Skepticism grows
among US voters By Jim Lobe
WASHINGTON - Popular doubts about United States
President George W Bush's credibility and his
justification for going to war in Iraq are on the rise,
according to a new survey conducted by the University of
Maryland's Program on International Policy Attitudes
(PIPA).
The survey of a random sample of
more than 1,000 voters, which echoes the results of
other recent national polls, found that 55 percent of
respondents believed that the administration went to war
on the basis of incorrect assumptions, particularly the
notion that Iraq posed an imminent threat to the US or
its allies.
And despite subsequent denials by
senior administration officials, an overwhelming 87
percent of the public felt that the administration
before the war portrayed Iraq as an imminent threat.
While 42 percent believed that the administration did
have the evidence to justify such a depiction, a strong
majority of 58 percent said that it did not.
This disparity, according to PIPA, which
conducted the survey between October 31 and November 10,
has translated into major questions about the
president's personal veracity and credibility. Only 42
percent of those polled said that they believed that
Bush was "honest and frank", while 56 percent said they
had doubts about the things he says.
Moreover,
72 percent (up from 63 percent in July) said that when
the administration presented evidence of Iraqi weapons
of mass destruction (WMD) - one of its two major pre-war
reasons for attacking Iraq - it was either presenting
evidence it knew was false (21 percent) or "stretching
the truth" (51 percent), according to the survey. That
represents a sharp rise in public skepticism about the
war's justifications from five months ago.
Last
June, 39 percent of respondents said they thought the
administration was being truthful in its pre-war
assertions about the threat posed by Baghdad. That
percentage has now fallen to 25 percent. And the 21
percent who now believe the administration was, in
effect, lying in its claims about Iraqi WMD is more than
double the 10 percent who told pollsters that five
months ago.
These changes are particularly
significant for Bush's re-election prospects, according
to PIPA's director, Stephen Kull, who noted that trust
in the credibility of candidates is one of the most
reliable indicators of voting behavior in the US, even
higher than party affiliation.
Indeed, those who
said they believed the president was being truthful
about the pre-war situation were 11 times more likely to
say they intended to vote for Bush next year than those
who expressed doubts.
Kull also told the media
that the decline in Bush's credibility might be the
single most important factor in a sharp rise in the
number of voters who say the president's handling of
Iraq has made them less likely to vote for him in the
November 2004 presidential elections.
As
recently as two months ago, a plurality of 35 percent of
respondents said Bush's performance on Iraq would make
them more likely to vote for him, as opposed to 31
percent who said it would not affect their vote either
way, and 30 percent who said it would make them less
likely to back him.
While the same percentage of
voters (35 percent) insists his performance in Iraq will
still incline them to vote for Bush, 42 percent now say
they are less likely to vote for him for that reason.
"For the first time, the president's handling of Iraq
has shifted from a net positive to a net negative for
his electoral prospects," said Kull.
While the
increasingly violent resistance to the US occupation in
Iraq was a factor, he added, the fact that more people
believe the administration lied or was "stretching the
truth" about the reasons for going to war was the main
reason for the rise in the "less likely" category, he
added.
Echoing the findings of most pre-war
polls, which, until immediately before the war, showed
that majorities of the public favored giving the United
Nations arms experts more time and seeking more
international support before invading Iraq, the new
survey finds that Americans have returned to their
pre-war views.
A majority of 61 percent said the
administration should have taken more time to find out
whether Iraq did indeed have WMD, and 59 percent said
they should have taken more time to build international
support.
This contrasts strongly with opinions
during and in the immediate aftermath of the war.
In one Los Angeles Times poll taken April 2-3,
for example, two-thirds of respondents said Bush had
devoted enough time to international diplomacy and 73
percent said he had given arms inspectors ample time to
search for the weapons.
Significantly, most of
the public in the latest survey believed that Bush was
determined to go to war regardless of the actual
evidence. Sixty-three percent said the president would
have attacked even if US intelligence agencies had told
him there was no reliable evidence that Iraq possessed
or was building WMD or was providing substantial support
to al-Qaeda.
Despite all of these findings, only
38 percent of those polled believed that going to war
was the wrong thing to do. Forty-two percent said the
war was the best thing for the US and an additional 15
percent said they supported the war in order to support
the president, though they were not certain that war was
the best option.
Supporting these judgments was
the belief that, while Iraq might not have posed an
imminent threat on the order depicted by the
administration, most of the public still believed it had
a WMD program (71 percent) and was providing support to
al-Qaeda (67 percent), despite no evidence to support
these conclusions.
"The majority's views about
the decision to go to war are nuanced," said Kull. "It
believes there were legitimate concerns that prompted
the decision, while at the same time it believes the
threat was not imminent and the decision was taken
precipitously, without proper international support."
(Inter
Press Service)
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