º£½Ç´óÉñ

This page is rendered using the default Netgen Site API pagelayout template.

This block is rendered using the default Netgen Site API full view template.

People are war weary

ID
727021
Location ID
742391
Current version
15
Content type
csm_list_article_item

Fields

1. Headline
ID
16904117
Field definition ID
1319
Identifier
headline
Field type identifier
ezstring
Description
[empty]
Contents

People are war weary
2. SEO Title
ID
23239791
Field definition ID
1800
Identifier
seo_title
Field type identifier
ezstring
Description
[empty]
Contents
[empty]
3. Body
ID
16904119
Field definition ID
1320
Identifier
body
Field type identifier
ezxmltext
Description
[empty]
Contents

A decade of war in Afghanistan and Iraq has taken a toll on American support for military ventures – and on the public's confidence that US airstrikes can make the situation in Syria better.

While robust majorities initially supported the US intervention in Afghanistan (82 percent) and Iraq (59 percent), only 36 percent favor the US taking military action to reduce Syria's ability to use chemical weapons, according to

More than 2 in 3 Americans, on average, approved of previous US military engagements over the last 20 years, at the outset of the conflict. Syria ranks the lowest. "After more than a decade of conflict in Afghanistan and Iraq, war fatigue may be lingering," the Gallup poll concluded.

Other recent polls show even starker opposition. Just 29 percent of Americans in favor airstrikes in Syria, with 48 percent opposed. Nearly three-quarters of those polled say US airstrikes are likely to stir a backlash against the United States and its allies in the region, and 61 percent say they are likely to lead to a long-term US military commitment in Syria.

"Americans have heard it before – that we'll be in and out quick," says Michael Dimock, director of the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press, commenting on the poll. "You could call it war weariness or just a lack of faith in this kind of promise. There's also a related sense that our efforts overseas have not been effective ... or done more harm than good."

To many Americans, the prospect of yet another war in the Middle East – or anywhere, for that matter – is a bridge too far. In June, only 28 percent of Americans said that the Afghan war had been worth fighting, according to an ABC/Washington post poll. The shorthand for all that negativity on war is "war weary."

Six in 10 Americans oppose missile strikes against Syria, even if it's clear that the Assad regime used chemical weapons against its own people, according to  released Sept. 3. That opposition is deep and robust: It extends across party lines, regions, age groups, income, and education levels, the survey showed. Fifty-four percent of Democrats oppose missile strikes, as do 55 percent of Republicans and 66 percent of Independents.


4. Media (Image or video)
ID
16904121
Field definition ID
1321
Identifier
media
Field type identifier
ezobjectrelationlist
Description
[empty]
Contents


5. Related links
ID
16904125
Field definition ID
1323
Identifier
related_external_links
Field type identifier
ezmatrix
Description
NOTE: Related links will show only on the last list item in the list. Do not add related links to other list items.
Contents
[empty]
6. Bottom Blue Box (former Info box & Fact box)
ID
16904129
Field definition ID
1325
Identifier
sidebar_info_box
Field type identifier
ezxmltext
Description
The contents will be displayed just below the page navigation button.
Contents
[empty]
7. Page URL name
ID
16904131
Field definition ID
1326
Identifier
page_url_name
Field type identifier
ezstring
Description
[empty]
Contents
[empty]
8. Page Title
ID
16904133
Field definition ID
1328
Identifier
page_title
Field type identifier
ezstring
Description
[empty]
Contents
[empty]
9. Metadata
ID
16904135
Field definition ID
1415
Identifier
metadata
Field type identifier
ezmatrix
Description
[empty]
Contents
[empty]