According  to a 2011 Gallup poll, the U.K., U.S., and EU did not enjoy much  approval in Iran even before they tightened sanctions there, escalating  tensions. Nine percent of Iranians approved of  U.K. and U.S. leadership when Gallup surveyed in February and March  2011 and not many more approved of the EU's leadership (12%). Iranians  were just as unlikely to approve of the leadership of Germany (11%) and  Russia (13%), but they are more approving of  key trade partners China (18%) and Turkey (24%).

Iranians  were most likely to disapprove of the leadership of the U.S. (65%) and  the U.K. (62%), the countries with the stiffest sanctions imposed  against Iran. Disapproval of trade  partners was lower, but in every case, Iranians were still more likely  to disapprove than approve, and at least one in four Iranians didn't  know or refused to voice an opinion.
 Tensions  between Iran and Europe reignited this week after Iranian students  attacked the British embassy in Tehran to protest new sanctions on  Iran's energy and financial sectors. The  U.K. withdrew its diplomats in response and the EU restricted the  assets and travel of 180 Iranian officials and companies. The U.S.  Senate Friday approved stricter sanctions against Iran's central bank.  Russia and China cautioned against aggravating Iran,  and Turkey expressed worry for its own security, after Iran threatened  to hit NATO's missile shield if provoked.
While  Iranians' approval of the leadership of all these countries and the EU  is relatively low, the most educated Iranians are more likely to approve  than less educated Iranians, regardless  of income. Approval of leadership of the U.K., the U.S., Germany, and  the EU at least triples among those Iranians with four years of  education beyond high school. The increase is similar for Russia and  China and the percentage still more than doubles in Turkey.

Younger  Iranians tend to approve of the leadership in the countries measured  and the EU more than older Iranians, but this relationship is not as  strong as the relationship with education,  and ratings are still low. Approval ratings among the oldest Iranians  are about half of what they are among the youngest Iranians for nearly  all countries except Turkey.

Implications
 Iranians'  dim views of the leadership of key Western powers and their trade  partners highlight the difficult situation Iranians are in as their  leadership battles diplomatically on  the global stage. One  in four Iranians are "suffering" in  terms of how they rate their lives, and Gallup finds unemployment in  Iran to be among the highest in the world. Still, Iranians do not appear  to have a high opinion  of important global powers. Iranians are the most approving, on a  relative basis, of Turkey, but approval is still so low that it is  difficult to assess how much clout the country holds in Iranians' eyes.
While  more educated and younger Iranians are slightly more approving of the  leadership of each of the countries measured and the EU, their approval  ratings are too low to find much  comfort in. As such, world leaders seeking to pursue diplomacy with  Iran should tread carefully as not to further damage their reputations  among the Iranian people.
Tp view the report on Gallup's website, click here. 
