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Al-Ahed Telegram

Most Americans Think US Should Stop Building Democracy in Islamic World

Most Americans Think US Should Stop Building Democracy in Islamic World
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Local Editor

A majority of Americans soured on the US government's attempts to promote democracy in Muslim-majority countries, a Rasumssen Reports poll revealed on Monday.

Most Americans Think US Should Stop Building Democracy in Islamic World

In contrast, nearly one third of Americans, or 28 percent, support democracy building in such countries, the poll showed.

"Fifty-eight percent [58 percent] say the United States should leave things alone," Rassmussen Reports said of the efforts by the US government to promote democracy in Islamic countries.

Democracy-building initiatives, combined with the policy of "regime change" in nations with governments that the United States opposes, has been a centerpiece of US foreign policy dating back at least to the administration of President Bill Clinton.

Examples include the US invasion of Iraq and subsequent efforts to organize a Western-style democracy, which many foreign policy experts blame for the rise of the Daesh [the Arabic acronym for the Takfiri "ISIS" group], among other terror groups. Despite a similar US effort in Afghanistan, the Taliban now controls more territory than when the United States invaded the country in 2002.

US support for the ouster of Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak and Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, and Washington's unequivocal support for the so-called "Arab spring," is also blamed by many analysts for fomenting the rise of the Daesh and numerous other extremist terrorist organizations.

Today, the Obama administration's focus on ousting Syrian President Bashar Assad is often criticized for hampering its efforts to destroy Daesh, since Syrian forces backed by Russian air strikes had arguably proved more effective that a hodgepodge of US-backed allegedly "moderate" groups.

US attempts at democracy promotion and regime change had extended to other parts of the world, most notably to the Balkans, where the United States at present is engaged in attempts to change the legitimate government of Macedonia by supporting Albanian extremists as well as opposition parties and non-governmental groups, according to Macedonian media reports.

Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team

 

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