That mentality sheds some light on why al Qaeda, dispersed and under U.S. assault, can continue to draw recruits. "Our research doen show that anti-American feelings do make it easier for al Qaeda to operate and to grow in the Muslim world," says Kull, a leading analytical pollster of international trends.
The attitudes studied explain, in part, why an average of 74 percent of those surveyed want the United States to "remove its bases nd military forces from all Islamic countries"; 92 percent of people interviewed in Egypt thought so the highest such total. About half of those surveyed favor attacks on U.S. soldiers in Iraq, the Persian Gulf, and Afghanistan. Again, Egyptians were most likely to support hitting U.S. forces in the region.
But majorities most of them strong ones oppose attacks on American of other civilians.
Still, the survey found considerable doubt among Muslim publics that al Qaeda was responsible for the 9/11 attacks in America.
That mentality sheds some light on why al Qaeda, dispersed and under U.S. assault, can continue to draw recruits. "Our research doen show that anti-American feelings do make it easier for al Qaeda to operate and to grow in the Muslim world," says Kull, a leading analytical pollster of international trends.
The attitudes studied explain, in part, why an average of 74 percent of those surveyed want the United States to "remove its bases nd military forces from all Islamic countries"; 92 percent of people interviewed in Egypt thought so the highest such total. About half of those surveyed favor attacks on U.S. soldiers in Iraq, the Persian Gulf, and Afghanistan. Again, Egyptians were most likely to support hitting U.S. forces in the region.
But majorities most of them strong ones oppose attacks on American of other civilians.
Still, the survey found considerable doubt among Muslim publics that al Qaeda was responsible for the 9/11 attacks in America.
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