GALLUP NEWS SERVICE

Seventy-two percent of Americans interviewed in a new CNN/USA Today/Gallup poll conducted Saturday and Sunday favor the war against Iraq, while 25% are opposed. Roughly the same number approve of the job President George W. Bush is doing.

The percentage supporting the war is just slightly lower than the 76% approval registered last Thursday night -- the day after hostilities began -- but remains significantly higher than support levels in the weeks and months leading up to the beginning of hostilities. Approval levels for the concept of war had been running in the high 50% range in the months leading up to last week. Support increased to 66% on Monday night, March 17, after President Bush made his "ultimatum" speech in which he pledged military action if Saddam Hussein did not leave Iraq, and, as noted, jumped to 76% on Thursday night.

The level of support for the war against Iraq is slightly more muted than was the case just after the first Persian Gulf War began in January 1991. At that time, 80% of Americans supported the decision to begin the air war in the effort to drive the Iraqis out of Kuwait.

Both those who support and those who oppose the current war say they hold their views strongly. Out of the total of 72% who favor the military action, about four in five (59% of all Americans) say they support it strongly. At the other end of the spectrum, of the 25% who oppose military action, roughly two-thirds (17% of all Americans) oppose it strongly.

Opinion of the War With Iraq March 22-23, 2003

Additionally, most of those who support military action do so because they approve of the general policy aims of the war. More than 8 out of 10 of those who favor the war say they do so because it is the right thing for the United States to do, while only about 2 out of 10 say they support it not because it is the right thing to do, but because they want to show support for the troops in Iraq.

Bush Job Approval

President George W. Bush's job approval rating is now at 71%. This represents a jump of 13 points from last weekend -- an expected "rally effect" increase that usually accompanies U.S. involvement in war or a situation in which Americans are in harm's way on foreign shores.

George W. Bush's Job Approval Rating:

2003

The current rating for Bush is 11 points lower than the 82% job approval rating the American public gave his father after the Persian Gulf War began in 1991.

How Well is the War Going?

About half of Americans -- 53% -- say the war has gone very well so far, while most of the rest say it has gone moderately well. Only 8% feel it has gone badly. An analysis of the difference between the responses obtained to this question on Sunday as compared to those obtained on Saturday shows a significant drop in the percentage saying it has been going "very" well. This no doubt reflects the more sobering news coverage as the weekend developed of the resistance allied troops have faced, the fact that the coalition forces have suffered casualties, including Americans killed in action, and the visibility given to the televised pictures of what Iraqis claim are American prisoners of war.

Opinion of How the War Is Going March 22-23, 2003

Americans have become somewhat less optimistic about the possible length of the war against Iraq. The weekend poll shows that 28% say the war will be over in less than a month, while 33% say it will last four months or more. As recently as Thursday night, a slightly higher 34% thought it would be over in less than a month.

The current estimates of the war's length are still more optimistic than those measured at the beginning of the Persian Gulf War in January 1991.

The substantial majority of Americans, 75%, are convinced that there will be several hundred or fewer casualties as a result of the war. Despite the weekend's news reports, that estimate is higher than the 65% who felt that way last Thursday night, and remains substantially more optimistic than the initial estimates of casualties obtained as the first Persian Gulf War began.

Eighty-four percent of Americans say the United States and its allies are winning the war. Virtually no Americans say Iraq is winning, while 14% believe neither side is winning. There was little change on this measure as the weekend progressed.

Weapons of Mass Destruction

Allied commanders on Sunday said they had not yet found evidence of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. Despite that, almost 9 out of 10 Americans believe it is at least somewhat likely that the United States will find conclusive evidence that Iraq has weapons of mass destruction or the facilities to develop them.

How necessary is it that such weapons be found in order to justify the initiation of the war? The American public is split on the issue: 41% believe that it will be necessary to find such weapons for the war to be justified, and almost as many, 38%, say the war will be justified regardless of whether such weapons are found, while 15% say they don't support the war in either case.

Public Following War Closely

Sixty-three percent of Americans have been following news of the war closely, which is quite high on a relative basis as far as most news events go, but is slightly lower than the 70% who were following the news of the first Persian Gulf War closely a few days after it began on Jan. 16, 1991.

Survey Methods

Results are based on telephone interviews with -- 1,020 -- national adults, aged 18+, conducted March 22-23, 2003. For results based on the total sample of national adults, one can say with 95% confidence that the margin of sampling error is ±3 percentage points. In addition to sampling error, question wording and practical difficulties in conducting surveys can introduce error or bias into the findings of public opinion polls.