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UAE - Why Iraq War Support Fell So Fast - American Isolationism Could Be A New Trend.


The three most significant US wars since 1945 - Korea, Vietnam, and now Iraq - share an important trait: As casualties mounted, American public support declined. In the two Asian wars, that decline proved irreversible.

With Iraq, the additional bad news for President George W. Bush is that support for the war in Iraq has eroded more quickly than it did in those two conflicts. For Bush, low support for his handling of the war - now at 35%, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the latest Gallup poll Gallup Poll
Noun

a sampling of the views of a representative cross section of the population, usually used to forecast voting [after G H Gallup, statistician]

Gallup poll n
 - has depleted de·plete  
tr.v. de·plet·ed, de·plet·ing, de·pletes
To decrease the fullness of; use up or empty out.



[Latin d
 any reserves of "political capital" he had from his re-election in November 2004 and threatens his entire agenda.

Recent bombshell political developments, both a bipartisan Senate resolution calling for more progress reports on Iraq and the stunning call for withdrawal by a Democratic hawk, Rep. John Murtha of Pennsylvania, have not helped. But the seeds of Bush's woes were planted early on.

Just seven months into the Iraq war, Gallup found that the percentage of Americans who viewed the sending of troops as a mistake had jumped substantially - from 25% in March 2003 to 40% in October 2003. In June 2004, for the first time, 54% thought the US had made a mistake, a figure which holds today.

With Vietnam, that 50% threshold was not crossed until August 1968, several years in. With Korea, it was March 1952, about a year and a half into US involvement. Why did Americans go sour on the Iraq war so quickly, and what can Bush do about it?

John Mueller, an expert on war and public opinion at Ohio State University Ohio State University, main campus at Columbus; land-grant and state supported; coeducational; chartered 1870, opened 1873 as Ohio Agricultural and Mechanical College, renamed 1878. There are also campuses at Lima, Mansfield, Marion, and Newark. , links today's lower tolerance of casualties to a weaker public commitment to the cause than was felt during the two previous conflicts of the Cold War ear. The discounting of the main justifications for the Iraq war - alleged WMD WMD

white muscle disease.
 and support for international terrorism - has left many Americans sceptical of the entire enterprise.

In fact, "I'm impressed by how high support still is", Prof. Mueller says. He notes that some Americans' continuing connection of the Iraq war to the war on terror This article is about U.S. actions, and those of other states, after September 11, 2001. For other conflicts, see Terrorism.

The War on Terror (also known as the War on Terrorism
 is fuelling that support. In addition, intense political polarisation gives Bush resilient support among Republicans. But among Democratic voters who supported the US-led invasion initially, most have long abandoned the president.

In polls, independent voters now track mostly with Democrats. And, analysts say, once someone loses confidence in the conduct of a war, it is exceedingly difficult to woo them back. "[Bush's] best option is bringing peace and security to Iraq", says Darrell West, a political scientist at Brown University. West says: "If he can accomplish that, people will think the war's going well and that he made the right decision. But that's proving almost impossible to achieve".

Pollster poll·ster  
n.
One that takes public-opinion surveys. Also called polltaker.

Word History: The suffix -ster is nowadays most familiar in words like pollster, jokester, huckster,
 Daniel Yankelovich, writing in the September/October 2005 issue of Foreign Affairs magazine, states that "in my judgment the Bush administration has about a year before the public's impatience will force it to change course".

Not helping the president has been the modern phenomenon of 24/7 cable news coverage, which brings instant magnification to the daily death toll and the long-standing media practice of focusing on negative developments. And there is the lingering public memory of Vietnam itself, which, in the Iraq war, may have made the public warier sooner of getting stuck in a quagmire.

Scholars like Mueller at Ohio State speak of an emerging "Iraq syndrome" which will have consequences for US foreign policy long after American forces pull out - particularly in Washington's ability to deal forcefully with other states it views as threatening, such as North Korea and Iran.

"Iraq syndrome" seems to be playing out, too, with the American public. The just-released quadrennial quad·ren·ni·al  
adj.
1. Happening once in four years.

2. Lasting for four years.



quad·renni·al n.
 survey of American attitudes towards foreign policy - produced jointly by the Pew Research Centre and the Council on Foreign Relations The Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) is an influential and independent, nonpartisan foreign policy membership organization founded in 1921 and based at 58 East 68th Street (corner Park Avenue) in New York City, with an additional office in Washington, D.C.  - shows a revival of isolationism isolationism

National policy of avoiding political or economic entanglements with other countries. Isolationism has been a recurrent theme in U.S. history. It was given expression in the Farewell Address of Pres.
. Now, 42% of Americans say the US should "mind its own business internationally and let other countries get along the best they can on their own" - up from 30% in 2002.

According to Pew Research Centre director Andrew Kohut, that 42% figure is also similar to how the US public felt in the mid-1970s, at the end of the Vietnam War Vietnam War, conflict in Southeast Asia, primarily fought in South Vietnam between government forces aided by the United States and guerrilla forces aided by North Vietnam. , and in the 1990s, at the end of the Cold War.
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Publication:APS Diplomat Fate of the Arabian Peninsula
Geographic Code:7IRAQ
Date:Nov 28, 2005
Words:708
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