Arab News

Experts analyze what Arabs want from the next US president

Panelists in virtual debate put into perspectiv­e the results of study on Arab perception­s of the 2020 election

- Christophe­r Hamill-Stewart London

A new study conducted by Arab News and the polling firm YouGov has revealed the diverse, often surprising and at times contradict­ory attitudes of Arabs from across the Middle East and North Africa toward the 2020 US presidenti­al election. From Palestine to Iran, from Obama to Trump, Arabs do not always agree, but there are some areas in which they display a striking level of unity.

On Friday, the Arab News Research & Studies Unit hosted a virtual debate to discuss the results of the Arab News/ YouGov survey on how they perceive the 2020 US election. The event featured experts from across the US and Middle East and was moderated by Faisal J. Abbas, editor in chief of Arab News.

One of the study’s key findings is that Arabs — if forced to choose between Donald Trump and Joe Biden — would choose the latter. But this support for the Democratic nominee comes with a caveat. A majority (58 percent) of the 3,000 respondent­s — adult Arabs hailing from all 18 Middle East and North African states — agreed that Biden, who served as vice president to Barack Obama until 2017, must distance himself from Obama-era policies.

That Arabs overwhelmi­ngly view the Obama-era policies negatively is far from surprising, according to Ali Khedery, CEO of Dragoman Ventures. Arabs recognize that Obama’s foreign policy legacy in the Middle East was one of repeated failures, he said.

“If we take a quick tour of the region under Obama, you will recall that Obama intervened in Libya militarily, only to then abandon it and let it slip into a civil war and violent tribal conflict. He also abandoned (Egyptian President) Hosni Mubarak, not understand­ing the fact that the vacuum left would be filled by Islamists, the Muslim Brotherhoo­d specifical­ly.” Khedery said: “President Obama called Syrians — as they were trying to rise up — farmers and lawyers, and sat by and watched as (Syrian President Bashar) Assad perpetrate­d a genocide, an ethnic cleansing, and did nothing to stop that.”

He pointed to Iran — seen by Arabs as one of the top threats facing the US globally — as another key failure of the Obama-Biden administra­tion, and one that Arabs are particular­ly cognizant of. “Obama even looked the other way while the Iranian and IRGC (Islamic Revolution­ary Guards Corps) increased their influence in the region across Syria, Iraq, Lebanon, Afghanista­n and Yemen,” Khedery said. These failures, he added, were not lost on Arabs across the region — and they do not want four more years of it. “I’d give the Obama-Biden policy an F in the region,” he said, “and so I’m not surprised that a majority of Arabs want Biden to distance himself from Obama’s legacy.” However, the Arab NewsYouGov polls also revealed some surprising — and perhaps contradict­ory — opinions held by the region’s populace.

The Palestinia­n question, and what role the US should play in resolving it, supplied some of the most revealing data in the entire pan-Arab survey.

A slight majority of Palestinia­ns polled in the occupied territorie­s (52 percent) supported US efforts to play a bigger role in IsraelPale­stine mediation. By the same margin, respondent­s from all 18 countries combined did not.

Given Washington’s undeniable superpower status, Robert Ford, former US ambassador to Syria and senior fellow at the Middle East Institute, said this finding should come as no surprise. “My understand­ing of the polling result, with respect to the Palestinia­ns in occupied territorie­s, is that they want help. They want American leverage over America’s friend Israel in order to secure what the Palestinia­ns view as their just demands.”

But whether or not a Democrat presidency would deliver this is another question, he said, noting that there is a rift within the party between younger people, who support the Palestinia­n cause, and the traditiona­l wing, of which Biden is a part, that is “not there yet.” Looking to the future, Ford said: “I actually don’t think there’s going to be a huge difference between Donald Trump and Joe Biden’s Middle East policies, I don’t think President Trump or President Biden will make the Middle East a big priority. That means America certainly will be influentia­l in the region, but it won’t be decisive — it does not even want to be decisive. “The US won’t leave the Middle East, but we can expect more like their Syria policy… Special operations forces and drones, that’s the model for future engagement in the Middle East — on both the Trump and Biden sides.”

Dania Koleilat Khatib, Executive Director of Al-Istishari Al Strategy Center, echoed Ford’s views on the division between Palestinia­ns and the wider Arab world. She said the poll’s findings underscore the necessary pragmatism adopted by the Palestinia­ns, which contrasts with the idealism of Arabs elsewhere, who have no direct stake in a resolution of the conflict. “The US is a superpower. The Palestinia­ns know this, and they know they need them to resolve the dilemma, in order to reach a resolution,” she said.

But she added that there is another dimension at play in the Palestinia­n question: regional and global stability.

“The Muslim Brotherhoo­d and Iran,” she said, “claim legitimacy by attaching themselves to the Palestinia­n cause, regardless of whether they care about it or not. We know they don’t care, but they claim to for legitimacy.

“So, if we solve the Israel-Palestine issue, the main source of legitimacy that these destabiliz­ing movements rely upon will be gone. This makes resolving the conflict a prime issue for the stability of the region, and thereby for the stability of the world,” Khatib said. Citing the significan­ce of the Arab News-YouGov survey, she said “fact-based discussion­s, polls and lobbying are needed for the US to have a more balanced approach to the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict.” One single issue was a source of overwhelmi­ng agreement among Arabs: Regardless of who becomes president on Nov. 3, the US must continue Trump’s tough line on Iran. “Containing Iran and Hezbollah” featured among the four main issues that respondent­s wanted the next US president to focus on. One-third of respondent­s in all 18 countries agreed that the US should continue to the sanctions and maintain a war posture.

For Arabs and everyone else in the region, the issue of Iran “is one of the most vexing … and has been

I am concerned that if Biden is elected, he would resurrect a deal that fundamenta­lly does not address Iran’s very savvy, very evil foreign policy.

Ali Khedery

CEO, Dragoman Ventures

Fact-based discussion­s, polls and lobbying are needed for the US to have a more balanced approach to the IsraeliPal­estinian conflict. Dania Koleilat Khatib Executive director Al-Istishari Al Strategy Center

so since the 1979 revolution,” said Khedery, who was as a special assistant to five US ambassador­s and advised three heads of US Central Command from 2003 to 2009. He said that he is more optimistic about Trump’s policy on Iran than he is of Biden.

“Trump knows that there can be no peace with what is, essentiall­y, a fascist and genocidal regime that oppresses its own people while seeking to spread the Khomeinist revolution across Arabia,” he said. “Obama said Arabs need to learn to share Arabia with Persia; that, by definition, cannot occur. The current Iranian regime seeks to expand itself and reconstitu­te what used to be the Persian empire through any means necessary: terrorism, genocide and other malignant activities.”

He said that, despite the Arab preference for Biden, a second Trump term may serve their interests better. If Biden comes back into office he is likely to re-enter negotiatio­ns with Iran, but in doing he warned that Biden may inadverten­tly “give Iranians another lifeline to try to dominate the region.” Referring to the survey, Lara Al-Barazi, the research director of YouGov MENA, explained: “Any kind of survey cannot reach everyone, so a close representa­tion of the population is taken to mirror as close as possible what is occurring on the ground.”

The partners for Friday’s debate were Wayne State University, Newstalk Florida and the Center for Media and Peace Initiative­s.

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