Three out of four self-described supporters of
President George W. Bush still believe pre-war Iraq had weapons of mass destruction
(WMD) or active programs to produce them, and that Iraqi President Saddam Hussein
gave "substantial support" to al-Qaeda terrorists, according
to a survey released Thursday.
Moreover, as many or more Bush supporters hold those beliefs today than they
did several months ago, before the publication of a series of well-publicized
official government reports that debunked both notions.
Those are among the most striking findings of the survey, which was conducted
in mid-October by the University of Maryland's Program on International Policy
Attitudes (PIPA) and Knowledge Networks, a California-based polling firm.
The survey, which polled the views of nearly 900 randomly chosen respondents
equally divided between Bush supporters and those intending to vote for Democratic
Senator John Kerry in November's presidential election, found a yawning gap
in the worldviews, particularly as regards pre-war Iraq, between the two groups.
"It is normal during elections for supporters of presidential candidates
to have fundamental disagreements about values or strategies," said an
analysis produced by PIPA.
But "the current election is unique in that Bush supporters and Kerry
supporters have profoundly different perceptions of reality. In the face of
a stream of high-level assessments about prewar Iraq, Bush supporters cling
to the refuted beliefs that Iraq had WMD or supported al-Qaeda."
Indeed, the only issue on which the survey found broad agreement between the
two sets of voters was on the question of whether the administration itself
actively propagated the misconceptions about Iraq's WMD and connections to al-Qaeda.
"One of the reasons that Bush supporters have these [erroneous] beliefs
is that they perceive the Bush administration confirming them," noted PIPA
Director Steven Kull. "Interestingly, this is one point on which Bush and
Kerry supporters agree."
The survey also found a major gap between Bush's stated positions on a number
of international issues and what his supporters believe that position to be.
A strong majority of Bush backers believe, for example, that the president supports
a range of global treaties and institutions, which he is actually on record
as opposing.
On pre-war Iraq, the survey asked each respondent questions about WMD and links
to al-Qaeda on three levels: 1) what the respondents themselves believed about
the two issues; 2) what they believed "most experts" had concluded
about them; and 3) what they believed the Bush administration was saying about
them.
The survey found 72 percent of Bush supporters believe either that Iraq had
actual WMD (47 percent) or a major program for making them (25 percent), despite
the widespread media coverage in early October of the Central Intelligence Agency
(CIA's) Duelfer Report, the final word on the subject by the $1 billion, 15-month
investigation by the Iraq Survey Group.
It concluded Hussein had dismantled all of his WMD programs shortly after the
1991 Gulf War and had never tried to reconstitute them.
Nonetheless, 56 percent of Bush supporters said they thought most experts currently
believe Iraq had actual WMD, and 57 percent said they thought the Duelfer Report
had concluded that Iraq either had WMD (19 percent) or a major WMD program (38
percent).
Only 26 percent of Kerry supporters, by contrast, said they believed that pre-war
Iraq had either actual WMD or a WMD program, and only 18 percent said they believed
"most experts" agreed with those two possibilities.
Similar results were found with respect to Hussein's alleged support for al-Qaeda,
a theory that has been most persistently asserted by Vice President Dick Cheney,
but that was thoroughly debunked by the final report of the bipartisan 9/11
Commission earlier this summer.
Seventy-five percent of Bush supporters said they believed Iraq was providing
"substantial" support to al-Qaeda, with 20 percent asserting Baghdad
was directly involved in the 9/11 attacks on New York and the Pentagon.
Sixty-three percent of Bush supporters even believed that clear evidence of
such support has been found, and 60 percent believed "most experts"
have reached the same conclusion.
By contrast, only 30 percent of Kerry supporters said they believe such a link
existed and that most experts agree.
But large majorities of both Bush and Kerry supporters agree that the administration
is saying Iraq had WMD and was providing substantial support to al-Qaeda. In
regard to WMD, those majorities have actually grown since last summer, according
to PIPA.
Remarkably, asked whether the United States should have gone to war with Iraq
if U.S. intelligence had concluded Baghdad did not have a WMD program and was
not supporting al-Qaeda, 58 percent of Bush supporters said no, and 61 percent
said they assumed the president would also not have gone to war under those
circumstances.
"To support the president and to accept that he took the U.S. to war based
on mistaken assumptions," said Kull, "likely creates substantial cognitive
dissonance and leads Bush supporters to suppress awareness of unsettling information
about prewar Iraq."
Kull added that this "cognitive dissonance" could also help explain
other remarkable findings in the survey, particularly with respect to Bush supporters'
misperceptions about the president's own positions.
In particular, majorities of Bush supporters incorrectly assumed he supports
multilateral approaches to various international issues, including the Comprehensive
Nuclear Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) (69 percent), the land mine treaty (72 percent),
and the Kyoto Protocol to curb greenhouse gas emissions that contribute to global
warming (51 percent).
In all of these cases, majorities of Bush supporters said they favored the
positions that they imputed, incorrectly, to the president.
Large majorities of Kerry supporters, on the other hand, showed they knew both
their candidate's and Bush's positions on the same issues.
Bush supporters were also found to hold misperceptions regarding international
support for the president and his policies.
Despite a steady flow over the past year of official statements by foreign
governments and public-opinion polls showing strong opposition to the Iraq war,
less than one-third of Bush supporters believed that most people in foreign
countries opposed Washington having gone to war.
Two-thirds said they believed foreign views were either evenly divided on the
war (42 percent) or that the majority of foreigners actually favored the war
(26 percent).
Three of every four Kerry supporters, on the other hand, said they understood
that most of the rest of the world opposed the war.
Kull, who has been analyzing U.S. public opinion on foreign-policy issues for
two decades, said misperceptions of Bush supporters showed, if anything, the
hold the president has over his loyalists.
"The roots of the Bush supporters' resistance to information very likely
lie in the traumatic experience of 9/11 and equally into the near pitch-perfect
leadership that President Bush showed in its immediate wake," he said.
"This appears to have created a powerful bond between Bush and his supporters
– and an idealized image of the president that makes it difficult for his
supporters to imagine that he could have made incorrect judgment before the
war, that world public opinion would be critical of his policies or that the
president could hold foreign-policy positions that are at odds with his supporters."
(Inter Press Service)