
A poll of Egyptians conducted last month shows that they have increasingly  positive views of Iran, believe that both Iran and Egypt should obtain nuclear  weapons, and still trust their own military more than any other institution in  Egypt. 
The poll of 812 Egyptians, half of them women, was conducted in a  series of in-person interviews by the firm Greenberg Quinlan Rosner and  sponsored by the Israel Project, a pro-Israel advocacy organization with offices  in Washington and Jerusalem. 
According to the poll, Iran is viewed  favorably in Egypt, with 65 percent of those surveyed expressing support of the  decision to renew Egypt-Iran relations and 61 percent expressing support of the  Iranian nuclear project, versus 41 percent in August 2009. 
Sixty-two  percent of those polled agreed that "Iran and its president, Mahmoud  Ahmadinejad, are friends of Egypt," though 68 percent held unfavorable views of  Shiite Muslims. 
Iran's deputy defense minister said recently that the  Iranian regime is seeking more military cooperation with Egypt. "We are ready to  help Egypt to build nuclear reactors and satellites," he said on the occasion or  Egyptian President Mohammed Morsy's meeting with Iranian President Mahmoud  Ahmadinejad last month. Morsy's office has said the two didn't discuss military  cooperation. 
Eighty-seven percent of respondents want Egypt to have its  own nuclear bomb. 
Israel Project CEO Josh Block told The Cable that the  statistics show the effect of Morsy's outreach to Iran and the danger of  regional proliferation of nuclear weapons if Iran is successful in obtaining a  nuclear bomb. 
"Very scary to people opposed to proliferation of nuclear  weapons, let alone to unstable countries in the world's most turbulent part of  the world, is the 87 percent who want Egypt to build nuclear weapons," he  said. 
"Morsy's dangerous embrace of Iran is leading a surprising shift  in favor support for Tehran, which has for decades been seen by Egyptians as  their top threat, as well as for their work on nuclear  weapons." 
Egyptians are overwhelmingly focused on the dire state of  their domestic economy. Only 2 percent of those polled said that "strengthening  relations with other Muslim countries" should be one of Morsy's top two  priorities, and 45 percent agreed with the statement that "Egypt needs to focus  on things at home and should be less involved in regional  politics." 
Nevertheless, 74 percent of those polled said that disapprove  of Egypt having diplomatic relations with Israel -- an increase from 26 percent  in August 2009 -- and support for a two-state solution to solve the  Israeli-Palestinian conflict is at only 30 percent. Seventy-seven percent agreed  that "The peace treaty with Israel is no longer useful and should be  dissolved." 
Block blamed that result at least partially on the stance of  leading Egyptian politicians like President Morsy, who has indicated recently he  does not plan to abrogate the Israel-Egypt peace treaty but whose Muslim  Brotherhood party identifies Israel as a racist and expansionist  state. 
"The fact that Morsy and other leading politicians in Egypt  regularly express disdain for the peace treaty leads to such decay in public  attitudes," Block said. "Then again, nearly half the public voted for a  presidential candidate who openly declared his intent to travel to Israel and  support for the Camp David accords." 
Block was referring to retired Air  Force general Ahmed Shafiq, who served as prime minister under Hosni Mubarak and  was defeated narrowly in a runoff election earlier this year. 
The poll  found that 64 percent of Egyptians still feel warmly about the Supreme Council  of the Armed Forces, which ran Egypt in the interim period before Morsy was  elected, and 81 percent approve of the job they are doing. Forty-nine percent of  Egyptians polled felt warmly about Morsi, and 43 percent felt warmly about the  Muslim Brotherhood. 
Forty percent felt warmly about the Muslim  Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party, but only 11 percent felt warmly about  the Salafist Nour Party, a hard-line Islamist party that fared well in the  parliamentary elections. 
American politicians fared poorly in the poll,  but among them Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was the most popular at 25  percent favorability. President Barack Obama scored 16 percent and Republican  nominee Mitt Romney only 8 percent, although only half of Egyptians polled knew  who Romney was. (Ahmadinejad's favorability rating? Forty-three  percent.) 
Most Egyptians don't seem to buy Romney's line that Obama has  "thrown Israel under the bus," but they're not too happy about his handling of  the region, either. 
Asked, "Do you think that President Barack Obama is  more on the side of Arabs or more on the side of Israel?," 68 percent of  Egyptians said Israel, and 60 percent said that Obama's presidency had been "a  negative thing" for the Arab world. 
39% of the Egyptians polled  expressed interest in learning more about Israel, especially it's political  system. The Israel Project runs an outreach program to the Arab world, focusing  on social media. Its Facebook page is called "Israel Uncensored."