Pakistanis with Favorable View of U.S.
That’s the small fraction of Pakistanis who say they have a favorable view of America in the latest Pew Global Attitudes poll.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
That’s the small fraction of Pakistanis who say they have a favorable view of America in the latest Pew Global Attitudes poll.
That’s the percentage of Italians who voice concern about immigration, the highest share of any of the publics in the latest Pew Global Attitudes 47-nation survey.
Support for suicide bombings in defense of Islam declined by half or more in Lebanon, Bangladesh, Pakistan and Indonesia over the last five years, according to a recent Pew Global Attitudes survey.
About a third of the Lebanese public (34%) now feels that suicide bombings are often or sometimes justified in the defense if Islam, a large decline from the 74% who said so in 2002.
That’s the proportion of Pakistanis who say they have a lot or some confidence in Al Queda leader Osama bin Laden to do the right thing in world affairs — still disturbingly high, but a substantial decline from the 51% who said so just two years ago.
Among the 47 countries in the latest Pew Global Attitudes Survey, nearly equal numbers named the United States as a top ally (19) as named it as the biggest threat (17).
That’s the percentage of Pakistanis who say that relations between the U.S. and Pakistan have improved in recent years.
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