Poll: More troops unhappy
with Bush’s course in Iraq
The American military —
once a staunch supporter of
President Bush and the
Iraq war — has grown in
creasingly pessimistic about
chances for victory.
For the first time, more troops
disapprove of the president’s han
dling of the war than approve of
it. Barely one-third of service
members approve of the way the
president is handling the war, ac
cording to the 2006 Military
Times Poll.
When the military was feeling
most optimistic about the war —
in 2004 — 83 percent of poll re
spondents thought success in Iraq
was likely. This year, that number
has shrunk to 50 percent.
Only 35 percent of the military
members polled this year said
they approve of the way President
Bush is handling the war, while
42 percent said they disapproved.
The president’s approval rating
among the military is only slight
ly higher than for the population
as a whole. In 2004, when his
popularity peaked, 63 percent of
the military approved of Bush’s
handling of the war. While ap
proval of the president’s war lead
ership has slumped, his overall
approval remains high among the
military.
Just as telling, in this year’s poll
only 41 percent of the military
said the U.S. should have gone to
war in Iraq in the first place,
down from 65 percent in 2003.
That closely reflects the beliefs of
the general population today —
45 percent agreed in a recent USA
Today/Gallup poll.