WASHINGTON - Former US president Jimmy Carter said the Iraq war was one of
the "greatest blunders" ever made by a US leader.
Former US president Jimmy Carter, pictured 07 November 2006,
said the Iraq war was one of the "greatest blunders" ever made by a US
leader.[AFP]
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Carter however, said on CNN he
believed the raging sectarian violence wracking the US-occupied country so far
fell short of a civil war.
"I think that the original invasion of Iraq, and all of its consequences,
yes, were a blunder," Carter said.
"It's going to prove, I believe to be one of the greatest blunders that
American presidents have ever made."
Asked whether the Iraq war would prove to be a bigger mistake in the annals
of US foreign policy than the war in Vietnam, he answered: "I think it is going
to be a close call ... but perhaps much more vividly known by the rest of the
world than Vietnam was."
The former president, who served from 1977 to 1981, said, however, President
George W. Bush could still navigate a way out of Iraq that could be defined as a
victory, by agreeing to an international conference on the conflict.
Carter also added his voice to the semantic debate on how to describe the
fighting, saying he did not think it amounted to the kind of civil war in which
his Carter Center human rights foundation had intervened.
"I think a civil war is a more serious circumstance than exists in Iraq," he
said, but added that it was not really important how the conflict was described.
Bush, during a visit to Latvia for the NATO summit, earlier sidestepped
suggestions Iraq had sunk into civil war, arguing that a recent upsurge in
violence was part of a spiral of sectarian unrest that began nine months
ago.