Zogby Poll of Lebanese Opinion
Earlier this morning, I noted that comparing the size of the marches protesting and supporting Lebanon’s government was problematic and that we didn’t have polling data to help us. Commenter JakeV noted that, indeed, John Zogby has surveyed the population of Lebanon. The poll, released yesterday, doesn’t quite answer the question I’m asking but it’s interesting nonetheless. Of course, as with all polls taken in societies without strong democratic traditions, some skepticism must be applied when reading the results.
[T]he demonstrations donât tell the whole story of what is happening in Lebanon today. A recent poll of 1,250 Lebanese, representing all religious groupings in the country, establishes that while an emerging consensus exists on some questions, on several key issues a deep sectarian divide still plagues the country. And these must be tended to if Lebanonâs unity and internal security are to be insured. The poll was conducted during the last week in February 2005 by a Lebanese polling firm, Information International, in conjunction with Zogby International.
[...]
How best now to proceed with securing Lebanon? Only Maronites see a Syrian withdrawal as key with one-half agreeing with this as the solution. About one-third of Shia and Sunnis and less than one-fourth of Orthodox agree. Many Lebanese, in particular Orthodox, Sunni, and Shiâa, see the solution to Lebanonâs security in âreinforcement and deployment of the Lebanese army and security forces all over Lebanon.â And while 60% of Druze see the disarming of Lebanonâs militias as necessary for the countryâs future, only about one in seven Maronites, Orthodox, and Sunni agree. Not surprisingly, only 5% of Shia agree, since the âdisarmingâ provision of UNSC 1559 specifically has Hizbollah in mind.The lesson in all of this is that as important as the demonstrations may be, those not demonstrating and their views must be factored by policy makers into the complex equation of how to move Lebanon forward. While it has become clear that the Syrian military presence in Lebanon has run its course, a Syrian withdrawal by itself doesnât solve the Lebanon puzzle. Intense U.S. pressure to implement the other half of 1559 may provoke counter-demonstrations that fragile Lebanon may not be able to easily digest.
In chart form, the results look like this:

Interesting. The last census was 72 years ago and I’ve yet to find a very useful demographic breakdown, which would make analyzing the results possible. The CIA World Factbook, which corresponds to other guestimates I’ve seen, breaks it down thusly:
Muslim 59.7% (Shi’a, Sunni, Druze, Isma’ilite, Alawite or Nusayri), Christian 39% (Maronite Catholic, Melkite Catholic, Armenian Orthodox, Syrian Catholic, Armenian Catholic, Roman Catholic, Protestant), other 1.3%.
The Maronites are the largest plurality, constituting something like 30%. Still, Lebanon may be the classic case of there being no such thing as “public opinion” but rather the opinion of various “publics.”
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