Most Americans want more diplomacy, many want fewer troops abroad
-survey
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[September 29, 2021]
By Arshad Mohammed
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A majority of
Americans want more U.S. diplomatic engagement and a plurality want
fewer U.S. troops stationed abroad, according to a survey taken as the
chaotic U.S. evacuation of Afghanistan took place.
The survey, reviewed by Reuters on Tuesday, was designed by the
nonprofit, nonpartisan Eurasia Group Foundation and conducted Aug.
27-Sept. 1. It found that 58.3% believe the United States should engage
more in negotiations on issues such as climate change, human rights and
migration.
It also found 21.6% believe the United States should engage less, while
20.1% had no opinion.
Of the 2,168 surveyed, 42.3% believe the United States should cut the
number of troops in Europe, Asia and the Middle East, reduce its
commitments to defend countries there and gradually shift regional
security responsibility to allies.
The poll, which Reuters reviewed prior to its Wednesday release, found
32.2% believed the United States should either maintain or boost its
troops abroad, while 25.5% had no opinion.
The last U.S. soldier left Afghanistan on Aug. 30, ending the nearly
20-year U.S. military involvement sparked by the goal of toppling the
Taliban rulers who sheltered the al Qaeda group blamed for the Sept. 11,
2001 attacks on the United States.
Eurasia Group Foundation senior fellow Mark Hannah said the number of
Americans who believe U.S. foreign policy should be more concerned about
building democracy at home than abroad increased substantially over the
last two years, saying this may reflect the survey occurring as U.S.
troops left Afghanistan.
"We collected our data at a time period when the U.S. was evacuating
from Afghanistan and the failures of nation-building and
democracy-promotion through military means were spectacular and quite
stark," he added. "That might explain this uptick and a desire to do
democracy promotion at home this year."
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A U.S. soldier of 2-12 Infantry 4BCT-4ID Task Force Mountain Warrior
takes a break during a night mission near Honaker Miracle camp at
the Pesh valley of Kunar Province, Afghanistan, August 12, 2009.
REUTERS/Carlos Barria
The survey also found that:
- 40.3% or respondents want to maintain current U.S. military
spending, while 38.6% want to cut it and 16.4% want to increase it;
- 62.6% support reviving nuclear talks with Iran and seeking an
agreement that prevents its development of nuclear weapons, while
37.4% oppose talks and favor pressuring Iran with economic sanctions
to keep it from obtaining such arms;
- 42.2% believe the U.S. military should defend Taiwan if it were
attacked by China, 16.2% believe it should not, and 41.6% were
unsure.
The Eurasia Group Foundation, which designed the online survey
carried out by SurveyMonkey, said it is legally separate from the
Eurasia Group political risk consultancy. Both were founded by
political scientist Ian Bremmer.
The survey had a plus or minus 2 percentage point margin of error,
at a 95% confidence level, which the group described as typical for
an adult population of 258.3 million.
(Reporting by Arshad Mohammed in Washington and by Michelle Nichols
at the United Nations; Editing by Dan Grebler)
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