Poll: More Troops Unhappy With Bush's Course in Iraq
By Robert Hodierne
Military Times
Friday 29 December 2006
The American military - once a staunch supporter of President
Bush and the Iraq war - has grown increasingly pessimistic
about chances for victory, according to the 2006 Military
Times Poll.
For the first time, more troops disapprove of the president's
handling of the war than approve of it. Barely one-third of
service members approve of the way the president is handling
the war.
When the military was feeling most optimistic about the war,
in 2004, 83 percent of poll respondents 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 slightly 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 approval of the president's war leadership
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.
Professor David Segal, director of the Center for Research
on Military Organization at the University of Maryland, was
not surprised by the changing attitude within the military.
"They're seeing more casualties and fatalities and less
progress," Segal said.
He added, "Part of what we're seeing is a recognition
that the intelligence that led to the war was wrong."
Whatever war plan the president comes up with later this
month, it likely will have the replacement of American troops
with Iraqis as its ultimate goal. The military is not optimistic
that will happen soon. Only about one in five service members
said that large numbers of American troops can be replaced
within the next two years. More than one-third think it will
take more than five years. And more than half think the U.S.
will have to stay in Iraq more than five years to achieve
its goals.
Almost half of those responding think we need more troops
in Iraq than we have there now. A surprising 13 percent said
we should have no troops there. As for Afghanistan force levels,
39 percent think we need more troops there. But while they
want more troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, nearly three-quarters
of the respondents think today's military is stretched too
thin to be effective.
The mail survey, conducted Nov. 13 through Dec. 22, is the
fourth annual gauge of active-duty military subscribers to
the Military Times newspapers. The results should not be read
as representative of the military as a whole; the survey's
respondents are on average older, more experienced, more likely
to be officers and more career-oriented than the overall military
population.
Among the respondents, 66 percent have deployed at least
once to Iraq or Afghanistan. In the overall active-duty force,
according to the Department of Defense, that number is 72
percent.
The poll has come to be viewed by some as a barometer of
the professional career military. It is the only independent
poll done on an annual basis. The margin of error on this
year's poll is plus or minus 3 percentage points.
While approval of Bush?s handling of the war has plunged,
approval for his overall performance as president remains
high at 52 percent. While that is down from his high of 71
percent in 2004, it is still far above the approval ratings
of the general population, where that number has fallen into
the 30s.
While Bush fared well overall, his political party didn?t.
In the three previous polls, nearly 60 percent of the respondents
identified themselves as Republicans, which is about double
the population as a whole. But in this year's poll, only 46
percent of the military respondents said they were Republicans.
However, there was not a big gain in those identifying themselves
as Democrats, a figure that consistently hovers around 16
percent. The big gain came among people who said they were
independents.
Similarly, when asked to describe their political views on
a scale from very conservative to very liberal, there was
a slight shift from the conservative end of the spectrum to
the middle or moderate range. Liberals within the military
are still a rare breed, with less than 10 percent of respondents
describing themselves that way.
Seeing media bias
Segal was not surprised that the military support for the
war and the president's handling of it had slumped. He said
he believes that military opinion often mirrors that of the
civilian population, even though it might lag in time. He
added, "[The military] will always be more pro-military
and pro-war than the civilians. That's why they are in this
line of work."
The poll asked, "How do you think each of these groups
view the military?" Respondents overwhelmingly said civilians
have a favorable impression of the military (86 percent).
They even thought politicians look favorably on the military
(57 percent). But they are convinced the media hate them,
only 39 percent of military respondents said they think the
media have a favorable view of the troops.
The poll also asked if the senior military leadership, President
Bush, civilian military leadership and Congress have their
best interests at heart.
Almost two-thirds (63 percent) of those surveyed said the
senior military leadership has the best interests of the troops
at heart. And though they don't think much of the way he's
handling the war, 48 percent said the same about President
Bush. But they take a dim view of civilian military leadership,
only 32 percent said they think it has their best interests
at heart. And only 23 percent think Congress is looking out
for them.
Despite concerns early in the war about equipment shortages,
58 percent said they believe they are supplied with the best
possible weapons and equipment.
While President Bush always portrays the war in Iraq as part
of the larger war on terrorism, many in the military are not
convinced. The respondents were split evenly, 47 percent both
ways, on whether the Iraq war is part of the war on terrorism.
The rest had no opinion.
On many questions in the poll, some respondents said they
didn't have an opinion or declined to answer. That number
was typically in the 10 percent range.
But on questions about the president and on war strategy,
that number reached 20 percent and higher. Segal said he was
surprised the percentage refusing to offer an opinion wasn't
larger.
"There is a strong strain in military culture not to
criticize the commander in chief," he said.
One contentious area of military life in the past year has
been the role religion should play. Some troops have complained
that they feel pressure to attend religious services. Others
have complained that chaplains and superior officers have
tried to convert them. Half of the poll respondents said that
at least once a month, they attend official military gatherings,
other than meals and chapel services, that began with a prayer.
But 80 percent said they feel free to practice and express
their religion within the military.

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