The latest polling coming out of the United States on the war with Iran should be a wake-up call to anyone paying attention. This is not a divided country cautiously debating foreign policy. This is an overwhelming rejection. The people do not want this war, and the data is not even close.
A new CNN poll shows that 66 percent of Americans disapprove of the war, with just 33 percent approving. Even worse, only about one-third believe there is any clear plan behind the conflict. At the same time, a Reuters/Ipsos poll found that 66 percent of Americans want the war ended immediately, even if objectives are not achieved. Only 27 percent support continuing the conflict. When two-thirds of the population is willing to walk away from a war unfinished, that tells you everything about public sentiment.
Another survey shows that 60 percent of Americans disapprove of the military strikes themselves, confirming that opposition is not just about execution but about the decision to go to war in the first place. Pew Research similarly found that 61 percent disapprove of how the conflict is being handled and 59 percent say the decision to use force was wrong.
Only 14 percent support sending ground troops, while 62 percent oppose it outright. Another poll shows just 7 percent support a large-scale ground war. Meanwhile, 68 percent oppose deploying troops entirely.
Step back and look at the pattern. Across CNN, Reuters/Ipsos, Pew, YouGov, and others, the conclusion is identical. Most Americans oppose the war. Most Americans oppose escalation. Most Americans want it to end immediately. This is not a partisan divide. Even within political bases, support is fractured.
Wars are rarely supported when they begin until they are framed as necessary. But when the public senses there is no clear objective, no defined end, confidence collapses. You cannot wage war abroad while losing the support of your population at home. That is how empires overextend and ultimately fail.
