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İran Savaşı Sonrası 36 Ülkede İsrail'e Yönelik Negatif Algı Zirve Yaptı

Pew Araştırma Merkezi'nin 36 ülkeyi kapsayan anketine göre, İsrail'e yönelik olumsuz görüşler İran ile yaşanan savaşın ardından belirgin biçimde arttı. Anket sonuçları, neredeyse tüm ülkelerde çoğunluğun İsrail hakkındaki düşüncelerinin olumsuz olduğunu ortaya koydu. Bu bulgu, İsrail Başbakanı Netanyahu aleyhine 'soykırımcı' yazılı pankartların taşındığı protestolarla aynı döneme denk geldi. İsrail'in İran'a yönelik askeri operasyonlarının uluslararası kamuoyundaki yankıları, ülkenin diplomatik duruşunu ve ekonomik ilişkilerini zorlayabilecek düzeyde. Anket, Batı ülkeleri de dahil olmak üzere geniş bir coğrafyada İsrail'e verilen desteğin erozyona uğradığına işaret ediyor. Uzmanlar, bu tür bir algı değişiminin İsrail'in bölgesel ittifaklar ve uluslararası iş birlikleri üzerinde uzun vadeli etkiler doğurabileceğini belirtiyor. Anket sonuçları, İsrail'in güvenlik politikalarına yönelik uluslararası eleştirilerin giderek yaygınlaştığını gözler önüne seriyor. Özellikle savaş sonrası dönemde insani duruma ilişkin haberler ve sivil kayıplar, İsrail'in küresel imajını olumsuz etkileyen temel faktörler arasında sayılıyor. Bu veriler, İsrail hükümetinin dış politika ve kamu diplomasisi stratejilerini yeniden değerlendirmesi gerektiğine dair bir sinyal olarak yorumlanıyor.

Başlangıç 05 Haz 20:02 2 olay Güncellendi 05 Haz
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  1. Siyasi05 Haz 20:02

    Negative views of Israel soar across 36 countries since Iran war, survey finds

    Negative views of Israel soar across 36 countries since Iran war, survey finds MEE staff on Fri, 06/05/2026 - 19:55 Pew found a marked increase in unfavourable views of Israel, with nearly every country surveyed hosting majorities with negative views A person holds a placard with a photo of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu with the writing "Genocidal" during a protest against the detention and treatment by Israel of activists participating in the Global Sumud Flotilla, in Milan, northern Italy, on 21 May 2026 (Piero Cruciatti/AFP) Off Negative views of both Israel and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu have soared since last year across Europe, Asia, the Middle East, and Latin America, according to a new poll from Pew Research Center. Out of 36 countries, majorities in 32 of them have either a very unfavourable or somewhat unfavourable view of Israel, with only respondents in India, Ghana, Nigeria and Kenya holding a favourable view of the country. The survey was conducted between 8 February and 13 May of this year. The US-Israel war on Iran started on 28 February and has had an impact on countries across the world, in part likely due to the economic impact of the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, where around 20 percent of the global oil supply passes through. Pew reported that across 36 countries, a median of 67 percent of adults held an unfavourable view of Israel, with just 25 percent holding a favourable view. Turkey, Pakistan, Malaysia, Indonesia, Japan, the West Bank and occupied East Jerusalem had the highest percentage of unfavourable views of Israel, with Turkey at 97 percent and Japan at 83 percent. (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({}); In the Anglophone world, specifically the US, Canada, Australia and the UK, all had majorities that held unfavourable views of Israel at 60, 65, 79, and 69 percent respectively. All ten countries surveyed in Europe also held generally unfavourable views of Israel, with Sweden and Spain topping out at 78 percent each and Hungary with the most favourable views of Israel, but still carrying a majority, 54 percent, who held unfavourable views. Israel's war on Gaza and subsequent genocide has led to a global hardening of views against the country over the past three years. But the war on Iran appears to have triggered a strong response across the world, with significant year-on-year spikes in unfavourable views of Israel. Israel's actions in Gaza, deemed a genocide by leading scholars, human rights organisations and political leaders, resulted in the death of at least 73,000 Palestinians since 7 October 2023. Its bombardment of the Gaza Strip has either destroyed or damaged 81 percent of structures in the enclave, with an estimated $18.5bn in damages according to the United Nations. Effects of war on Iran Some of the fallout from the genocide was visible in Pew's survey last year, but since then there has been another spike, likely connected to the war in Iran. From Italy to Japan, most people have negative views of Israel, poll finds Read More » Nigeria, where 47 percent have favourable views of Israel, saw a nine percent increase in unfavourable views of Israel. South Korea had the largest jump in unfavourable views, marking a ten percent jump. Germany, Italy, Argentina, Poland, the UK, and the US all recorded between a seven and nine percent jump in unfavourable views. Pew showed that people on the left of the political spectrum tended to hold more negative views of Israel than their counterparts on the right. The ideological gap was widest in the US, where 83 percent of liberals held negative views and just 37 percent of conservatives held negative views. That ideological gap is more prevalent in high-income countries but does not necessarily hold true in middle-income countries, according to the survey's authors. Only two countries, the Philippines and Kenya, had confidence in Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu "to do the right thing regarding world affairs". Majorities of respondents in every other country had no confidence at all or little confidence in Netanyahu. The same leap in unfavourable views of Israel was reflected in respondents' views of Netanyahu, with prominent increases in people losing confidence in Netanyahu's leadership over the past year. War on Iran News Post Date Override 0 Update Date Mon, 05/04/2020 - 21:19 Update Date Override 0

  2. Diplomatik05 Haz 12:06

    Pew poll: Negative vibes for Israel in 36 countries

    After more than three years of waging war against its neighbors, Israel appears to be more negatively regarded not only in the United States, where Israel’s image has been sinking since shortly after the outbreak of its war in Gaza in October 2023, but in the rest of the world as well. According to a new poll released, majorities — in some key cases overwhelming majorities — of respondents in most of the three dozen countries surveyed by the Pew Research Center between early February and mid-May said they held an unfavorable view of Israel and had little or no confidence in its long-serving prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu. A median across the 36 countries of 67%, or two thirds, of the more than 44,000 respondents said they had either a “very” or “somewhat unfavorable” opinion of Israel, while a median of 25% said their views were either “very” or “somewhat favorable.” The poll found that views of Israel were most negative among respondents in predominantly Muslim countries; among younger adults, especially in North America and Europe; and among those who identified themselves as being on the left side of their countries’ political spectrum. Respondents who considered themselves on the right tended to be more favorable. Included in the survey were 10 European countries, 12 across Asia (including Australia), four in sub-Saharan Africa, six in Latin America, as well as Turkey, the Palestinian West Bank and East Jerusalem, Canada, and the U.S. itself. The results for the U.S. respondents of the new international survey, part of Pew’s annual Global Attitudes Project, were released in a separate report two months ago. It found that 60% of U.S. adults have an unfavorable view of Israel, an increase from 53% in 2025 and 42% in 2022. Conducted in the last week in March, it also found that majorities of respondents under 50 in both parties – albeit more among those who identified as Democrats or Independents than Republicans — viewed Israel negatively. While the global survey began interviewing respondents roughly three weeks before Israel and the U.S. launched their war against Iran February 28, Pew said most of the interviews took place after that date Views were most negative among mostly Muslim countries, led by Turkey, where 99% of respondents said they held unfavorable views (91% “very unfavorable”); Pakistan, 95% unfavorable (87% “very unfavorable”); Malaysia, 89% unfavorable (79% “very unfavorable”); Indonesia, 86% unfavorable (79% “very unfavorable); and the West Bank/E. Jerusalem 85% unfavorable (80% “very unfavorable”). In Indonesia, “unfavorable” views increased by 6% compared to 2025; in Turkey, the increase was 4%. Elsewhere in Asia, “unfavorable” views in South Korea rose by 10 points — from 60% to 70% over the past year, the biggest increase for all countries that were surveyed in both 2025 and 2026, according to the survey. In Japan, “unfavorable” views were held by 93% of respondents. The only country on the continent where favorable views of Israel were greater than unfavorable views was India: 32% favorable, 28% unfavorable. Strong majorities in every European country surveyed by Pew also voiced unfavorable views of Israel. Spain and Sweden led the pack with 78% of respondents saying their opinion was negative. They were followed closely by the Netherlands (76%), Italy (75%), Germany (73%), and Poland (70%). The biggest year-to-year increase in the percentage of respondents who voiced unfavorable views were found in Italy (9 percentage points), Germany (9 percentage points), and Poland (8 percentage points). Even in Hungary, which had long cultivated close relations with Netanyahu under long-standing but recently ousted prime minister, Viktor Orban, a 54% majority of respondents said they held unfavorable views of Israel, compared to only 32% who expressed more positive opinions. Similarly, majorities of respondents – ranging from Chile (60%) to Brazil (52%) in five of the six Latin American countries – voiced unfavorable opinions of Israel. In the sixth, Peru, a 50% plurality agreed, while 28% of Peruvian respondents said they had either “somewhat” (22%) or “very” favorable views. Particularly notable were the results in Argentina, whose right-wing president, Javier Milei, has visited Israel three times since his inauguration in 2023 and who has declared himself to be “the most Zionist president in the world.” Fifty-five percent of respondents there described their views of Israel as “unfavorable” (34% “very unfavorable”). That marked an increase of 9 points from one year ago. The only continent in which pluralities of respondents said they held “somewhat” or “very favorable” opinions of Israel were found in sub-Saharan Africa. Half of Kenyan respondents said they held favorable views, as did 49% of Ghanaians, and 47% of Nigerians. Nigeria showed a sharp increase in unfavorable views compared to 2025 – from 32% to 41%. A 58% majority of respondents in South Africa, with which Israel has had a somewhat contentious relationship since the end of apartheid, said they had unfavorable views, 44% “very unfavorable.”

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