In survey, Trump draws strong support from US military veterans

Nearly half of veterans say Trump hasn't listened to military leaders enough.

But nearly half of the veterans surveyed believe the president has not listened to military leaders enough when it comes to national security decisions.

Fifty-seven percent of the veterans who were surveyed said they approve of Trump as commander in chief of the U.S. military, compared to 41% of adults in the separate survey. And a majority of those veterans approved of the president's dealings with North Korea, NATO allies and Russia.

But 45% of veterans surveyed said the president listens to military leaders too little, compared to 51% of Americans in the second survey. Meanwhile, 50% of veterans said the president listens the right amount, compared to 40% in the other survey.

Veterans as a group are more likely to identify with or lean toward the Republican Party, Pew said. But, Republican veterans are more approving of the president and some of his military policies than Republicans overall.

The surveyed veterans expressed a more positive view than the general public toward three of Trump's major military policies: sending troops to the U.S.-Mexico border, withdrawing from the Iran Deal and banning transgender individuals from serving in the military.

More than 50% of veterans expressed somewhat or strong approval for these policies, compared to fewer than 50% of the adults in the separate survey. And Republican veterans were more approving of these policies than Republicans overall.

The president saw less support around the creation of Space Force, which would be the sixth branch of the U.S. military.

Just 45% of veterans strongly or somewhat approved of the idea, compared to just 36% of people in the second survey. Only 15% of veterans strongly approved of a Space Force, which must still be approved by Congress.

Forty-eight percent of veterans said that Trump respects veterans "a great deal," compared to 30% of adults in the other survey.

However, those figures varied greatly with age and gender. Veterans ages 65 and older, along with male veterans, were more likely to indicate that the president respects veterans a great deal, compared to younger and female veterans. Just 33% of female veterans characterized it that way.