Al Qaeda? North Korea? Who Americans see as greatest security threat.
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| Washington
Nearly two-thirds of Americans consider Al Qaeda and its affiliates to pose the most serious security threat the US faces, well above that from a saber-rattling North Korea or a fiery-tongued Iran.
When asked in a recent poll to rate a list of countries or entities on a 1-to-10 scale based on the threat they pose to the United States, 61 percent of Americans placed Osama bin Laden鈥檚 Al Qaeda terrorist organization in the 9-10 or 鈥渧ery high鈥 threat level.
North Korea came in second, earning a 鈥渧ery high鈥 threat rating from 42 percent of those polled, while Iran was third at 37 percent. Afghanistan earned the 鈥渧ery high鈥 threat rating from 31 percent of Americans, Pakistan from 22 percent, and America鈥檚 next-door neighbor Mexico from 9 percent. Israel and Venezuela were tied at the bottom, with each considered a 鈥渧ery high鈥 threat by 5 percent of Americans.
鈥淲hat Al Qaeda coming out on top tells us is that the American people are more realistic than sometimes we might think,鈥 says Robert Pape, a University of Chicago associate professor and leading expert on suicide terrorism. 鈥淭o put Al Qaeda above Iran is quite remarkable, it shows [Americans] are realistically weighting and differentiating鈥 threats amid all the 鈥渕edia noise鈥 they hear on the topic, Dr. Pape says.
The findings on Americans鈥 assessment of major threats are from a 海角大神 Science Monitor/TIPP poll conducted between Nov. 29 and Dec. 4. The poll was conducted shortly after North Korea shelled a small South Korean island off its coast, drawing the US into the Korean Peninsula鈥檚 heightened tensions. That context could help explain North Korea鈥檚 significant 鈥渉igh threat鈥 rating.
But the poll鈥檚 findings also suggest that Americans differentiate between threatening rhetoric 鈥 of the variety often used by Iran鈥檚 President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad 鈥 and the very real security threats posed by an entity with a track record of striking or trying to strike the US. Not only do American remember the 9/11 terrorist attacks, of course, but the poll was taken just weeks after an attack using package bombs on airplanes and hatched by Al Qaeda on the Arabian Peninsula was foiled at the last minute.
What the poll鈥檚 results suggest, Pape says, is that Americans do not lump together all 鈥淢uslims鈥 or Muslim countries as a significant threat, but do consider very dangerous those terrorists 鈥 in this case radical Muslims 鈥 who have attacked the US and continue to demonstrate a desire to inflict more harm.
Pape says there is something of a silver lining in Al Qaeda鈥檚 placement at the top of the security threats the US faces, because it is not a 鈥渉opeless鈥 threat but one that a change in US policy of the last 20 years can reduce.
Islamist terrorists, and suicide terrorists of all stripes, have been very clear that the motivation for their attacks is foreign occupation of their lands, Pape says. He says the seeds of Al Qaeda鈥檚 鈥渨ar鈥 on the US can be found in American 鈥渂oots on the ground鈥 in the Arabian Peninsula since the 1990鈥檚.
What that means, he says, is that the US has the key to reducing what Americans appear to consider the number-one threat the US faces, which is terrorist attacks. And that key is pulling back on what is perceived as American 鈥渙ccupation鈥 of Muslim lands.
Pape concedes that some Americans might view that position as appeasement, but he disagrees, taking the view that America has other means to project power and defend its interests without antagonizing local populations.
鈥淎s long as we are overseas in the places we are and in the numbers we are,鈥 Pape says, 鈥渢hese attacks are going to be more numerous than we鈥檇 like.鈥