What Americans think about Trump judgment on military force — as Iran talks resume

Key points

  • Most Americans say they distrust **Donald Trump’s judgment on using military force, even though many view **Iran as a serious threat.
  • Polls show limited public appetite for initiating an attack on Iran: roughly one-fifth support a U.S. strike while nearly half oppose it.
  • Partisan split: Republicans are far likelier to back Trump’s posture; independents and Democrats are skeptical and favor diplomacy as talks resume in Geneva.
  • The public also worries about broader consequences — troop commitments, regional escalation and rising costs — which tempers support for military options.

Quick explainer (What Americans think)

As indirect talks between U.S. and Iranian negotiators restart in **Geneva, Americans show a mix of concern and caution. While many view Iran’s nuclear program as dangerous, surveys find low trust in the president’s instincts on when and how to use force — a key political constraint if diplomacy collapses.

What the polls say (short bullets)

  • AP-NORC polling finds only about 3 in 10 Americans trust the president’s judgment on military matters — trust is much higher among Republicans and much lower among Democrats.
  • A University of Maryland poll shows ~21% would favor a U.S.-initiated attack on Iran today, while 49% oppose such a move.
  • Reuters and other outlets note the same dynamic: the White House’s pressure tactics raise fears of escalation and do not translate into broad public mandates for war.

Why Americans are cautious

Three practical concerns shape public skepticism:

  1. Escalation risk. Many worry a strike could trigger wider regional conflict and U.S. casualties.
  2. Costs and distraction. Voters prioritize domestic issues (economy, health care) and worry that new combat operations divert attention and money.
  3. Trust in decision-making. Repeated use of force or bellicose rhetoric without clear strategy erodes confidence that leaders will weigh risks prudently.

What this means politically and for policy

  • Politically, low public trust narrows the administration’s space to pursue kinetic options without building a clear, bipartisan case. Congressional support would be crucial — and polls suggest swing lawmakers face voter skepticism.
  • For policy: diplomats still have an opening. The preference for negotiation in many segments of the public gives extra leverage to negotiators in Geneva to pursue a deal that avoids military escalation.

Bottom line

Americans broadly see Iran as a threat but remain doubtful about the president’s judgment on military action. That gap — strong concern paired with weak trust — makes immediate, large-scale military moves politically fraught and leaves diplomacy as the path with the most public backing as talks resume.

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