Approval of US-led war in Afghanistan falls to a new low
By ANIFriday, July 16, 2010
NEW YORK - A new ABC News/BBC/ARD poll has claimed that support for the war in Afghanistan has hit a new low and President Obama’s approval rating for handling it has declined sharply since spring.
The number of Americans who say the war in Afghanistan has been worth fighting has declined from 52 percent in December to 43 percent now.
Obama’s approval rating for handling it has gone down from 56 percent in April to 45 percent in July.
Just 42 percent say the war in Iraq has been worth fighting, essentially the same as for Afghanistan. But that’s arrived from the opposite direction, up 8 points in the past year to the most since 2006.
Seventy-one percent support removing all remaining U.S. combat troops from Iraq, scheduled to happen by the end of next month; fewer but still easily a majority, 60 percent, support keeping up to 50,000 non-combat troops there in a supporting role.
In Afghanistan, 45 percent call Obama’s plan to start withdrawing troops by next summer “about right,” but an additional 31 percent say it should start sooner.
The key question about these wars is whether they’ve achieved their fundamental goal - improving long-term U.S. security - and the lukewarm answers underscore their challenges winning broader support.
Fifty-three percent of Americans say the war in Afghanistan has improved the long-term security of the United States - a majority, but hardly an overpowering one. Fifty percent say the same about the war in Iraq. And many fewer - 25 percent in both cases - say these wars have done “a great deal” to contribute to long-term security, a weak result given their costs in lives and lucre.
Among people who say the Afghanistan war has improved U.S. security, 68 percent also say the war has been worth fighting. In Iraq, among those who see security gains, 72 percent say that war’s been worth it.
Among those who see no security gains, however, the sense that these wars have been worth fighting plummets to 14 percent in Afghanistan, 10 percent in Iraq.
This ABC News/Washington Post poll was conducted by telephone July 7-11, 2010, among a random national sample of 1,288 adults, including landline and cell-phone-only respondents.
Results for the full sample have a 3.5-point error margin. (ANI)