Major Poll: Vast Majority in Arab World Oppose Recognition of Zionist Regime
WEST BANK (Dispatches) – The vast majority of Arabs continue to oppose establishing diplomatic ties with the Zionist regime two years after some Arab regimes in the region signed recognition agreements, an annual survey has revealed.
The 2022 Arab Opinion Index, a survey of 33,300 individual respondents in 14 Arab countries, showed only very small percentages sympathetic to their country establishing relations with the occupying regime.
The highest support was in Morocco, which established relations in December 2020 as part of a U.S.-brokered deal, with 20 percent of respondents saying they supported recognition.
The lowest support was in Algeria and Mauritania, with 0 and 1 percent respectively supporting recognition.
The occupying regime also topped the poll as the regional regime most threatening to the respondents’ home country, peaking at 79 percent for Palestinians and 53 percent for Lebanese.
The U.S. was the second-most threatening country for most respondents.
Despite the widespread opposition to Zionist recognition, only 1.5 percent said the occupying regime was the most pressing issue facing their region.
Inflation and the cost of living came top of respondents’ concerns, followed by “negative economic conditions” and unemployment.
A majority of people in all regions said their country was heading in the wrong direction, with the highest percentage, 84, in the Levant (Lebanon, Syria, Jordan and Iraq) agreeing.
Much of the region has been hit by economic crisis as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic and the conflict in Ukraine.
Ukraine was a crucial source of food for much of the Arab world, which is heavily dependent on imports.