Copenhagen: Thanks to Donald Trump, global perceptions of the US have deteriorated for a second consecutive year and are now worse than views of Russia, an annual study on democracy published on Friday revealed.
This comes at a time when the US president’s policies continue to severely strain the NATO alliance.
The survey, commissioned by the Denmark-based Alliance of Democracies Foundation, said the US was also most frequently named in response to which country posed the greatest threat to the world, after Russia and Israel. The survey did not go into details on the criteria used, but the Alliance says its aim is to defend and advance democratic values, as reported by Deccan Herald.
“The fast decline of the United States’ perception around the world is saddening but not shocking,” alliance founder and former NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said.
“US foreign policy over the past 18 months has, among other things, called into question the transatlantic relationship, imposed widespread tariffs, and threatened to invade a NATO ally’s territory,” he added.
The primary causes are Trump’s tariffs, his repeated threats to control Greenland – a fellow NATO member through Denmark, a cut in US aid to Ukraine as well as the US-Israeli war against Iran and the ensuing spike in oil prices.
Trump was enraged after European countries declined to send their navies to open the Strait of Hormuz to global shipping after the start of the air war on Iran. In April he considered withdrawing from NATO, further weakening the alliance.
The Democracy Perception Index survey, which ranks the perception of countries from -100% to +100%, showed that net perception of the U.S. had swung to -16% from +22% two years ago, placing it behind Russia at -11% and China at +7%. It did not provide a reason for the positive sentiment on China.
The survey was conducted by polling firm Nira Data between March 19 and April 21, based on more than 94,000 respondents in 98 countries. Country perceptions were measured in a sample of 46,600 respondents in 85 countries.
The report was published ahead of the Copenhagen Democracy Summit, which takes place on May 12.












