Perhaps nowhere is the shift in mood greater than in Obama's ancestral home of Kenya, which in 2008 was gripped by Obama-mania. The capital, Nairobi, was plastered with his likeness on T-shirts, key chains and even a beer brand. This year, Obama paraphernalia was hard to find anywhere. And though he was still the favorite among Kenyans, there was a widespread belief that the first American president of African descent had largely neglected the continent.
"When Obama was elected in 2008, he gained the status of a demigod of some sort in most of Africa. The years that followed, however, were marked by disappointment," wrote Charles Onyango-Obbo, a columnist for Daily Nation, Kenya's most respected newspaper.
The feeling was similar Tuesday in Mexico, where many expressed frustration that neither Obama nor Republican nominee Mitt Romney addressed key cross-border issues such as bilateral trade, immigration, arms smuggling or the 60,000 Mexicans killed in drug violence.
"In the last debate between Obama and Romney, the candidates expressed regret for the 30,000 killed in the conflict in Syria. Not one word for the Mexican humanitarian tragedy in Mexico," Sergio Aguayo, a professor at the College of Mexico, said in an online debate forum called "El Palenque."
And in the Arab Middle East, there was a sense that the United States has been largely absent. For Egypt, "it does not matter much who wins," said Abdo Deif, a cashier at a Cairo supermarket. "With the state the country is in, there is no time to discuss the U.S. elections, not now when people are worried about water, bread and gas."
Libya may be an exception to the ambivalence. Despite a September attack in Benghazi that killed the U.S. ambassador and three other Americans, the United States has enjoyed greater popularity in Libya than elsewhere in the Middle East because of its role in supporting the country's revolution last year. "We are very interested in how this election goes," said Tarek Ali, a gold seller in Tripoli. "Personally, I love Obama."
In Europe, too, Obama was the overwhelming favorite, according to several polls, including one by the German Marshall Fund and another by GlobeScan/PIPA for the BBC.
In Germany, where more than 200,000 people turned out in Berlin to support Obama during his 2008 campaign, even many right-wing politicians privately said they were hoping that he wins reelection.
But Germans have seen many of their hopes turn to disappointment as Obama pivoted to the Asia-Pacific in a search for new business partners. Now the United States is seen by Germans as a fading superpower, and many expect that the United States will continue its global retreat.
One place where the view of Obama has been more sharply conflicted is Israel, where many fear a second Obama term would lead to tension over Iran and more pressure to reach a peace deal with the Palestinians.
In Afghanistan, Obama is disliked for having escalated the war, but many Afghans also fear the consequences of his decision to withdraw U.S. troops by the end of 2014, which could lead to a collapse of the Kabul government.
Obama has taken tough trade actions against China, including filing a complaint in September with the World Trade Organization over Beijing's subsidies for exported car parts and an earlier 2009 anti-dumping complaint over Chinese tires.
But Chinese academics and others view the moves as attempts to win over voters in the crucial swing state of Ohio and predicted that a less aggressive strategy would prevail once the election had passed.
Richburg reported from Beijing. Sudarsan Raghavan in Nairobi, William Booth in Mexico City, Abigail Hauslohner in Tripoli, Pamela Constable in Kabul, Edward Cody in Paris, Ingy Hassieb in Cairo, Joel Greenberg in Jerusalem and Michael Birnbaum in Berlin contributed to this report.
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