The vast majority of
Americans—some 72 percent,
according to an NBC/Wall Street Journal poll conducted in late
September—say they believe that the United States will end up using
ground troops to combat ISIS in Iraq.
In other words, they don’t believe the multiple explicit
promises that President Obama has made to the contrary since he
first announced the start of this conflict in August.
When Obama says things like, “as Commander-in-Chief, I will not
allow the United States to be dragged into fighting another war in
Iraq,” most people aren’t buying it.
Why would they? The mission has already
expanded far beyond the narrow boundaries that Obama explained
when he made his first speech in August; what was once a series of
limited strikes to support a humanitarian crusade on a single
mountain is now
a multi-year effort to wage war against an enemy in two
different countries. The administration keeps insisting that this
war involving hundreds of airstrikes is somehow
not a combat mission. And the official legal justification for
the engagement is dubious at best and likely illegal.
And, oh yeah, we’re shipping an infantry division over to Iraq.
Next month, the 1st Infantry Division is setting up headquarters in
Iraq as part of the military operation against ISIS. According
to the Army Times, it will be the first division
headquarters to go to Iraq since the U.S. withdrawal in 2011.
So of course most Americans don’t believe America’s promises on
ground troops in Iraq. He’s given them no reason to.
from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2014/09/29/the-vast-majority-of-americans-believe-w
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