The latest Associated Press-Ipsos poll found that many Americans perceive the 
alleged atrocities against Iraqi civilians by U.S. forces as isolated incidents 
while saying the U.S.-led invasion was a mistake, an unusual disconnect that 
sets this conflict apart from Vietnam. 
The survey of 1,003 adults was completed Wednesday, shortly before the 
announcement that U.S. airstrikes had killed Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the al-Qaida 
leader in Iraq, and the Iraqi parliament's approval of candidates for ministers 
in charge of the army and police. 
It remains to be seen how those events could affect opinion, especially among 
a public paying close attention to war dispatches. 
Some 76 percent of those questioned said they were following reports about 
allegations that U.S. troops killed unarmed Iraqi civilians. 
The military is investigating reports that a small number of Marines murdered 
24 Iraqi civilians — including unarmed women and children — in the town of 
Haditha on Nov. 19. It also is conducting a probe of an incident in Hamdaniya 
following allegations that Marines pulled an unarmed Iraqi man from his home on 
April 26 and shot him to death without provocation. 
Regardless of whether the allegations turn out to be true, 63 percent of 
those surveyed said they thought the killings of civilians were isolated 
incidents. That view was especially true among Americans over 35, whites and 
those living in the South, where the military has a strong presence. 
"I think they're doing everything possible to avoid such things," said 
Christine Berchelmann, a retired nurse and Republican-leaning independent from 
San Antonio. "The people they are seeking out, they are in dwellings right in 
the middle of all these civilians. There are always going to be casualties." 
Sixty-one percent in the survey said the military is doing all it can to 
avoid killing Iraqi civilians. 
While the AP poll found that most Americans are willing to give U.S. troops 
the benefit of the doubt, their misgivings about the war and the prospect of 
Iraq establishing a stable, democratic government are growing. 
Fifty-nine percent said the United States made a mistake in going to war, a 
new high and a significant jump from the 34 percent in December 2004. 
"The biggest mistake was going into Iraq," said David Smith, 38, a salesman 
from Springfield, Mo., and Democrat who leans independent. "If hindsight was 
20-20, they should have thought about the repercussions." 
Despite President Bush's pronouncements about Iraq setting up a viable 
government, only 44 percent of those polled said it was likely they would see a 
stable government in Baghdad. It was a new low in the survey. 
"I think this is the first time in recorded history where the American people 
wholeheartedly support the troops and support for the mission is waning," said 
Rep. Ike Skelton of Missouri, the top Democrat on the House Armed Services 
Committee. 
The 15-term lawmaker cited the greater involvement of the National Guard and 
Reserves in the war. Some 25,000 members of the Guard and Reserve are in Iraq 
among the 132,000 U.S. troops. 
"People have a neighbor or a cousin," Skelton said. 
During Vietnam, growing opposition to the war paralleled disenchantment with 
American forces, many of whom had been drafted to serve. The conflict dragged on 
more than a decade, more than 50,000 Americans were killed and the U.S. departed 
Saigon in April 1975 as the communists prevailed. 
Capturing the public consciousness during Vietnam was the My Lai massacre, in 
which U.S. soldiers killed hundreds of innocent civilians in 1968. 
In Iraq, the military has relied on an all-volunteer force of trained 
professionals. 
Kathleen Hall Jamieson, director of the Annenberg Public Policy Center at the 
University of Pennsylvania, said it is possible to oppose the war but 
"nonetheless see the military as divorced from that. The military is our sons 
and daughters and, of course, we wouldn't systematically engage in something 
that defiles American values." 
Rep. John Kline, R-Minn., said he was not surprised "that the American people 
believe in the fundamental goodness of the American soldiers." Kline, a member 
of the Armed Services Committee, described the current troops as the "best we've 
ever had." 
The survey also found that the war continues to take a toll on the public's 
view of Bush. Approval of the president was at 35 percent, essentially unchanged 
from his rating of 33 percent last month based on the poll's margin of error of 
3 percentage points. 
His handling of Iraq and foreign policy and the fight against terrorism hit 
new lows: Just 33 percent approved of his actions on Iraq and 39 percent on the 
commander in chief's fight against terrorism. 
People had an even lower opinion of the Republican-controlled Congress. Only 
24 percent approved of the way it's doing its job, essentially unchanged from 
last month but still a new low. 
Fifty-two percent want Democrats to capture control of Congress in November, 
about the same as last month's poll.