FixGov

Americans Believe U.S. International Influence Declining, New Study Shows

A stunning report just released by the Pew Research Center underscores the extent to which development at home and abroad have altered Americans’ attitudes toward international engagement. 

Among the report’s key findings:

The public distinguishes sharply, however, between military and economic engagement with the world, opposing the former while firmly embracing the latter.

The public’s long-range foreign policy goals reveal the intensification of a longstanding inward focus.

There is a wide gulf between the general public and foreign policy on many of these goals.  For example:

And while huge majorities of both the public and elites give top priority to preventing more terrorist attacks, they have divergent views about the progress we’ve made toward that goal.

The public has strong views about one of the most urgent foreign policy challenges the United States faces—Iran’s steady movement toward a nuclear weapons capacity.

China is another important concern. 

As for the world’s most unstable and conflict-torn region, the Middle East, the survey offered the public a choice between two different sets of policy priorities.

There’s not a lot of good news for President Obama in this survey.

China and Iran are tied for the top slot as the country that represents the greatest threat to the United States.  Coming in third was the United States itself.  If we are not yet our own worst enemy, the public seems to be saying, we’re getting there: our continuing inability to govern ourselves effectively is undermining much of what we care about, at home and abroad.

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