BERLIN — The British were offended, the Palestinians accused him of racism and even in friendlier Poland, Mitt Romney's union policies drew criticism from the current leaders of the movement that toppled Communism. Romney's visit to Britain, Israel and Poland was never expected to produce the same media frenzy as then-candidate Barack Obama's extravagant, eight-country tour of 2008. Obama received rock star treatment from international media and world leaders as he traveled from the battlefields of Iraq and Afghanistan to the glittering chancelleries of Europe. Nevertheless, comparisons were inevitable and much of it was less than favorable to the presumptive Republican presidential nominee. “The designated Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney wanted to demonstrate foreign policy expertise and diplomatic skills with his trip to Britain, Israel and Poland,” the Swiss newspaper Tages-Zeitung said Tuesday. “Today, on the last day of the tour, he must be made to admit that he clearly missed this target.” Romney supporters insisted that much of the criticism was unfair and overblown, especially in countries of Europe where the political culture tends to be left of contemporary America. The contrast between the two candidates' foreign tours has been striking. In 2008, more than 200,000 people turned out in Berlin to hear Obama speak of a world without nuclear weapons and promise to counter climate change. French President Nicolas Sarkozy lavishly praised “my dear Barack Obama.” David Cameron, then the head of Britain's opposition Conservative Party, made sure British and American television cameras recorded him with Obama in three separate locations in less than an hour. Fast forward four years to what Germany's Spiegel Online news website described as Romney's “tour of gaffes.” It all started in London, where Romney described some of the problems facing Olympic organizers as “disconcerting,” unwelcome comments from a foreigner that unleashed a media firestorm in Britain. Cameron, now the prime minister, fired back that “it's easier if you hold an Olympic Games in the middle of nowhere,” though aides insisted the prime minister wasn't referring to Salt Lake City, where the GOP nominee ran the 2002 Winter Games. The Daily Mail newspaper quoted anonymous British officials as saying Romney's visit was “a total car crash” and that the likely GOP standard bearer was “worse than Sarah Palin.” “The striking comparison here is with George W. Bush,” the London newspaper The Independent fumed. “Even the bumbling, gaffe-prone Dubya appears diplomatically agile next to the supposedly urbane Mr. Romney.” Although Romney's reception in Israel was warmer, he nonetheless stirred up a storm by dismissing Palestinian claims to Jerusalem and implying that their culture — and not Israeli military occupation — was responsible for the economic gap between Israelis and Palestinians. “Yesterday, he destroyed negotiations by saying Jerusalem is the capital of Israel, and today he is saying Israeli culture is more advanced than Palestinian culture,” fumed a top Palestinian official Saeb Erekat. “Isn't this racism?” Things went better for Romney in Poland, where Obama is widely unpopular because of his administration's efforts to improve relations with Russia — a country many Poles view with deep suspicion. On the other hand, Romney has branded Russia the “No. 1 geopolitical foe” — language that pleases many Poles and reminds them of Ronald Reagan whom many of them revere for helping to bring down Communism. Ex-president Lech Walesa, former leader of the Solidarity labor movement that helped end Communist rule, has never forgiven Obama for perceived snubs, including the US president's refusal last year to receive him privately during a presidential visit to Poland. Walesa effectively endorsed Romney when they met Monday in Gdansk, where the Solidarity movement was born in 1980. The current leaders of the movement, however, distanced themselves from the Romney visit, citing the candidate's “attacks against trade unions and labor rights.” — AP