dcentity2000
<font color=red>Simba Cub<br><font color=green>Is
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- Jul 22, 2003
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Recent developments in Iraq have lead to a current knife-edge situation that threatens to bring the country down into all out civil war.
Everyone, even the most radical, are calling for peace:
The scale of the problem is widespread:
I hope not. What do you think?
[EDIT] I voted that it will not yet descend into civil war, but probably will in the future. Hussein kept everyone suppressed and now they're all springing out. I also feel that the occupation is a negative at the moment, as it is not a peace keeping force and rather an invading force. People resent that kind of thing.
Rich::
The action, should you have missed it, was that the religious groups have resorted to violence:Baghdad's streets are almost deserted after Iraq's government put the capital and three provinces under curfew to halt sectarian violence.
To outline how grave the situation is, a said curfew has been instated and...At least 130 people - mostly Sunnis - have died since the al-Askari shrine, holy to Shias, was bombed on Wednesday.
Hiwa Osman, an Iraqi Government spokesman, has acknowledged that civil war is now a distinct probability, saying:All police and army leave has been cancelled.
He does, however, not believe that they are either in a state of civil war and firmly hopes that there will not be one.Everything will fall apart if we have civil war.
Everyone, even the most radical, are calling for peace:
Sadly, it doesn't appear to be working - yet:On Thursday radical Shia cleric Moqtada Sadr added his voice to those calling for restraint.
"The occupation is sowing sedition among us," he said.
"Do not allow this to weaken your determination, unity and solidarity."
Our correspondent says the latest violence has been shocking even by Iraq's standards.
...
The main Sunni alliance said it was pulling out of the emergency talks convened by President Talabani after the string of attacks on Sunnis.
It has also announced its withdrawal from negotiations to form a coalition government - a development which could have far-reaching consequences, our correspondent says.
...
Ayatollah Sistani has urged Shias not to attack Sunni mosques, but a spokesman for the cleric said anger might be hard to contain.
The scale of the problem is widespread:
I could go on like this for ages. It's a pickle, no doubt about that. But will these poor Iraqis descend into a civil war, in keeping with many occupations in the past?the Association of Muslim Scholars - the main Sunni religious authority - said at least 168 Sunni mosques had been attacked across the country since the bombing on Wednesday, the Associated Press reported.
I hope not. What do you think?
[EDIT] I voted that it will not yet descend into civil war, but probably will in the future. Hussein kept everyone suppressed and now they're all springing out. I also feel that the occupation is a negative at the moment, as it is not a peace keeping force and rather an invading force. People resent that kind of thing.
Rich::