Americans expect prolonged US-Iran war as ceasefire falters, Reuters/Ipsos poll finds


People walk past a billboard featuring images of Iran's late Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in Tehran, Iran, July 13, 2026. Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via REUTERS

July 13 (Reuters) - ⁠Four in five Americans expect the U.S. war with Iran to drag on ⁠for an extended period, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll conducted as fighting escalated ‌and President Donald Trump declareda blockade of Iranian shipping in the Gulf.

The three-day poll completed on Sunday found that 79% of respondents think U.S. military involvement in Iran will "go on for an extended period of time," ​up from 65% in late March. Only 18% of respondents ⁠said they think the war would "end ⁠pretty quickly in a matter of weeks."

Some 37% of respondents approved of U.S. military strikes ⁠against ‌Iran, which Washington resumed on June 26 in response to what it said were Iranian attacks on commercial shipping in the Strait of Hormuz.

The poll surveyed ⁠1,019 U.S. adults nationwide and had a margin of error ​of about four percentage ‌points.

Trump said on Monday the United States was reinstating its blockade of Iranian shipping ⁠in the Gulf ​and would be reimbursed 20% on all cargo transiting the strait after Tehran said it had closed the vital waterway and the two sides exchanged more missile and drone attacks.

The latest hostilitiescast ⁠further doubt on aninterim deal signed last month to ​reopen the strait and halt the war while the sides pursued 60 days of further negotiations. Trump has said he considers the ceasefire over, while leaving the door open to further ⁠talks.

Sixty percent of poll respondents said they expected gasoline prices to worsen over the next year as a result of the war. Half said they believe the war has not been worth its costs.

Trump's approval rating has hovered near the lowest levels of his political ​career since the conflict began, with Republican strategists warning that ⁠rising living costs have neutralized the political benefits of his tax cuts.

Higher gas prices and cost ​of living concerns pose a political risk to Trump's ‌Republican Party ahead of November's midterm elections, in ​which it risks losing its House majority and possibly the Senate as well.

(Reporting by Ryan Patrick Jones in Toronto; Editing by Scott Malone and Sanjeev Miglani)

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