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Resistance See other Resistance Articles Title: Veterans Reach Their Tipping Point Against Our Post-9/11 Wars An important new consensus is forming against Americas endless wars, shaped by an important constituency: the military veterans who have sacrificed so much to fight them. A Pew Research poll of veterans released contained results that contradict the cherished talking points of the bipartisan Washington foreign policy blob that sees leadership and engagement as being synonymous with bombing and regime change. Sixty-four percent of veterans said the war in Iraq was not worth fighting when the costs to America are weighed against the ostensible benefits to the region and our national security. Just 33 percent concluded that George W. Bushs Baghdad democracy adventure was worthwhile in retrospect. Thats not much different than the prevailing view among the American public, where 62 percent said the Iraq war wasnt worth it versus 32 percent who still think it should have been fought. Perhaps more surprisingly, 58 percent of veterans believe the Afghanistan warnow Americas longest, despite two consecutive presidents of both parties advocating retrenchmentwasnt worth fighting. Thats only a point behind the 59 percent of Americans as a whole who say the same. Veterans who served in either Iraq or Afghanistan are no more supportive of those engagements than those who did not serve in these wars, write Pews Ruth Igielnik and Kim Parker. And views do not differ based on rank or combat experience..... Poster Comment: Thank Ada for this one. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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