Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
International

Arabic Twitterati cast US as an enemy: Study

Darpan News Desk IANS, 25 Sep, 2014 10:21 AM
    Researchers used Twitter as an instrument to measure public sentiment, in ways an opinion poll cannot, and revealed that millions of Arabic language tweets confirm high levels of anti-Americanism in the Middle East.
     
    "No matter which side of the domestic dispute an individual was on, he or she was likely to be opposed to the United States," said the study that provides new and interesting information about attitudes in the Middle East towards particular US actions.
     
    "Rather than an enemy of an enemy being a friend, the US is consistently cast as an enemy," researchers wrote.
     
    "The findings also highlight policy challenges - and opportunities - for the US in the Middle East," said Amaney Jamal, a professor of politics at Princeton University who conducted the research with colleagues at Princeton and Harvard University in the US.
     
    The researchers used a tool created by Boston-based social media analytics firm Crimson Hexagon to examine Arabic reaction on Twitter to major events in 2012 and 2013.
     
    These events included Hurricane Sandy striking the United States, the possible US intervention in the Syrian civil war, the Boston Marathon bombing and the removal of Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi.
     
    The analytics tool identified and categorised more than 2.2 million Arabic tweets around the time of the overthrow of Morsi in 2013 that mentioned the United States.
     
    Just three percent of the tweets were categorised as pro-American. About 23 percent were categorised as neutral, but the rest were critical of the United States.
     
    Similarly, in analysing tweets regarding the Syrian civil war, "Ninety seven percent of tweeters who expressed political views were antagonistic toward the United States, despite the fact that the United States opposed the Assad regime, which was also opposed by many Arab tweeters," researchers said.
     
    In contrast, an examination of tweets in reaction to Hurricane Sandy striking the U.S. found that nearly 30 percent of Arabic tweets expressed concern about the US people.
     
    "It is not true that these people just hate the United States," co-researcher Robert Keohane, a professor of public and international affairs at Princeton explained.
     
    "But there is a very deep dislike of American intervention and an unwillingness to give the US credit even when it is on their side," Keohane noted.
     
    "I think it is going to be a very long road for the US, and the US should not expect to get a huge amount of public support from the Arab world," he pointed out.
     
    The study was presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association in August.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Kerry refuses to cooperate with Iran to fight IS

    Kerry refuses to cooperate with Iran to fight IS
    Speaking at the US ambassador's residence in Paris after an international meeting on security and peace in Iraq, Kerry said: " We are not coordinating with Iran....

    Kerry refuses to cooperate with Iran to fight IS

    Modi regime offers opportunity to reenergise US-India ties: US expert

    Modi regime offers opportunity to reenergise US-India ties: US expert
    The Bharatiya Janata Party's (BJP) assumption of power offers an opportunity to reinvigorate US-India ties and work together for mutual benefit...

    Modi regime offers opportunity to reenergise US-India ties: US expert

    Pakistani politicians barred from flight for turning up late

    Pakistani politicians barred from flight for turning up late
    Two Pakistani politicians were barred from a flight for holding it up for over one-and-a-half hours, media reported Tuesday....

    Pakistani politicians barred from flight for turning up late

    US says it wants India to have good relations with China too

    Ahead of Chinese President Xi Jinping's visit to India, the US says it has a very broad relationship with India and wants New Delhi to have...

    US says it wants India to have good relations with China too

    US includes India among 22 major illicit drug producers

    US includes India among 22 major illicit drug producers
    President Barack Obama has identified India among 22 major illicit drug-producing or drug-transit countries that "significantly affect the...

    US includes India among 22 major illicit drug producers

    $1bn needed to fight Ebola virus: UN

    $1bn needed to fight Ebola virus: UN
    Over one billion dollars are needed to fight the West Africa Ebola outbreak - a tenfold increase in the past month, the UN's Ebola coordinator has said....

    $1bn needed to fight Ebola virus: UN