proud of the role, we > are playing in creating it.

Give me a break. Yeah sure we played a role in creating it. We created the country of Iraq as a full back from our days of empire and we helped create saddam and the hardship of the people during the sanctions - now you want us to feel proud? Fuck you!

Ben


Correction

17.03.2004 00:05

Doh. I was just comparing my own work with an Al-Jazera article on the same subject (  http://tinyurl.com/2jrsu ) and found a mistake. I wrote:

"Most respondents (59%) still oppose the presence of the occupying forces,"

The actual figure is 51%. This does not change the essential point of my argument though it is factually wrong so should be corrected. Figures get mixed up in your head when you're dealing with so many of them sometimes.

asa


But WHAT are they comparing with ????

17.03.2004 02:07

I am no supporter of Saddam Hussein, but can we be a little careful here.

The situation in Iraq prior to invasion was not what ANY ruler, even Hussein had chosen or tried to create.

It was what had been created by ten years of crippling sanctions aimed at water and elecricity supplies, medecine etc. Sanctions which by Madeleine Albrights televised admission , had killed 500,000 Iraqi children, let alone adults. She said , remember, that the deaths were "worth it".

This period prior to invasion had also include almost daily BOMBING by the US and Britain, continually for years - but hardly reported at all.

This thing the Iraqis were asked to compare their situation to was a country on its knees, at its last gasp after a ten year stranglehold by its opponents. Who had deliberately destroyed its infrastructure and blocked it rebuilding.

So the question they were asked was really - are things better than when you were being strangled by ten years of sanctions, bombed daily, AS WELL AS suffering under an increasingly paranoid and cornered dictator.

How much of the problems the ordinary Iraqi faced was Saddam ? How much the sanctions etc ?

Perhaps you might like to dig out the UN survey on health and social conditions in the Middle East just before the first Kuwait war, and the subsequent sanctions.

You will be shocked. Iraq was way ahead of all the other Arab countries, and approaching western european standards of nutrition, health care, employment, social support. Read it for yourself.

It is astounding reading, and raises all sorts of questions in your mind. At least at that time Saddam must have had the welfare of his people in his mind.

What on earth persuaded him to throw it all away and plunge them into the pit by invading Kuwait. How come he so totally failed to see how it would end ?

Ask the Iraqis how things now compare with saddams rule BEFORE war and sanctions, and the result would be very different. You see it was not just a matter of Saddams attitude to his people. What destroyed them, and him, was a shocking misjudgement in foreign policy. How did this tragedy happen ?

I hope WE played no part in encouraging this lethal folly. Certainly I think it WAS US that arbitrarily took a piece of Iraq in the first place, called it Kuwait, and chose some disgusting rich family to place on its throne. Didn't I read that we did this to weaken Iraq by denying it access to the sea ? Can some better historian tell us if this is true ?

Guilt, in truth, is all around.

freddie


Soundz about right

18.03.2004 12:08

"58% said they trust none in the offered list or gave no answer."

This sounds similar to when I visited Iraq in 2000. One day I was speaking to someone high up in one of the Universities. He said: "It's always the politicians of the world that make the problems not the people."

I think this was a fairly risky thing for him to say at that time, under Saddaam Hussain, although I knew words were equally aimed at our governments because we were talking about the murderous sanctions policy at the time.

Apart from that any poll iniated by racist organisations like the BBC are bound to be somewhat suspect in my view.

steve


Reply to steve

18.03.2004 23:44

I agree - even on their own narrow terms, the actual figures of the poll do not make comfortable reading for them. If even their own poll show 51% against the occupation, 15% wanting an immediate end to occupation and 34% thinking this would be "very effective" in the improvement of security, then you have to wonder what the REAL figures are!

asa