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  Israelis still prefer McCain
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ContributorScott³ 
Last EditedScott³  Aug 05, 2008 10:51am
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News DateMonday, August 4, 2008 04:50:00 PM UTC0:0
DescriptionPolitico.com

An excerpt...
"Since Israelis absorbed intense media coverage of Barack Obama’s visit to their nation late last month, their opinion of him has improved, but only slightly.

A new poll finds 38 percent of Israelis still would rather see Obama’s Republican rival John McCain elected U.S. president, compared to 31 percent for Obama, the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee.

That’s slightly narrower than the 9-point edge held by McCain in a poll conducted in late June.

The new poll surveyed 499 Jewish Israeli respondents in Hebrew by phone on July 30 and 31.

That was one week after Obama’s whirlwind overseas tour swept through Israel, bringing saturation Israeli media coverage of his meetings with top politicians, his visit to the Kotel – one of the most important Jewish religious sites – and, perhaps most significantly, his outlining a more hawkish stance on Iran’s nuclear ambitions.

“He was received well and said all the things he needed to say from an Israeli perspective,” said Mitchell Barak, director of KEEVOON Research, Strategy & Communications, the independent Jerusalem-based firm that conducted the poll. Barak, who was raised in the U.S. and worked briefly for the Republican Jewish Coalition, said Obama “got the same level of attention that Axel Rose got when he came here,” but that Obama “was really taken seriously.”

Obama got rock-star welcomes during many of the other stops on his trip, most notably in Germany, where an estimated 200,000 turned out to hear him deliver a speech near where the Berlin Wall once stood.

The Illinois Senator is wildly popular in Europe, and a spring Pew poll of 23 foreign nations – not including Israel – on six continents found respondents in all but two countries (Jordan and Pakistan) had more confidence in Obama than McCain to do the right thing in world affairs."
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