Approval for Barack Obama’s foreign policy has dropped to an all-time low, with just 40 percent of Americans backing the president’s handling of international affairs, while 52 percent disagree with his performance on the global stage, a new poll reveals.
The survey, released by Quinnipiac University on Thursday, shows
that overall assessments of Obama’s foreign policy are equally
bleak when broken down on an issue-by-issue basis.
Only 33 percent of Americans support Obama’s proposed path on
dealing with Syria, with the majority opposed to intervention.
Among those polled, only 27 percent of registered voters believe
US involvement in Syria serves the national interest, while the
same number Americans support the president’s plan of providing
arms and military supplies to forces fighting to topple the
government of President Bashar Assad.
Meanwhile, 59 percent of Americans remain opposed to providing
material support to Syrian rebels, with the overall lack of
support cutting across party lines.
However, by a margin of 49 percent to 38 percent, voters did
approve of the use of unmanned drones or missiles to attack
Syrian government targets if it did not put American lives at
risk.
Perceptions of his handling of the war in Afghanistan remains
divided, with 46 percent agreeing with the course the president
is taking and 45 percent opposed.
The president however, was viewed positively on counterterrorism
issues, garnering a 52 percent approval rating.
The latest survey also
revealed that 48 percent of respondents disapprove of Obama’s
overall job performance, with only 44 percent approving, a slight
bump from a May poll which put his negative rating at 49 percent
and his approval rating at 45 percent. However, an April poll had
the president polling favorably, with 49 percent supporting and
45 percent opposing his job performance.
The poll was conducted between June 28 and July 8 among 2,014
registered voters with a margin of error of 2.2 percent.
Despite Obama’s handling of terror-related issues generally being
viewed as positive, a separate Quinnipiag poll released Wednesday
found that 45 percent of the public believe the government’s
antiterrorism policies have “gone too far in restricting the
average person’s civil liberties.” Forty percent on the other
hand, said they have “not gone far enough to adequately protect
the country.”
When posed the same question
in 2010, only 25 percent of the pubic said the government had
gone too far in restricting civil liberties, while 63 said it
hadn’t done enough to secure the country.
American voters further said, by a margin of 55 to 34 percent,
that Edward Snowden, the former NSA contractor who blew the lid
on the agency’s sweeping surveillance programs, is a
whistleblower rather than a traitor.
"The massive swing in public opinion about civil liberties and
governmental anti-terrorism efforts, and the public view that
Edward Snowden is more whistleblower than traitor are the public
reaction and apparent shock at the extent to which the government
has gone in trying to prevent future terrorist incidents,"
said Peter Brown, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University
Polling Institute.
"The fact that there is little difference now along party
lines about the overall anti- terrorism effort and civil
liberties and about Snowden is in itself unusual in a country
sharply divided along political lines about almost everything.
Moreover, the verdict that Snowden is not a traitor goes against
almost the unified view of the nation's political
establishment," he continued.