I promised Kevin Drum that I’d leave Juan Cole alone until my irritation at his post on Kylan Jones-Hoffman subsided.
And I try to keep my promises, I really do.
But I just surfed over something else that I have to point out.
Professor Cole backpedaled from his non-accusation (“just sayin’, you know”) that the Iraq The Model brothers are CIA stooges to explain that what he really meant to say was this:
I drew attention to Martini Republic’s questions about the independence of IraqTheModel without actually expressing any opinion myself one way or another, except to say that they are out of the Iraqi mainstream. The dittoheads who read them and can look at the above polling figures and come to a different conclusion are just innumerate (if only they were also so illiterate as to be unable to figure out my email address).
One of them complained that this poll was done last April. Does anybody really think US favorability numbers are up since then?
An IRI poll in September found that Muqtada al-Sadr was just about as popular as Iyad Allawi (45% and 47% favorability respectively). And Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, the clerical leader of the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq, trumped them all.
So I’m getting ready for bed, and I surf over to the IRI site, and here’s what they have to say:
Recent public opinion surveys conducted by IRI show Iraqis to be surprisingly optimistic about their future and much stronger supporters of democracy than many new reports would lead you to believe.
Over 51% of Iraqis polled felt that their country is headed in “the right direction,” up slightly from IRI’s May/June poll. More telling, the number who feel that things are heading in “the wrong direction” has dropped from 39% to 31% over the same time period.
Some of this confidence may be a result of wide public support for the Iraqi Interim Government. Prime Minister Allawi holds an enviable approval rating, with 66% rating him as either “very effective” or “somewhat effective.” Likewise, President al-Yawer enjoys the support of 60.6% of Iraqis polled who say that they “completely trust” or “somewhat trust” him.
In a stunning display of support for democracy and a strong rebuttal to critics of efforts to bring democratic reform to Iraq, 87% of Iraqis indicated that they plan to vote in January elections. Expanding on the theme, 77% said that “regular, fair elections” were the most important political right for the Iraqi people and 58% felt that Iraqi-style democracy was likely to succeed.
Help me out here, Professor…do you think we’re all idiots?