“„Gallup also asked which of series of actions by the U.S. would improve views of American leadership. The main finding was that “residents in eight of the countries surveyed are most likely to say the United States’ withdrawal from Iraq would improve their opinion very significantly.” Closing Guantanamo was also frequently cited, while a variety of economic and political reform suggestions received a degree of support varying by country.
Well, doneand done, basically, and we’ve just entered Week Two of the next four years. No one should be under the false impression that there’s any sort of magic bullet for repairing U.S. esteem in the Arab world. There are and will continue to be real points of divergence in interests — the U.S./Israel partnership, for instance, isn’t going to be jettisoned, to Arab chagrin. But what’s important — and what’s been lacking for eight years — is a presumption of basic good faith on the part of the United States, so that even when the United States acts on areas of mutual interest, the Arab public interprets those actions accordingly. That in turn requires visible U.S. action on issues of concern to the Arab public, despite political difficulties.
Seen in that light, it’s reasonable to expect leaving Iraq and shutting Guantanamo to earn the Obama administration some dividends — stuff that’s going to be important when the United States has to, say, extract difficult Arab acceptance of peace terms with Israel or launch Hellfire missiles at Al Qaeda operatives in Yemen or something.