While Syria and Iraq have
been headline news in the mainstream and not-so-mainstream media for months, we
rarely get any information about how Syrians and Iraqis feel about the current
conditions in their civil war-torn nations. Fortunately, ORB
International has surveyed both Syrians and Iraqis and has
provided us with a sense of how both groups feel about the current situation in
their nations. ORB has been tracking public opinion in Iraq since 2004
and in Syria since 2013 with more than 2 million face-to-face meetings
throughout Iraq over the 11 year period. Let's look at the numbers
starting with Iraq and closing with Syria. Please note that I have not included
"refused to answer or don't read responses" so the totals presented
will not add up to 100 percent.
Iraq:
In Iraq, a total of 1234
respondents were interviewed on key issues as follows:
1.) Do you feel that Iraq
is heading in the right or wrong direction?
- 25 percent said that
Iraq was heading in the right direction
- 66 percent said that
Iraq was heading in the wrong direction
2.) Do you support or
oppose the airstrikes by coalition forces which are happening in Iraq
currently and how strongly do you support or oppose these strikes?
- 13 percent strongly
supported the airstrikes
- 31 percent somewhat
supported the airstrikes
- 31 percent somewhat
opposed the airstrikes
- 25 percent opposed the
airstrikes
3.) Do you think that the
influence of the Iraqi army is positive or negative on the matters in Iraq?
- 37 percent said that
the influence was positive
- 32 percent said that
the influence was somewhat positive
- 22 percent said that
the influence was somewhat negative
- 9 percent said that the
influence was negative
4.) Do you think that the
influence of the Iraqi Parliament is positive or negative on the matters in
Iraq?
- 3 percent said that the
influence was positive
- 15 percent said that
the influence was somewhat positive
- 48 percent said that
the influence was somewhat negative
- 33 percent said that
the influence was negative
5.) Do you think that the
influence of ISIL is positive or negative on the matters in Iraq?
- 1 percent said that the
influence was positive
- 4 percent said that the
influence was somewhat positive
- 10 percent said that
the influence was somewhat negative
- 84 percent said that
the influence was negative
6.) Do you think that the
influence of Iran is positive or negative on the matters in Iraq?
- 17 percent said that
the influence was positive
- 25 percent said that
the influence was somewhat positive
- 14 percent said that
the influence was somewhat negative
- 40 percent said that
the influence was negative
7.) Do you think that the
influence of the coalition against ISIL is positive or negative on the matters
in Iraq?
- 7 percent said that the
influence was positive
- 24 percent said that
the influence was somewhat positive
- 35 percent said that
the influence was somewhat negative
- 27 percent said that
the influence was negative
8.) According to your
view, is a military or political solution the best solution for Iraq's current
crisis?
- 49 percent said that a
military solution was the best solution
- 51 percent said that a
political solution was the best solution
9.) Is splitting the
nation into autonomous regions that can govern themselves the best solution to
the crisis in Iraq?
- 26 percent supported
splitting Iraq into autonomous regions
- 74 percent opposed
splitting Iraq into autonomous regions
10.) Do you prefer what
your life was like before ISIL took over parts of Mosul and other Iraqi
governments or what your life is like now?
- 88 percent preferred
their life prior to ISIL's takeover
- 12 percent preferred
their life after ISIL's takeover
11.) There are many
reasons explaining the presence of ISIL in Iraq. Do you agree or disagree
that ISIL is an American-made group?
- 56 percent agreed
- 29 percent somewhat
agreed
- 7 percent somewhat
disagreed
- 3 percent disagreed
This question is of
particular importance. Of the potential responses to the question about
who created ISIL, the largest proportion agreed that ISIL was American-made
followed by the wrong policies of the al-Maliki government and the sectarian
congestion that has occurred in both Syria and Iraq.
Syria:
In Syria, a total of 1365
respondents were interviewed on key issues as follows:
1.) Do you feel that
Syria is heading in the right or wrong direction?
- 37 percent said that
Syria was heading in the right direction
- 57 percent said that
Syria was heading in the wrong direction
2.) Do you support or
opposed the airstrikes by coalition forces which are happening in Syria
currently and how strongly do you support or oppose these strikes?
- 26 percent strongly
supported the airstrikes
- 22 percent somewhat
supported the airstrikes
- 26 percent somewhat
opposed the airstrikes
- 23 percent opposed the
airstrikes
3.) Do you think that the
influence of Bashar al-Assad is positive or negative in the matters in Syria?
- 26 percent said that
the influence was positive
- 21 percent said that
the influence was somewhat positive
- 19 percent said that
the influence was somewhat negative
- 30 percent said that
the influence was negative
4.) Do you think that the
influence of ISIL is positive or negative in the matters in Syria?
- 7 percent said that the
influence was positive
- 14 percent said that
the influence was somewhat positive
- 28 percent said that
the influence was somewhat negative
- 48 percent said that
the influence was negative
5.) Do you think that the
influence of the Nusra Front (al-Qaeda's affiliate in Syria) is positive or
negative in the matters in Syria?
- 16 percent said that
the influence was positive
- 19 percent said that
the influence was somewhat positive
- 22 percent said that
the influence was somewhat negative
- 41 percent said that
the influence was negative
6.) Do you think that the
influence of the Free Syrian Army is positive or negative in the matters in
Syria?
- 18 percent said that
the influence was positive
- 18 percent said that
the influence was somewhat positive
- 20 percent said that
the influence was somewhat negative
- 42 percent said that
the influence was negative
7.) According to your
view, is a military or political solution the best solution for Iraq's current
crisis?
- 51 percent said that a
military solution was the best solution
- 37 percent said that a
political solution was the best solution
8.) Do you support or
oppose the division of Syria?
- 27 percent support the
division
- 70 percent oppose the
division
9.) Do you prefer what
your life was like before the crisis or what your life is like now?
- 40 percent preferred
their life prior to the crisis
- 21 percent preferred
their life after the crisis
10.) There are many
reasons explaining the presence of ISIL in Syria. Do you agree or
disagree that ISIL is an American-made group?
- 38 percent agreed
- 44 percent somewhat
agreed
- 11 percent somewhat
disagreed
- 6 percent disagreed
Again, this question is
of particular importance. Of the potential responses to the question
about who created ISIL, the largest proportion agreed that ISIL was
American-made followed by the widespread sectarian politics in Arab countries
and Turkey.
As we can see, the
situation in both Iraq and Syria is deteriorating with a majority in both
nations stating that their nations are heading in the wrong direction.
Most Iraqis and Syrians preferred their lives before the crisis, however,
it is interesting to see that 21 percent of Syrians prefer their lives after
the crisis. As well, 21 percent of Syrian respondents stated that the
influence of ISIL in Syria was positive.
There are three interesting points that I gleaned from this data:
1.) The high proportion of both Iraqis and Syrians that felt that
ISIL was a creation of the Americans; in the case of Iraqis, 85 percent agreed
that ISIL was an American creation and in the case of Syrians, 81 percent
agreed that ISIL was an American creation. This will make it very
difficult for the United States to achieve any degree of trust with either Iraqis
or Syrians.
2.) Nearly half (47 percent) of Syrians still feel that Bashar al-Assad has a positive influence on Syria. This will add to the complexity of unseating the man that the current administration in Washington has vilified for years.
3.) America's current puppet government in Iraq has the support of only 18 percent of Iraqis.
As we can see from these results, the situation in both Iraq and Syria is extremely complicated. Both Iraq and Syria are divided internally, however, the citizens of both nations have little desire to see their nations divided into smaller fiefdoms, a solution that has already being bantered about as you can read here.
It is indeed a complicated mess. About two years I wrote a piece advocating the only and most likely solution for Syria would be to break the country into two parts. If Assad remains in power those who have suffered and been displaced will never forgive him and live under his rule. A change in ruling factions is also not a viable solution in that it would probably unleash a wave of killings, and reprisals. Remember the Shiite-related Alawites rightly fear an Al Qaeda led triumph as the worst possible outcome, they would make the mass killing of Alawites their first priority. The secular leaders of the Syrian rebels, clustered in the exile group known as the Syrian National Council, also must worry about the extremist threat they themselves would face if the Assad government fell. It all appeared a massively ugly mess and little has changed. More on why I finally came to this solution and why it still remains the best option in the article below.
ReplyDeletehttp://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2013/09/syria-must-be-split-in-two.html
Just a dig a little you find that in fact the US has provided ISIS arms and equipment maybe not on purpose. But if you leave a sandwich on the floor can you blame the dog for eating it? The US gave pretty much any group fighting Al Assad early on weapons, money and Toyota trucks including ISIS. Just look it up yourself. Also Seymour Hersh is pointing a light on some of this also. Look him up.
ReplyDeleteIt's difficult to know what the surveyor means by manmade in this question: "Do you agree or disagree that ISIL is an American-made group?" Manmade in a conspiratorial way? Manmade as in what evolved as the product of a prior military strategy?
ReplyDelete