Russia, China, North Korea and Iran are generally considered to be the greatest threats to the United States, but to what extent the public favors these threats is less clear. The four have the independent means of threatening regional American interests, if not worldwide, while greater cooperation in the four creates a Unique safety challenge to continuous world leadership. Three already have nuclear missiles capable of hitting the United States while the fourth, Iran, could in the predictable future. The four also engaged in various cyber attacks and disinformation campaigns targeting the United States.
The invasion of Ukraine by RussiaAnd its implications for the future of NATO, poses a continuous challenge because the Trump administration is looking for war. China Economic and military expansionand in particular has increased Exercises around Taiwan questions the balance of powers in the region, while the introduction of the AI model In depth Poses both cybersecurity and economic threats to the American technological industry. North Korea continues to resist denuclearization, after having assembled an estimated 50 nuclear warheads and materials for 20 to 40 others in January 2024. Meanwhile, Iran not only holds a nuclear program, but supports various proxy militias active in the Middle East and beyond.
American media coverage concerning the four varies according to new developments, including the re -election of President Donald Trump. American media coverage of Russia increased after Trump said he could end the conflict in Ukraine “In 24 hours” During the campaign track. Since its inauguration, the left media have critical The treatment of negotiations by the Trump administration with Russia while right sources have more optimistic view. The goal has moved to North Korea after Trump and the US defense secretary Pete Hegseth described North Korea as a “Nuclear state”, Inadvertently legitimize the right of the country to nuclear weapons and trigger discourse.
Surveys in Pew in sleep in 2014 and 2019, in which respondents were invited to appoint the country they considered the greatest threat to the United States, included the four In different rows through time. PEW surveys have generally found concerns about China and Russia increasing in the past decade. Pew Research in 2023 revealed that 50% of respondents appointed China the greatest threat, against 17% for Russia and only 2% for North Korea.
Two 2017 NBC and Survey Monkey surveys, listing the same four countries in addition to the Islamic State, revealed that the Americans considered North Korea as the the greatest immediate threat. A 2022 The Yougov survey included the same four countries, as well as Afghanistan, China (34%) and Russia (30%) named the greatest threat to US national security. However, the views were widely differently on the partisan lines. Democrats were much more likely to identify Russia as the major threat compared to Republicans (43% against 19%), with an almost reversed model with regard to China (22% against 50%).
The previous experimental survey operates in 2019 And 2020 found the Americans more concerned with the nuclear program of North Korea than that of Iran. However, this diverged on the parties of the parties, the Republicans are always more concerned with Iran, despite the first having already a technology of verifiable nuclear missiles, perhaps according to the conservative media focused more on the Middle East.
The classification order gives an overview of the priorities of the public policy of the public and can indirectly put pressure for the allocation of more resources to certain threats, or at least justify such an allocation of resources. Due to the current accent of the Trump administration as well as media coverage, we would touch on public emphasis on the threats of Russia and China. On the other hand, in the absence of a major event as a nuclear test, North Korea and Iran can be less priority, even by recognizing the current national threat of the two countries.
We have ordered a national web survey by the penny, organized from February 12 to 26, where we asked 522 respondents to classify the four states according to the great threat that they think that the state is for US national security. Overall, the respondents clearly identified China as the greatest threat, with 44.64% of the respondents listing the country first, and 69.16% classifying it in the first two threats. Meanwhile, the majority of respondents also classified Russia in the first two (59.39%). On the other hand, Iran was the least likely to be classified first (11.88%) with similar rates for North Korea (13.98%).
However, when they are ventilated by identification of the parties, we find significant differences. A clear plurality of the Republicans first classified China (48.18%), while the Democrats were almost uniformly divided during their first classification between China (38.42%) and Russia (37.44%). In addition, Republicans were more likely to classify China in the first two compared to Democrats (75.45% against 62.56%). It should also be noted that Republicans were about twice as likely to assess Iran compared to Democrats (16.36% against 8.37%).
Earlier in the survey, the four were included in a longer list of countries for which we asked respondents their feelings on a five -point Likert scale (1 = very negative, 5 = very positive). Of these four, China caused the highest average (2.35), while the other three were lower than a more in -depth analysis than the initial evaluations of the countries did not seem to considerably influence their subsequent classification as a security threat, with the exception of China, where a thin majority of respondents (50.85%) who have held negative views on the country class superior, going to 37.11% among these positive assessments.
The results reaffirm that, although the public has negative opinions from the four countries, they consider China as the greatest threat to American national security, a perception that aligns the Trump administration Indo-Pacific to focus. However, this hierarchy raises critical concerns if used to justify foreign policy. The strong partisan fracture in the perception of threats suggests to what extent internal political framing, rather than objective risk assessments, the concerns of the shame. This is, once again, largely due to the current media concentration and the overexposure of China as an imminent threat. In addition, while the military and economic expansion of China presents significant challenges, a fixation on the risks of Beijing diverting the attention and resources of other pressing threats or recognizing the interconnection of threats.
The continuous aggression of Russia, the growing nuclear capacities of North Korea and the growing influence of Iran in the Middle East all require strategic vigilance. A complete approach to national security must recognize the evolution of the nature of multiple threats. Without this balance, the United States can find itself strategically vulnerable, underestimating challenges which, in the long term, could prove as substantial as those posed by China.
