The Talk Show American

THE TALK SHOW AMERICAN: Troops Believe in Iraq Mission, Morale Is High

Friday, July 21, 2006

Troops Believe in Iraq Mission, Morale Is High

Two-thirds of U.S. troops serving in Iraq
say they believe the cause they're fighting for is worthwhile, according
to a new Stars and Stripes survey.

The survey results, reported in the July 19 Mideast edition of Stars
and Stripes newspaper, revealed that 46 percent of readers in Iraq who
responded to a survey called fighting the war for America "very
worthwhile." Another 30 percent rated it "somewhat worthwhile."

Fourteen percent of respondents called the mission "not very
worthwhile," and just 8 percent referred to it as "not worthwhile at all," the
July 20 paper reported.

The survey explored readers' views on a variety of other issues. Among
them were how clearly their mission is defined, their unit's as well as
their personal morale, support for troops in the Middle East, and how
informed they are about that support.

Respondents overwhelmingly agreed that their mission is clearly
defined, the survey noted. Fifty-five percent called it "very clear" and 27
percent called it "somewhat clear." Nine percent said it's "somewhat
unclear," and 7 percent said it's "not at all clear."

Unit morale is high, and personal morale even higher, most respondents
said. Forty-four percent called unit morale "very high," and 43 percent
gave the same ranking for their personal morale. Eighteen percent
called their unit morale "somewhat high," and 30 percent ranked their
personal morale at that level.

Twenty-six percent of respondents called unit morale "somewhat low,"
and 19 percent gave that rating for their personal morale. Ten percent
reported "very low" unit morale, and 6 percent rated their personal
morale at rock bottom.

The vast majority of deployed troops agreed that public support for
troops in the Middle East is strong. Forty-four percent rated it "very
strong," and 26 percent called it "somewhat strong." Twenty-two percent of
respondents called it "not very strong," and 6 percent "weak."

Two-thirds of respondents believe they're well informed about what the
public is doing to support troops serving in the Middle East, the
survey showed. Forty-four percent called themselves "very well informed," 20
percent "somewhat informed," 28 percent "not very well informed," and 6
percent rated themselves "not well (informed) at all."

Responses appeared to track with military rank. Eight-eight percent of
senior officers, for example, ranked both unit and personal morale as
high or very high. Among junior enlisted servicemembers, 49 percent
rated unit morale as high or very high and 66 percent gave that same rating
to their own personal morale.

Almost across the board, respondents said conditions in Iraq had
improved since they arrived there. Sixty-nine percent of senior officers, 66
percent of senior enlisted members and 64 percent of junior enlisted
troops said conditions were very or somewhat improved. Forty-eight
percent of junior officers assigned that rating to conditions.

Nearly 600 Stars and Stripes readers in Iraq responded to the survey,
and the results were compiled by media experts from MORI Research, the
newspaper reported.

Stars and Stripes [http://estripes.osd.mil/]

Visit the Defense Department's Web site "America Supports You" at
http://www.americasupportsyou.mil, that spotlights what Americans are
doing in support of U.S. military men and women serving at home and
abroad.

1 comment:

Marshall Darts said...

Of course they do. They need to in order to fight and survive or die. It doesn't make the war right.

The politicians are the ones that are supposed to make those decisions and they did, and they put our dedicated soldiers into a quagmire.

Military always carry out orders like true professionals. Unfortunately the guys who sent them have never been close to a battlefield.

Post a Comment