BERLIN — Germans do not seem too friendly to Americans these days.
According to a recent Harvard Kennedy School study of global media, 98 percent of German public television news portrays President Trump negatively, making it by far the most anti-Trump media in the world.
Yet the disdain for America predates the election of Trump, who is roundly despised here for his unapologetic anti-European Union views.
In a 2015 Pew Research Center survey of European countries, Germany had the least favorable impression of America. Only about 50 percent of Germans expressed positive feelings toward former President Barack Obama, who visited here last week to lecture the world on diversity and tolerance. He never changed negative German attitudes much from the unpopular George W. Bush years.
Germans apparently do not appreciate that fellow NATO member America still subsidizes their defense. Nor do they seem appreciative of their huge trade surplus ($65 billion) with the United States.
Germans seem to have forgotten that U.S. troops for 45 years kept the Soviets from absorbing all of Germany. The Berlin Airlift is now premodern history.
But why do confident Germans increasingly dislike the U.S.?
It is complicated.