American Public’s Lower Concern for Beijing Compared to Five Eyes’ Allies

A new ‍study conducted​ by the Australian Institute of International ⁣Affairs‍ (AIIA) has found that perceptions of Beijing vary among ⁣countries that are members ⁤of the Five Eyes intelligence-sharing agreement. While people in Australia, Canada, and the UK ⁣share negative views of Beijing, Americans ⁤are the least ​concerned ⁢about China’s military power and influence⁣ on ​democracy. Australians, on the other hand, have a less negative view of ⁣Beijing’s foreign policy compared to residents of the UK ‍and Canada.

New⁤ Zealanders have recently elected a more ‍conservative government that ‌is more suspicious of Beijing than its predecessors. The NZ‌ government ⁣is now seeking public support for ⁢joining⁣ Pillar Two of​ the AUKUS ⁢pact, which​ covers technology sharing.

Despite concerns about ‌Chinese⁣ technology and allegations⁢ of ⁣spy equipment embedded in ⁢hardware and Trojan horses in software, people in all surveyed countries had a neutral or close-to-neutral view of Chinese technology.⁢ New Zealand was ⁤an⁣ outlier with ‌a more positive⁢ outlook.

Attitudes towards trade with ⁣China ⁣were just below neutral due ⁤to ⁤China being a‌ major trading partner for all Five Eyes nations. However, Chinese investment was viewed with ⁣suspicion along with Beijing’s influence on ⁤democracy and military power.

The study also revealed societal differences in attitudes towards China. There ‍were no notable‌ differences between genders but ‍those ‍with ‌higher education tended to ⁤be slightly more positive toward Beijing than those who only completed ‌secondary⁣ or high school education. Younger respondents also held more positive views compared ​to older ​ones.

Political‍ allegiance played a role in Americans’ attitudes towards China, with‍ Democrats being less‌ negative than ‍Independents or Republicans.​ In contrast, there was little difference among party supporters’ views in ⁤Australia, ​Canada, New ⁣Zealand, and the UK.

Social interaction was found to be influential in shaping ​attitudes towards China. Those​ who⁢ had never ​traveled to China or interacted with ​Chinese‍ people from mainland China⁤ held more negative views compared to others.

public attitudes across Five Eyes nations were similar and driven by ⁢factors such as China’s foreign policy image and its threat to democracy. The concerns raised by governments regarding ‌Chinese Communist Party interference are⁤ reflected in public attitudes as well.

The​ researchers questioned‌ whether ​a common narrative ​defending liberal democracy against an authoritarian threat from China could bring these nations ​closer together but warned that‍ consensus towards ⁤Beijing could⁣ potentially fragment​ along demographic lines internally within each country.

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