US should stay out of Syria
Last week, several polls came out assessing U.S. public opinion on
intervention in Syria.
According
to the Huffington Post poll, Americans oppose U.S. air strikes on Syria by
3-to-1. They oppose sending arms to the rebels by 4-to-1. They oppose
putting U.S. ground troops into Syria by 14-to-1. Democrats, Republicans
and independents are all against getting involved in that civil war that
has produced 1.2 million refugees and 70,000 dead.
A CBS/New York Times poll
found that by 62-to-24 Americans want to stay out of the Syrian war. A
Reuters/Ipsos poll found that by 61-to-10 Americans oppose any U.S.
intervention.
But the
numbers shift when the public is asked if it would make a difference if
the Syrian regime used poison gas. In that case, opposition to U.S.
intervention drops to 44-to-27 in Reuters/Ipsos.
Yet on
the Sunday talk shows and cable news, the hawks are over-represented. To
have a senator call for arming the rebels and U.S. air strikes is a better
ratings “get” than to have on a senator who wants to stay out of the war.
In that
same CBS poll, however, the 10 percent of all Americans who say they
follow the Syrian situation closely were evenly divided, 47-to-48, on
whether to intervene.
The
portrait of America that emerges is of a nation not overly interested in
what is going on in Syria, but which overwhelmingly wants to stay out of
the war.
But it
is also a nation whose foreign policy elites are far more interventionist
and far more supportive of sending weapons to the rebels and using U.S.
air power. From these polls, it is hard not to escape the conclusion that
the Beltway elites who shape U.S. foreign policy no longer represent the
manifest will of Middle America.


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