As President Obama begins a big week in which he will continue to make the case for U.S. military intervention in Syria, the latest polling shows a majority of Americans still oppose a Syria strike even though most also believe that the government likely used chemical weapons against its own citizens.
The CNN/ORC poll released Monday finds that about 80% of Americans believe Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s regime gassed Syrians, but roughly 70% said striking Syria was not ultimately in America’s national interest. Even if Congress votes to authorize military action, a majority (55%) of Americans would still oppose air strikes, according to the poll.
Those findings match up closely with polls released last week, which found most Americans oppose action.
Perhaps the most interesting split comes between self-identified Democrats and Republicans. A slight majority (56%) of Democrats want Congress to authorize a resolution to strike, but only a little more than a third of Republicans and a little less than a third of independents, agree. If Congress does vote in favor, support becomes roughly even: 51% of Democrats and 47% of Republicans support action at that point.









