Israhell must suppress democracy, because Israhell cannot exist with democracy

Started by yankeedoodle, January 07, 2023, 12:49:08 PM

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yankeedoodle

We know that Israhell has constructed the Abraham Accords scam with which they sign "peace agreements" with countries which they are not at war with, and then "normalize" relations with these countries, all of which happen to be undemocratic and ruled by some sort of monarch or dictator, with Israhell giving the monarch or dictator high-tech surveillance equipment and other assistance to suppress their populace and prevent the emergence of democracy. 

This, of course, assures that Israhell can claim to be the "only democracy" in the Middle East, because they make every effort to suppress the emergence of democracy, because Israhell cannot exist in a democratically-controlled region.

Overwhelming majority in Arab states want democracy but reject recognition of Israel
The survey, which included 33,000 respondents across 14 Arab and Muslim countries, also found 85 percent consider themselves religious.
https://www.jewishnews.co.uk/overwhelming-majority-in-arab-states-want-democracy-but-reject-recognition-of-israel/

A comprehensive study of public opinion across 14 Arab and Muslim countries found that the overwhelming majority support a democratic system, while opposing any recognition of Israel.

Some 72% said they support a democratic system while 87% believe that financial and administrative corruption is widespread in their countries. 39% say they don't enjoy full equality.

As for Israel, which has normalised ties with a number of the states included in the survey, such as UAE, Morocco, Bahrain and Sudan, 84% of the respondents oppose their home countries' recognition of Israel. 36% cited "colonialist occupying power in Palestine" as the main reason for opposing recognition of Israel while 9% cited "Expansionist state set on controlling more Arab territory."

The negative attitude towards Israel across the 14 Arab and Muslim states doesn't surprise Dr. Yoel Guzansky, a Senior Researcher at the Institute for National Security Studies (INSS) specialising in Gulf politics & security.

"The Abraham Accords, as well as the peace accords with Jordan and Egypt, were signed with the elites, not the people. In Egypt, most people are against Israel

Among respondents from Saudi Arabia, which Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has his eyes on as the next Arab state to include in the Abraham Accords, 38% rejected recognition of Israel, but 57% decided not to respond.

The fact that so many Saudi declined to respond to that question "demonstrates the difference between the Gulf and the other Arab states. The Gulf is usually more accepting and pragmatic when it comes to relations with Israel," Dr. Guzansky told Jewish News.

Still, part of the reason for why Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman hasn't signed a peace deal with Israel yet, Dr. Guzansky said, is because most Saudis are against it.

"But he will swallow that if he can get other things in return such as weapons from the U.S. Netanyahu says he can contribute to better Saudi-U.S. relations, but can he really?"

Netanyahu might raise the issue of West Bank annexation again to try and blackmail the Saudis into signing a peace deal, like he did with the UAE, Dr. Guzansky said. "But can he sell the same used car twice?"

A majority had a negative view of American, Iranian, French and Russian policies toward Palestinians.

The report found 84% consider policies by Israel and the U.S. a threat to stability and security in the Arab region, while only 57% see Iran and Russia as a threat.

Only 12% said they aren't religious while a majority in 12 of the countries agreed with the question "No one is entitled to declare followers of other religions infidels/apostates." An overwhelming majority in Algeria and Mauritania disagreed with that statement.

72% agree "the government has no right to use religion to win support for its policies," while a a slight majority disagreed with the statement "It would be better for my home country if religion was separated from politics."


The study, made by the Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies (ACRPS), included 33 thousand respondents from Mauritania, Morocco, Tunisia, Libya, Egypt, Sudan, Algeria, Palestine, Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and Qatar. Click here to read the full survey.   https://pressat.co.uk/media/uploads/3d75300ef75333b7f5fcee7dcea4df3a.pdf

[pdf]https://pressat.co.uk/media/uploads/3d75300ef75333b7f5fcee7dcea4df3a.pdf[/pdf]