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		Fewer Republicans think their party has better plan for Syria, 'War on 
		Terror':
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		 [October 25, 2019] 
		By Chris Kahn 
 NEW YORK (Reuters) - When Terry Brien, 64, 
		reads about American troops pulling out of northern Syria, the 
		Republican data manager from Colorado seethes at “one of the biggest 
		mistakes that we’ve made in a very long time” in the Middle East.
 
 Brien, an Army and Air Force veteran, said the withdrawal, which opened 
		the way for a Turkish offensive that displaced thousands of people and 
		led to the escape of some Islamic State militants, contributed to his 
		recent lack of faith in his party’s ability to conduct foreign policy.
 
 It is a feeling that appears to be growing among the Republican rank and 
		file this year.
 
 According to an Oct. 18-22 Reuters/Ipsos public opinion poll, only about 
		half of all Republicans - 54% - said their party has a better plan than 
		Democrats, independents or others for dealing with Syria. That is down 
		12 points from a similar poll that ran in April.
 
 At the same time, 65% of Republicans said their party had the better 
		plan for managing the United States' so-called "War on Terror," down 10 
		points from the April poll.
 
		
		 
		
 President Donald Trump, who announced the withdrawal after a phone call 
		with Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan, has defended his decision as part 
		of an effort to draw down military operations overseas “where our great 
		Military functions as a policing operation to the benefit of people who 
		don’t even like the USA.”
 
 Yet the national online poll of 4,082 adults in the United States found 
		that 51% of all Americans felt that the country is better off “with U.S. 
		military forces stationed in the Middle East,” while 29% did not.
 
 More Americans seemed to want the United States to become involved in 
		international peacekeeping than several years ago. Thirty-five percent 
		of adults strongly agreed in the poll that “America is NOT the world’s 
		policeman.” That is down 12 points overall from a similar poll that ran 
		in 2013.
 
		The poll also showed that 75% of Republicans approved of the way that 
		Trump was dealing with the Islamic State (ISIS), which is down by about 
		8 points from April.
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			Turkish and U.S. troops meet on the Turkish-Syrian border for a 
			joint U.S.-Turkey patrol in northern Syria, as it is pictured from 
			near the Turkish town of Akcakale, Turkey, September 8, 2019. 
			REUTERS/Murad Sezer/File Photo 
            
 
            The Trump administration did not return a request for comment on the 
			Reuters/Ipsos poll.
 Brien, who took the poll, said his criticism of the Republican 
			Party's ability to conduct foreign policy is grounded in his general 
			disapproval of Trump. Unlike former Republican Presidents Ronald 
			Reagan and George H.W. Bush, Brien said he thinks Trump simply lacks 
			the personal skills needed to work with America’s global neighbors 
			to achieve common goals.
 
 “Trump just seems to be out of his depth and out of touch on 
			everything," Brien said. "He doesn’t seem to understand why he 
			shouldn’t try to make money off his position of president."
 
 When the poll asked which political party has a better plan for 
			handling the "War on Terror," Brien answered “none.”
 
 Ann Dahlheim, 67, a Republican who lives outside of Washington D.C., 
			said she thought independents were better than anyone right now at 
			leading the country.
 
 “Republicans and Democrats can’t agree on anything, much to my 
			disgust,” Dahlheim said. “We need some fresh new ideas.”
 
 The Reuters/Ipsos poll was conducted online, in English, throughout 
			the United States. It has a credibility interval, a measure of 
			precision, of about 3 percentage points.
 
 (Reporting by Chris Kahn; Editing by Dan Grebler)
 
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