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EXTENT A
Argentina
Monica Flores Correa
1990 Nieman Fellow
B
Brazil
Claudia Antunes
2006 Nieman Fellow
U
Uruguay
Carina Novarese
2003 Nieman Fellow
G
Gatemala
Dina Fernandez Garcia
2003 Nieman Fellow
M
Mexico
Alma Guillermoprieto
2005 Nieman Fellow
C
Canada
Arben Kallamata
1993 Nieman Fellow
C
Canada
Douglas Leiterman
1954 Nieman Fellow
C
Canada
John Geddes
2003 Nieman Fellow
C
Canada
William French
1955 Nieman Fellow
C
Canada
Bill Schiller
2006 Nieman Fellow
I
Iceland
Agnes Bragadottir
1988 Nieman Fellow
G
Great Britain
Kirsty Milne
2004 Nieman Fellow
G
Germany
Guenter Haaf
1976 Nieman Fellow
F
France
Francoise Lazare
1998 Nieman Fellow
F
Finland
Pekka Mykannen
2003 Nieman Fellow
S
Spain
Daniel Samper
1981 Nieman Fellow
C
Cameroon
Alice Tatah
2006 Nieman Fellow
S
South Africa
Ton Vosloo
1971 Nieman Fellow
S
South Africa
Phillippa Green
1999 Nieman Fellow
I
Indonesia
Endy Bayuni
2004 Nieman Fellow
N
New Zealand
Ivor Wilkins
1984 Nieman Fellow
N
New Zealand
David Baumfield
1965 Nieman Fellow
A
Australia
Bruce Stannard
1983 Nieman Fellow
I
India
Ramindar Singh
1982 Nieman Fellow
I
India
Arun Chacko
1978 Nieman Fellow
C
China
Jingcao Hu
2001 Nieman Fellow
C
China
Jie Lin
2004 Nieman Fellow
C
China
Xiaoping Chen
1998 Nieman Fellow
T
Thailand
Thepchai Yong
2005 Nieman Fellow
J
Japan
Satoshi Yoshida
1978 Nieman Fellow
J
Japan
Sayuri Daimon
2000 Nieman Fellow
V
Vietnam
Thai Nguyen
1964 Nieman Fellow
V
Vietnam
Nguyen Quang Dy
1993 Nieman Fellow
D
Denmark
Samuel Rachlin
1985 Nieman Fellow
34 Nieman fellows in 23 countries took part in a Watchdog survey on perceptions of America
Post 9/11 Europe: All Americans, then anti-American
DISCUSSIONS | June 09, 2006

A sense of squandered opportunities, and now suspicion.


By Dan Froomkin
froomkin@niemanwatchdog.org

European Nieman fellows blame President Bush for squandering goodwill in the wake of the terrorist attacks in New York and Washington. Much of the criticism is centered around Bush’s human rights record – but some of it is just personal.

Read posts from:
  • Kirsty Milne, Great Britain: 'Special arrangement' seen as a delusion
  • Guenter Haaf, Germany: ‘Sorry I can’t report a more U.S.-friendly opinion’
  • Daniel Samper, Spain: A strong anti-Bush feeling
  • Pekka Mykkänen, Finland: Because of Iraq, 2 prime ministers had to go
  • Agnes Bragadóttir, Iceland: Suffering badly in the propaganda wars
  • Françoise Lazare, France: Both U.S. and French reputations seen suffering
  • Samuel Rachlin, Denmark: Right now, acrimony toward our American baby
  • In all, 34 current and past Nieman fellows from 23 countries took part in a one-question e-mail survey done by this Web site on the occasion of its second anniversary. The question was:

    Please share with us your thoughts about people’s main perceptions of America where you live, and how their perceptions have changed in recent years, say since 9/11.

    Françoise Lazare writes from France, remembering how the editor of her paper, Le Monde, spoke for an entire continent when he wrote on September 13, 2001: "We are all Americans.” But in the following years, France, like many other countries, soured on President Bush’s Middle East policies.

    Agnes Bragadóttir writes from Iceland: “Right after the attack on the Twin Towers and for some months after that, there was huge sympathy and support for the American nation here in Iceland, as well as in the rest of the world, or most parts of it, to my understanding. The thing is, that your own President, Mr. Bush, seems to be the root of the change of perspective in Iceland. People have become extremely negative toward the President, the ideology of War Against Terrorism, of the USA behaving like the Police of the World, being above law and order in practically every sense, at least in any sense the USA government chooses to be.”

    Guenter Haaf writes from Germany that Iraq changed everything. “The U.S. is viewed widely as an internationally insensible bully. Only a minority of Germans, mostly with personal experience in the U.S. and of some in-depth knowledge of U.S. history, still hope that U.S. domestic political checks-and-balance will eventually correct the internationally harmful course of the Bush II administration.

    The fond memories of the Americans as friends helping this nation to find its path back to civilization after WWII is fading.”

    Pekka Mykkänen writes from Finland: “After the war in Iraq and many scandals, such as Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo Bay, that have followed, the Finns have become extremely suspicious of America, more suspicious than many other European nations. According to the Eurobarometer poll in November 2003, Finns saw the United States as the greatest threat to world peace – ahead of North Korea, Iran or Iraq.”

    And some of it is distinctly personal. Daniel Samper writes from Spain: “Spain has always been a very anti-American country, but Bill Clinton was considered an intelligent and open person, two things that can't be said of Bush. “

    Kirsty Milne writes from Great Britain: “My observation is that there has been a generational shift from being pro-American by instinct to anti-American by default….

    “The turning point would not have been 9/11, as your question suggests, but Iraq...  Iraq may have been the wake-up call that makes Britain look across the Channel instead of across the Atlantic.”

    -

    Martin Lobel
    It’s time to do more than just say the economy is the No. 1 issue
    If voters are to go into the midterm elections with any understanding at all, the press needs to get away from he-said, she-said reporting and look into the positions that candidates and the two parties are taking. Martin Lobel offers some vital questions.

    William Claiborne
    What a broken Senate looks like from far away...and why it matters
    Our correspondent in Australia has ideas on how to improve things a little. But he’s not optimistic that anyone on Capitol Hill will be interested.

    Steven Greenhut
    How severe is the public employee pension problem across the U.S.? (Hint: Is a $3 trillion debt severe?)
    Columnist and author Steven Greenhut looks at the ongoing pension issue, including abuses of it, and deals with some of the key questions.

    Watchdog Blog
    Herb Strentz
    Des Moines Fair Coverage, Part 2
    Cleaning up in the wake of the 2010 Iowa State Fair will be daunting this year. In addition to the mess left by nearly 1 million visitors and thousands of farm animals, we have a continuing saga of news coverage that told of possible racial assaults and then, in Saturday Night Live fashion, appears [...]

    Herb Strentz
    On ‘Beat Whitey Night’ in Des Moines
    (Editor’s note: The incidents described here have become part of a developing story, as this Google link shows.) The Des Moines Register’s reluctance to identify criminal suspects or victims by race has turned into an outright refusal to do so. The closing night of the Iowa State Fair was marked by an observance not exactly on the [...]

    Barry Sussman
    Justice Department Shows Its Mettle, Indicts Clemens
    I got this note from a friend and colleague a little while after Roger Clemens was indicted by a federal grand jury on Aug. 19th: “And meanwhile, Condoleezza Rice, Donald Rumsfeld, CIA officials and others who lied to Congress in sworn testimony about Iraq go free. If we can ‘look forward, not backward’ on torture, perjury, [...]

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