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President Bush's re-election campaign has a certain Perils of Pauline aspect. Just as the job-creation situation showed signs of improving, Iraq suddenly turned worse. A month or two from now, we could see things in Iraq get better but see the jobs situation turn south again.

For now, Iraq seems to be Bush's bigger problem. Since mid-March, we've seen the casualty rate and the atrocities committed against Americans and our allies increase dramatically. As horrendous as the desecration of the bodies of the four American contractors in Falluja was, the death of a coalition soldier from El Salvador, whom the Iraqi resistance reportedly killed by putting a live hand grenade in his mouth, was perhaps even more horrible.

At this point, polls show that most Americans still basically back the war but have real misgivings about how it's being conducted. The April 1-4 national survey of 790 adults by Princeton Survey Research for the Pew Research Center indicated that 57 percent of Americans still think that the "U.S. made the right decision" in using military force against Iraq. Those results are consistent with three earlier Pew polls taken since early February.


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As of the April 1-4 survey, which came after the murders in Falluja, most Americans still thought that the U.S. military effort in Iraq was going well -- 14 percent said "very well," 43 percent said "fairly well," 26 percent said "not too well," and 13 percent said "not at all well." The optimists were 57 percent of the total, the same percentage as those who thought going to war was the "right decision." The obvious question is whether U.S. support for the war will drop if news remains bad.

Already, the Pew poll is finding widespread dissatisfaction. Although 50 percent of Americans say the "U.S. should keep military troops in Iraq until a stable government is established there," that level of support is down from the 63 percent of early January. Now, 44 percent say the troops should come home "as soon as possible." That's up from 32 percent in January.

Asked whether "Bush has a clear plan for bringing the situation in Iraq to a successful conclusion," only 32 percent said yes, down from 44 percent in December. Fifty-seven percent say Bush does not have a clear plan, up from 45 percent.

And asked "Which concerns you more, that the U.S. will leave Iraq before a stable democracy is in place, or that the U.S. will wait too long to withdraw its troops from Iraq," only 36 percent worried that the troops will be withdrawn before the job is done. But 52 percent were concerned that the United States will wait too long.

Experts on foreign policy and intelligence express grave concern that if the June 30 handover of control to the Iraqis by the U.S.-led coalition takes place on schedule, the United States could find itself in the middle of a religious civil war among the Shiites, Sunnis, and Kurds. The experts also worry that even if a civil war doesn't happen, a unified Iraqi uprising against the United States and the coalition is possible, and the United States and Bush may well be in a no-win situation.

In this murky situation, two things are clear. First, there will be a presidential election in the United States on November 2 -- probably a very, very close one. Second, the situation in Iraq is not improving; the charge that "things are really better than the media are portraying them" has become laughable.

The moment of truth for Bush will come this fall, when MoveOn.org and the other 527s supporting presumptive Democratic nominee John Kerry launch a wave of advertising that replays tapes of the 2002 and early-2003 claims by Bush, Vice President Cheney, and other leading administration officials who pushed the country into war. Many of their justifications don't really stand up today.

Because Sen. Kerry voted to authorize Bush to use force against Iraq, he is in no real position to question having gone to war. "Independent" groups will certainly do the job for him, and it's not likely to be a pretty sight. One big unknown is what will happen in Iraq in the meantime. If we knew that, we'd likely have a good idea about how receptive the American public will be to charges that Bush led the country astray.

COMMENTS

  • Have you noticed that no one else is following us? In fact Spain, El Salvador and the Dominican Republic are going home! The USA has stopped rebuilding facilities and the United Nations will not go near the place! France and Germany said we were wrong from the start and have not changed their position. This is how Hitler took over control of Germany - he invaded other countries, told the Germans that the security needs dictated a Patriot Act type of unconstitutional search and established a government group of "protectors" for homeland security. The USA has given up more freedom than it is protecting. God may be speaking to George the Third but the voice is coming from the bottom of the bottle.
  • Like the first King George this one will get his. Fortunately it will be through the ballot box. He's right when he states that we are not an imperial nation. The contradiction to that statement is Iraq. We as an electorate can not let him get away with this oxymoron. He got what he wanted all along - Saddam's gone. Not one more life needs to be shed and he shall be held accountable at the polls.
  • And how do you propose to eradicate all those "crazed radicals"? It was interesting that at an American news conference run by the military one Iraqi stood up and said we are all Mahdi army. I heard President Bush at his press conference say that America's God given destiny is to change the world by bringing everyone democracy. And if the Iraqi's choose not to be forced by America into adopting democracy, I guess the President would say tough- God requires them to adopt it. Do you know how crazy that sounds? I hate to say this, but it is not a small group of fanatical religious crazies that are attacking us -- And as we apply more pressure this group will grow. If there is nothing else that the Israeli Palastinian conflict teaches it is that the hammer only radicalizes people. It was true during the American Revolution when the British committed one atrocity after another -- just as it is true in Iraq. Our mission is over. Saddam Hussein is in some prison somewhere and his administration is destroyed. He has been eliminated as a threat to his neighbors. It is time to come home and let the Iraqis sort out this mess on their own with UN assistance. Our help will only destabilize the situation further. And if the Iraqi's decide to have a civil war between the factions -- that is their business. We are not the police of the world. The longer we stay in Iraq the more we will be seen as an aggressive occupier and I don't think most Americans are interested in becoming a Colonial power again as in Puerto Rico, Guam, American Somoa and the Phillipines.