Slide-share of David Pollock's Polling on Egyptian Public Opinion from Fikra Forum
Muslim Brotherhood Still Has Some Support; Islamic Reform Lags Behind
A clear majority of Egyptians (64 percent) voice an unfavorable view of the Muslim Brotherhood. Yet despite the Sisi government’s fierce campaign against that organization, nearly one-third of Egyptians privately say they have either a “very positive” (10 percent) or at least a “fairly positive” (19 percent) opinion of it. Five percent say they don’t know or refuse to answer the question. These numbers are little changed over the past year.
On a related question, only one-fifth of Egyptians say it would be “a good idea” to “interpret Islam in a more moderate, tolerant, or modern way.” Three-quarters reject that notion, notwithstanding Sisi’s recent calls for “a religious revolution” at Al-Azhar. By comparison, in another recent poll, the proportion of West Bank and Gaza Palestinians who supported this concept was approximately twice as high.
ISIS Seen As Biggest Regional Problem
By far the most unfavorable ratings of all go to ISIS, or Da’esh in Arabic: 90 percent “very negative” plus 3 percent “fairly negative.” Moreover, the “conflict against Da’esh” tops the list of recommended “priorities for our government right now,” with 24 percent picking that as Egypt’s first priority and 29 percent as second priority – far ahead not only of Syria, Iran or Yemen, but also of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. In addition, a substantial proportion picks “the conflict between sects or movements of Islam” as Egypt’s first (22 percent) or second (15 percent) foreign policy priority.
Egyptians Disapprove of Assad Regime, But Don’t Want to Intervene
Regarding Syria, Egyptians have an overwhelmingly bad opinion of the Assad regime: 56 percent “very negative” plus 28 percent “fairly negative.” But just 19 percent want to assist the Syrian opposition at all, and a mere 4 percent favor direct Egyptian military intervention on its behalf. Half say Egypt should either “support diplomatic efforts for a cease-fire and political settlement” (24 percent) or else “stay out of the Syrian conflict completely” (27 percent).
A surprisingly substantial minority (17 percent) would prefer “Turkish military intervention to stabilize the situation in Syria.” But just 15 percent select the Syrian crisis as Egypt’s top priority from a list including five other current regional conflicts; only the conflict in Yemen ranks lower, with 6 percent.
Russia’s Policies Rated Very Low; Iran’s Even Lower
The large majority of Egyptians, 79 percent, rate recent Russian policies in the region negatively. An even larger majority, 89 percent, say that about Iran. And by a huge margin, the Egyptian public expects Arab-Iranian relations to get worse (62 percent) rather than better (11 percent) over the next few years. Nevertheless, opinions of the recent nuclear deal with Iran are more mixed: 42 percent say it is a good deal, as against 35 percent who call it bad; while 24 percent offer no opinion either way. And just 15 percent say “the conflict between Iran and Arab countries” should be Egypt’s number one regional priority today.
U.S., Other Governments and Movements Also Viewed Negatively
At the same time, three-quarters or more of Egyptians also voice an unfavorable opinion of the United States, Qatar, and Hezbollah. Other key regional players fare only slightly better: Hamas, the Palestinian Authority, Turkey, and Pakistan all receive negative scores in the 60 percent range. More unexpectedly, perhaps, so do both France and China.
Poll Reflects All Segments of Egyptian Society
These findings are based on a survey conducted by a leading Arab commercial company in late August/early September, using standard geographic probability techniques. It comprised personal interviews, with strict assurances of confidentiality, among a national sample of 1,000 adult Egyptians, yielding a statistical margin of error of approximately plus or minus 3.5 percent.
Unlike most other Egyptian surveys, this sample is fully representative of the entire national adult population. For example, 93 percent are Muslim and 7 percent Coptic Christian; half are under 35 years old; and just one-third have completed high school. The sample is also distributed proportionally around the entire country: 20 percent in metropolitan Cairo/Helwan/Giza/6 October City; 6 percent in Alexandria; and three-quarters scattered all around the Delta, Upper Egypt, the Suez Canal area, and elsewhere in provincial Egypt, both urban and rural.
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David Pollock is the Kaufman fellow at The Washington Institute and the director of Fikra Forum. http://fikraforum.org/?p=7856#.VijzsrQxE4p