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Viewing cable 09SEOUL525, SEOUL - PRESS BULLETIN; April 1, 2009

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
09SEOUL525 2009-04-01 07:35 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy Seoul
VZCZCXRO6056
OO RUEHGH
DE RUEHUL #0525/01 0910735
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
O 010735Z APR 09
FM AMEMBASSY SEOUL
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 3855
RUCPDOC/USDOC WASHDC 8353
RUEATRS/DEPT OF TREASURY WASHINGTON DC
RUEAIIA/CIA WASHINGTON DC//DDI/OEA//
RHHMUNA/USCINCPAC HONOLULU HI//FPA//
RUEKJCS/SECDEF WASHINGTON DC
RUEKJCS/JOINT STAFF WASHINGTON DC
RUEKDIA/DIA WASHINGTON DC//DB-Z//
RUEHMO/AMEMBASSY MOSCOW 9458
RUEHBJ/AMEMBASSY BEIJING 5566
RUEHKO/AMEMBASSY TOKYO 5661
RUEHGH/AMCONSUL SHANGHAI 0500
RUEHSH/AMCONSUL SHENYANG 4142
RUEHIN/AIT TAIPEI 3139
RUEHGP/AMEMBASSY SINGAPORE 6360
RUCNDT/USMISSION USUN NEW YORK 0759
RUEHGV/USMISSION GENEVA 2121
RUEHLO/AMEMBASSY LONDON 1169
RUEHFR/AMEMBASSY PARIS 1785
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 08 SEOUL 000525 
 
SIPDIS 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: PREL PGOV MARR ECON KPAO KS US
SUBJECT: SEOUL - PRESS BULLETIN; April 1, 2009 
 
TOP HEADLINES 
------------- 
 
Chosun Ilbo 
International Crisis Group (ICG) Senior Analyst: Intelligence 
Agencies Believe North Korea Has Developed 
Nuclear Warheads 
 
JoongAng Ilbo 
Prosecutors: 5 Million Dollars Taekwang Industrial Chairman Park 
Yeon-cha Handed to Son-in-law of Roh's Brother Have 
Not Flowed into Korea 
 
Dong-a Ilbo 
Roh's Top Aide Chung Sang-mun Allegedly 
Taking 100 Million Won from Park Yeon-cha 
 
Hankook Ilbo, Segye Ilbo 
Prosecutors Investigating into Suspicions that Son-in-law of Roh's 
Brother Received 5 Billion Won from Park Yeon-cha 
 
Hankyoreh Shinmun 
Police Covering Up for Influential Figures 
 
Seoul Shinmun 
Prosecutors' Probe Sets Sights on Roh 
 
 
DOMESTIC DEVELOPMENTS 
--------------------- 
 
President Lee Myung-bak, who arrived in London on March 31 to attend 
the G20 financial summit, held a bilateral summit with British Prime 
Minister Gordon Brown.  The two leaders discussed measures to 
further develop their relations as well as coordinated efforts to 
fight the global financial crisis.  They also addressed climate 
change and the ROK-EU cooperation. (All, All TVs) 
 
The ROKG called on North Korea on March 31 to allow its officials 
access to an ROK worker detained at the Kaesong Industrial Complex 
for criticizing the North's political system.  North Korea, however, 
refused to grant any communication with the employee of Hyundai 
Asan, according to the Ministry of Unification. (JoongAng) 
 
A high-ranking ROK official said that the ROK, the U.S. and Japan 
share the view that 
North Korea's missile launch should be brought before the UN 
Security Council.  The official said that all possibilities are open 
regarding "detailed countermeasures." (Hankook, Segye) 
 
In a Dong-a Ilbo survey, with regard to action against North Korea's 
impending missile launch, 41.4 percent agreed that the ROK must 
change its North Korea policy and persuade Pyongyang to return to 
the negotiating table, while 33.2 percent answered that strong 
sanctions should be imposed on the North.  On the KORUS FTA 
ratification, 52.0 percent said the ROK should ratify the deal at 
the same time as the Obama Administration ratifies it.   22.4 
percent responded that the ROK should ratify first and then call for 
the U.S. to ratify the trade pact.  On the redeployment of ROK 
troops to Afghanistan, 51 percent were opposed and 41.7 were in 
favor. (Dong-a) 
 
 
INTERNATIONAL NEWS 
------------------ 
Daniel Pinkston, a senior analyst for the International Crisis Group 
(ICG), said that intelligence agencies believe the North Koreans 
have developed nuclear warheads for (mid-range) Rodong missiles. 
(Chosun, Dong-a, Hankyoreh) 
 
North Korea announced on March 31 that it will try two U.S. 
journalists it has detained on charges of illegal entry and 
committing hostile acts, as opposed to expelling them.  Analysts say 
 
SEOUL 00000525  002 OF 008 
 
 
that the decision means it could take a long time to get the pair 
released. (Chosun, Dong-a, Hankook, Segye, Seoul, Pressian, All 
TVs) 
 
Japan's Fuji TV reported that North Korean leader Kim Jong-il's 
eldest son Kim Jong-nam said the Japanese government's plan (to 
intercept the rocket from North Korea) is normal since it is a 
self-defense act.  He noted that he has no information about the 
North's rocket launch planned for early April and he believes the 
North's launch is related to the Six-Party nuclear talks or to the 
North's relationship with the U.S. (Chosun, Dong-a) 
 
Japanese media on March 31 quoted a senior researcher at Global 
Security (Research Institute) as saying that there is a high 
possibility that the projectile North Korea is planning to launch is 
a satellite, considering its shape and size. (Hankook) 
 
During her visit to the Netherlands, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary 
Clinton warned North Korea that if it pushes ahead with a rocket 
launch, there will be consequences. (Segye, All TVs) 
 
 
MEDIA ANALYSIS 
-------------- 
 
-North Korea 
------------ 
 
Most of the ROK media gave wide play to North Korea's announcement 
that it will try two U.S. journalists it has detained on charges of 
illegal entry and committing hostile acts.  Conservative Chosun Ilbo 
took special note of this story on its front page, saying that this 
decision means that it could take a long time to get the journalists 
released.  The daily reported that "experts" observe that ahead of 
its rocket launch, North Korea is aiming to use the detention of the 
journalists to elicit concessions from the U.S. and the ROK. 
According to the newspaper, North Korea has resorted to "hostage 
diplomacy" to alienate the ROK from the U.S. and has secured 
diplomatic and economic gains. 
 
Chosun Ilbo ran a front page report quoting Daniel Pinkson, a senior 
analyst for the International Crisis Group (ICG), as saying that 
"intelligence agencies believe the North Koreans have developed 
nuclear warheads for (mid-range) Rodong missiles."  The newspaper 
said that ROK and U.S. intelligence authorities have not confirmed 
whether North Korea built warheads even though plutonium had been 
extracted from North Korea's nuclear plant.  According to the 
newspaper, experts are divided (on whether North Korea built 
warheads). 
 
Moderate Hankook Ilbo noted that a high-ranking ROK official said 
that the ROK, the U.S. and Japan share the view that North Korea's 
missile launch should be brought before the UN Security Council, and 
all possibilities are open regarding "detailed countermeasures." 
The newspaper commented that possible responses by the UN Security 
Council range from a Resolution to a Presidential statement. 
Conservative Segye Ilbo reported that during her visit to the 
Netherlands, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton warned North 
Korea that if it pushes ahead with a rocket launch, there will be 
consequences, hinting that the UN Security Council will impose 
sanctions on North Korea. 
 
Chosun Ilbo editorialized: "North Korea should handle foreign 
detainees according to international norms.  This would improve the 
North's image and make North Korea avoid criticism that it is 
seeking political gains by capitalizing on the hostage taking." 
 
Seoul Shinmun editorialized: "If the ROK and U.S. Presidents refrain 
from a military response and warn the North of sanctions in unison, 
they could lower the level of North Korea's provocations.  We hope 
that the two leaders will emphasize once again that the Six-Party 
Talks are essential to resolving the North Korean nuclear issue. 
They should send a message that the ROK-U.S. alliance will grow 
stronger" 
 
SEOUL 00000525  003 OF 008 
 
 
 
-G20 Financial Summit 
-------------------- 
Almost all media gave prominent play to President Lee Myung-bak's 
summit with British Prime Minister Gordon Brown.  ROK media reported 
that the two leaders discussed measures to develop their bilateral 
relations as well as coordinated efforts to fight the global 
financial crisis.  According to ROK media, they also addressed 
climate change and the ROK-EU cooperation. 
 
 
OPINIONS/EDITORIALS 
------------------- 
 
 
"POLITICAL ECONOMICS OF G20 SUMMIT" 
(JoongAng Ilbo, April 1, 2009, Page 46) 
 
The G20 financial summit, which will be held on March 2 in London, 
is not likely to draw consensus from participating countries.  The 
U.S. calls for greater budget spending for stimulating the economy 
while the European countries argue for revamping the financial 
system.  Also, conflicts between the developed countries and 
emerging economies have surfaced.  China's assertion that the 
International Monetary Fund (IMF)'s Special Drawing Rights (SDR) 
should replace U.S. dollars as a key currency won support from 
Brazil and Russia.  Participating countries differ in every issue. 
It seems inevitable that the G20 summit will opt for a vague 
compromise over a clear-cut solution.  In this situation, President 
Lee Myung-bak sees the G20 summit as a good opportunity to enhance 
the ROK's status. 
 
 
HOW LONG WILL N. KOREA GET AWAY WITH THESE ANTICS? 
(Chosun Ilbo, April 1, 2009, Page 30) 
 
By Columnist Park Doo-shik 
 
Time in its 2006 year-end issue chose North Korean leader Kim 
Jong-il as one of the 26 "people of the year."   Kim was fully 
qualified.  On July 4 of that year, he ruined George W. Bush's 
Fourth of July party by launching a long-range missile.  In October, 
he tested a nuclear device.  Few countries have challenged the 
United States in this way.  "Kim suffers from his own form of 
attention-deficit disorder," Time said explaining why it chose him. 
His "brazen act of defiance, according to Kim's calculations, pays 
off." 
 
Now the North is using exactly the same formula with the Barack 
Obama Administration.  Announcing the launch of a long-range missile 
which it claims is a carrier rocket for a satellite, it has 
threatened to counter any UN sanctions with "stronger measures." 
Peter Hayes, Director of the Nautilus Institute, said that North 
Korea is roaring at the United States. 
 
The provocations, however, can be seen as a means of survival that 
it has acquired since the first nuclear crisis in 1993 rather than 
mere attention-seeking.  Pyongyang has achieved much with such 
grandstanding.  It has built up its nuclear and missile capabilities 
in the face of pressures from Seoul and Washington.  It survived a 
hostile international environment when the communist block 
collapsed.  On the brink of bankruptcy due to the death of Kim 
Il-sung and devastating floods in 1994, it survived a serious crisis 
with aid from Seoul and Washington gained through such provocations. 
 
 
Accustomed to such success, it is now turning back the clock 16 
years, to a situation in Seoul-Washington relations where the 
conservative South Korean administration has to adjust to a liberal 
U.S. administration, which was also the case in 1993.  Furthermore, 
Clinton Administration officials who were at odds with the Kim 
Young-sam Administration during the first North Korean nuclear 
crisis are now pillars in the Obama Administration's diplomatic 
team. 
 
SEOUL 00000525  004 OF 008 
 
 
 
Proclaiming its withdrawal from the Non-Proliferation Treaty, the 
North at the time said it was "ready to go to war" and "turn Seoul 
into a sea of fire."  South Korea and the U.S. confronted it with UN 
sanctions.  Now, as then, the North took issue with the annual joint 
South Korean-American military exercises.  The emergence of concerns 
about North Korea's strategy to deal directly with the U.S. and 
freeze out the South is also similar.  Detention of U.S. citizens 
took place on a few occasions in Clinton's day and is recurring as 
two American journalists are held in the North. 
 
The North's provocations represent a drama it has played out for 16 
years, with the same actors performing the same scenes.  But the 
South Korean and American governments have learnt nothing.  "We 
sustain defeats knowingly," said a former diplomat.  The North 
Korean problem, though apparently treading water, had some defining 
moments.  They came in 1993 when the first North Korean nuclear 
crisis erupted, in 1998 when the North fired its first long-range 
missile, in 2002 when the uranium nuclear program was exposed, and 
in 2006 when it launched its second long-range missile and a nuclear 
device.  They were opportunities for Seoul and Washington to change 
the dynamics, but on every occasion they allowed themselves to be 
dragged around by the North as before. 
 
April 2009 is another such decisive moment.  Presidents Lee 
Myung-bak and Barack Obama are to meet in London on Thursday.  They 
have to choose either the course two South Korean and three American 
heads of state have already taken or find a new one.  That will not 
be easy.  "We've used up all means except force in the last 16 
years," said a government official.  "A perfect solution to the 
North Korean nuclear problem is an illusion." 
 
Both Lee and Obama say their North Korea policies are different from 
those of their predecessors.  But in diplomatic circles, a sense of 
helplessness prevails.  North Korea is aware of this, so it resorts 
to further provocations.  What the two presidents must do first is 
to dispel this lethargy. 
 
Even before the North fires a missile, Lee narrowed the scope of 
choices by opposing a military response.  Obama, who is criticized 
for conducting "supine diplomacy," gives the impression he is not 
really interested.  What we need is conviction and intuition on the 
part of the South Korean and U.S. presidents.  The public has the 
right to expect that the tedious drama will not run forever.  But so 
long as Pyongyang thinks it can get away with these antics, it's 
impossible to solve the North Korean nuclear issue.  Seoul and 
Washington should stop pursuing a course that has brought them 
nothing but defeat for 16 years. 
 
(This is a translation provided by the newspaper, and it is 
identical to the Korean version.) 
 
 
SEOUL AND WASHINGTON SHOULD SHOW THEIR STRONG COORDINATION 
(Seoul Shinmun, April 1, 2009, Page 31) 
 
President Lee Myung-bak left for London yesterday to attend the G-20 
summit.  During his overseas trip, the ROK-U.S. summit is the most 
noteworthy.  President Lee is scheduled to have his first meeting 
with U.S. President Obama on April 2.  They have many pending issues 
to resolve in the fields of foreign policy, security and economy. 
In particular, it is important to see how conservative Lee and 
liberal Obama will coordinate their stances at their first meeting. 
 
Unless the two Presidents display firm cooperation at this meeting, 
the basis of their economic relationship will be shaken, and North 
Korea will get the wrong impression.  After announcing its plan to 
launch a rocket, North Korea is denouncing the ROK daily.  If even a 
small crack opens in ROK-U.S. relations, it will work in the North's 
favor.  By disguising a missile as a satellite, North Korea is 
creating confusion among related nations about how to respond to 
North Korea's planned launch.  In this situation, if the ROK and 
U.S. Presidents refrain from a military response and warn the North 
of sanctions in unison, they could lower the level of North Korea's 
 
SEOUL 00000525  005 OF 008 
 
 
provocations.  We hope that the two leaders will emphasize once 
again that the Six-Party Talks are essential to resolving the North 
Korean nuclear issue.  They should send a message that regardless of 
the arrival of the Obama Administration, the ROK-U.S. alliance will 
grow stronger. 
 
In order to overcome an economic crisis, too, the ROK and U.S. 
Presidents should fall into step with each other.  The ROK is the 
co-chair of the G-20 summit.  President Obama should give a boost to 
President Lee's proposal to fight against trade protectionism.  His 
proposal to publicize the list of nations erecting new trade 
barriers seems to be desirable.  The extension of the currency swap 
agreement between the ROK and the U.S. should produce positive 
results.  Meanwhile, President Obama should not dampen the 
atmosphere of cooperation by mentioning sensitive issues, such as 
the renegotiations of the ROK-U.S. Free Trade Agreement (FTA) and 
the deployment of ROK troops to Afghanistan.  When the two nations 
exercise restraint and build mutual trust, the bilateral 
relationship will move forward. 
 
 
N. KOREA MUST SHOW IT IS NOT A HOSTAGE-TAKER 
(Chosun Ilbo, April 1, 2009, Page 31) 
 
North Korea announced Tuesday that it would indict two American 
journalists it has detained.  On Monday, North Korea arrested an 
employee of South Korea's Hyundai Asan who was working in the 
Kaesong Industrial Complex and is interrogating him, while refusing 
officials from the South access to him. 
 
North and South Korea signed an agreement in 2004 governing entry 
and sojourn in the Kaesong Industrial Complex and the Mt. Kumgang 
resort.  And Article 10, Clause 3 of the agreement ensures the basic 
rights of a person from South Korea who is being investigated. 
North Korea must first grant the Hyundai Asan employee his Miranda 
Rights.  In the case of the two detained U.S. journalists, it has 
allowed a Swedish diplomat in Pyongyang to meet them at Washington's 
request.  It would be clearly discriminating against the South 
Korean detainee if he is not granted such rights. 
 
It is difficult to assess North Korea's motive in detaining and 
investigating foreign civilians and even seeking to put them to 
trial at a sensitive time when it is about to launch a rocket that 
most people believe is a long-range missile and faces possible UN 
Security Council sanctions.  In both cases, North Korea is applying 
its own rigid regulations against foreign civilians. 
 
It must handle both cases according to the standards shared by the 
international community, such as respect for human rights and the 
guarantee of personal safety.  Not only will this help it improve 
its image, it will also shield it from criticism that it is taking 
foreign hostages. 
 
In an interview with The Financial Times on Monday, President Lee 
Myung-bak said he intends to keep the Kaesong Industrial Complex 
open to retain a window of communication with the communist country. 
 But if the basic safety of South Korean citizens cannot even be 
guaranteed, the Kaesong Industrial Complex loses all rationale.  The 
government must conduct a complete review of its preparations to 
protect citizens working in the Kaesong complex and strengthen weak 
areas. 
 
Workers at the Kaesong complex and companies operating there must be 
extra careful.  And we must once again weigh the merits and risks of 
doing business with North Korea. 
 
(This is a translation provided by the newspaper, and it is 
identical to the Korean version.) 
 
 
FEATURES 
-------- 
 
 
 
SEOUL 00000525  006 OF 008 
 
 
N. KOREA "HAS NUCLEAR WARHEADS" 
(Chosun Ilbo, April 1, 2009, Front Page) 
 
By Reporter Yu Yong-won 
 
Intelligence authorities in South Korea and the U.S. believe North 
Korea has already succeeded in manufacturing small nuclear warheads 
which can be mounted on a 1,300 km-range missile, a member of a 
private think tank claimed Tuesday. 
 
North Korea maintains Rodong missile bases in North Pyongan 
Province, Jakang Province and Yangkang Province. 
 
In a telephone interview with Chosun Ilbo, Daniel Pinkston, a senior 
analyst for the International Crisis Group's Northeast Asian office 
in Seoul, quoted an anonymous intelligence officer as saying North 
Korea is storing nuclear warheads in underground storage facilities, 
with their plutonium and trigger devices separated.  He claimed it 
would take about two or three days to assemble and mount them on 
missiles. 
 
The South Korean government had until recently speculated that North 
Korea has six to eight nuclear weapons, but had remained doubtful 
whether the North had managed to miniaturize the technology 
sufficiently to make missile warheads. 
 
In January, North Korea told visiting American academics that out of 
38.5 kg of plutonium it reported to the Six-Party Talks, it had 
already turned the disposable amount of 30.8 kg into weapons.  At 
that time, North Korean General Ri Chan-bok implied that weaponized 
plutonium had been used to make warheads. 
 
(This is a translation provided by the newspaper, and it is 
identical to the Korean version.) 
 
 
N. KOREA TO INDICT 2 DETAINED U.S. JOURNALISTS 
(Dong-a Ilbo, April 1, 2009, Page 8) 
 
By Reporter Shin Suk-ho 
 
North Korea said yesterday that it will try two American journalists 
who were detained in a border region earlier this month. 
 
The North's state-run Korean Central News Agency said the two 
reporters' illegal entry and hostile acts have been confirmed by 
evidence and their statements.  It added preparation is underway to 
indict the reporters while authorities are continuing their 
investigation. 
 
Pyongyang failed to elaborate on what the "hostile acts" were or 
what law will be applied to them.  Korean American Yuna Lee and 
Chinese American Laura Ling were detained by the North Korean 
military March 17 while they were covering North Korean escapees 
along the North's border with China near the Tuman River. 
 
Under North Korean law, foreigners who gather and leak s-e-c-r-e-t-s 
with the purpose of spying on the North are subject to five to 10 
years of hard labor.  If the crime is deemed serious, the punishment 
is harsher. 
 
Another clause of the law says foreigners who cause national discord 
with intent to antagonize the nation are also subject to the same 
punishment.  Considering that North Korea resolved past cases 
involving Americans politically, however, the report (by the 
KCNA)could be a bargaining chip to be used against the United 
States. 
 
Pyongyang and Washington are reportedly negotiating the journalists' 
release behind the scenes.  The North said the reporters are being 
allowed to contact consuls and are being treated according to 
international law. 
 
The U.S. State Department said Monday that (diplomats of the Swedish 
 
SEOUL 00000525  007 OF 008 
 
 
Embassy on behalf of the State Department interviewed the 
journalists) in Pyongyang.  State Department spokesman Gordon Duguid 
said the interview was held last weekend but that he had no idea 
where they are detained. 
 
North Korea also questioned a detained South Korean worker of 
Hyundai Asan Corp. for the second day yesterday.  A spokesman for 
South Korea's Unification Ministry said the North has yet to accept 
a request from Seoul and Hyundai to allow an interview with the 
worker with South Korean officials and an attorney. 
 
When the North began investigating the worker, it guaranteed his 
health, safety and rights in the process.  The South Korean civic 
group, Network for North Korean Democracy and Human Rights, issued a 
statement yesterday urging Pyongyang to allow the civilian to 
contact Seoul officials and (urging) his immediate release. 
 
(This is a translation provided by the newspaper, and it is 
identical to the Korean version.) 
 
 
OPINION POLL; IN RESPONSE TO NORTH KOREA'S MISSILE LAUNCH, 41% FAVOR 
DIALOGUE, 33% SUPPORT SANCTIONS 
(Dong-a Ilbo, April 1, 2009, Page 10) 
 
By Reporter Park Min-hyuk 
 
At the request of Dong-a Ilbo, the Korea Research Center conducted 
an opinion survey of 1,000 adults over the age of 19 on March 28 via 
telephone interviews.  The respondents were selected using "quota 
sampling" based on the demographic variables of region, gender, and 
age.  The poll's margin of error is plus or minus 3.1 percentage 
points with a 95 percent confidence level in the results. 
 
How should the ROK respond to North Korea's missile launch? 
 
The ROK must change its North Korea policy and persuade Pyongyang to 
return to the negotiating table.  41.4% 
The ROK must cooperate with the international community to impose 
strong sanctions on the North.  33.2% 
The ROK does not need to react sensitively to the North's move since 
the launch is intended to draw global attention. 22.6% 
Don't know/No response 2.8% 
 
The percentage of those in favor of dialogue with Pyongyang was 
relatively higher among respondents in their 20s (50.6%), those 
living in the Jeolla provinces (56.9%), and supporters of the 
opposition Democratic Party (60.6%). 
 
The percentage of those in favor of strong sanctions on Pyongyang 
was high among respondents over age 50 (44.0%), those living in the 
Chungcheong provinces (38.3%), and supporters of the ruling Grand 
National Party (44.8%). 
 
When should the ROK ratify the ROK-U.S. Free Trade Agreement (FTA)? 
 
After negotiating with the Obama Administration, the ROK should 
ratify the FTA around the same time as the U.S.  52.0% 
The ROK should first ratify the FTA and then ask the U.S. to ratify 
it. 22.4% 
After the U.S. ratifies the FTA, the ROK should ratify it. 6.0% 
The ROK should not ratify the FTA under any circumstances. 9.5% 
Don't know/No response 10.1% 
 
In almost every walk of life, the largest number of people 
responded, "The ROK should ratify the FTA around the same time as 
the U.S.," but opposition to FTA ratification was relatively higher 
among respondents in the Chungcheong provinces (15.2%), blue-collar 
workers (20.1%), and those working in agriculture, forestry and 
fisheries (18.4%). 
 
Should the ROK send its troops to Afghanistan? 
 
Since Afghanistan is dangerous, the ROK should not send its troops. 
 
SEOUL 00000525  008 OF 008 
 
 
51.0% 
The ROK should positively consider the troop dispatch to enhance the 
ROK-U.S. alliance.  41.7% 
Don't know/No response 7.3% 
 
By age, among respondents over age 50, supporters of the troop 
deployment outnumbered opponents, while among respondents in their 
20s to 40s, opponents outnumbered supporters. 
 
 
 
STEPHENS