Civil War Watch: Who’s calling it a Civil War?
Filed at 1:07 pm, Tuesday November 28th 2006
by Arlen Parsa
by Arlen Parsa
Time for an update on who’s calling the situation in Iraq a civil war, and who else is still in a State of Denialtm. First, here’s what we already know:
- The White House: Still in denial
- The scholars and experts: Not in denial
- The LA Times: Not in denial
- NYT’s Maureen Dowd: Not in denial
- NBC News: Not in denial
- CNN’s Michael Ware: Not in denial
- The Christian Science Monitor: Not in denial
- UN Secretary General Kofi Annan: “We could be there. In fact, we are almost there.”
- Wash Post’s Dana Priest: “Absolutely†believes the “level of violence [in Iraq] equals a civil war.â€
- The Democratic National Committee: “President Bush… should stop splitting hairs and start acknowledging the fact that Iraq is in a civil war”
- McClatchy Newspapers (formerly Knight Ridder): Awfully close to calling it a civil war (”a growing number of Middle East analysts … say that Iraq’s cascading civil war has spun out of Washington’s control.”)
- Associated Press: On the fence (”Editors at The Associated Press have discussed the issue and haven’t reached a definitive stance”)
- ABC, CBS: Discussing (”Officials at both ABC News and CBS News said that they discuss the situation all the time, but that there’s no network policy to use the term civil war”)
- Newsweek Columnist Fareed Zakaria: Not in denial
- The White House, update: Still in denial
- The New York Times jumps on the civil war bandwagon. Good for them.
- President Clinton as well.
- … and former Secretary of State Colin Powell too. (Note that Powell was also Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.)
- Well-known conservative Washington Post columnist George F. Will has now called the situation in Iraq “semi-genocidal,” seeming to indicate that he believes it is beyond civil war.
- Further, Al Gore has now called the situation in Iraq “worse than a civil war.”
- The Washington Post editorial board referred to the situation in Iraq as an “incipient civil war,” on December 7 2006, hinting that they may soon consider it a straight-out civil war.
- Washington Post Senior military correspondent Thomas E. Ricks (like Dana Priest, he is as close as WaPo reporters get to rock-star status) said on the December 10th episode of NBC’s Meet The Press that he believes the situation in Iraq is “an insurgency, a civil war, it’s, I think the pure hobbesian state- the war of all against all at this point. It-it isn’t a, it’s worse than a civil war in some ways, it’s in a state of meltdown. The country is falling apart.”
- A CNN poll conducted late fall 2006 showed that 65% of Americans consider the situation in Iraq a civil war.
- Republican Senator Gordon Smith (from Oregon) called the situation in Iraq a “civil war” on the CNN program The Situation Room with Wolf Blitzer on December 11, 2006. The Senator also hinted that he believes the President is in a state of denial about the situation in Iraq but hopes he will change his mind.
- A USA Today/Gallup poll released on December 11 2006 indicated that 76% of the American public believed Iraq was in a civil war, versus only 22% who didn’t.
- Former US-supported interim prime minister Iyad Allawi called the situation a civil war as early as March 2006. He has more recently said that Iraq is “approaching now, unfortunately, very fast the point of no return.”
- Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) has called the situation in Iraq a ‘civil war‘ now as well.
- Army Maj. Gen. William L. Nash (ret.) began calling the situation in Iraq a ‘civil war’ as early as spring 2006
- Joe Biden, Senate Committee on Foreign Relations Chair has said “We now have a civil war… All the king’s horses and all the king’s men will not put Iraq together again, absent Maliki making some very hard decisions about what he’s going to do.”
- Senator Ted Kennedy repeatedly called the situation in Iraq a “civil war” in a January 9, 2006 speech for the National Press Club.
Update:
- In an interview with the British Channel 4, now-former US Ambassador to the UN John Bolton referred to the situation in Iraq as a “civil war.” Video here (multiformat choice: Quicktime or Windows Media).
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