Show pageOld revisionsBacklinksBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== Civil War ====== ===== Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary ===== * **Core Identity:** **A universe-shattering ideological conflict that forces every superhuman to choose a side in a battle between government-mandated accountability and personal freedom, pitting hero against hero.** * **Key Takeaways:** * **Role in the Universe:** //Civil War// represents the ultimate schism within the Marvel superhero community, forcing a debate on the very nature of heroism and its place in society. It transitions heroes from a loose collective of vigilantes into a politically charged and fractured entity. [[Superhuman Registration Act]]. * **Primary Impact:** The event fundamentally altered the status quo for years, leading directly to the death of [[Steve Rogers|Captain America]], the ascension of [[Tony Stark]] to Director of S.H.I.E.L.D., and creating a vulnerable, divided hero community that was later exploited during the [[Secret Invasion]]. * **Key Incarnations:** The core ideological divide remains, but the scale and catalyst differ dramatically. The Earth-616 comic event was a sprawling, society-wide conflict involving hundreds of characters triggered by a civilian tragedy, whereas the MCU version, `Captain America: Civil War`, was an intimate, personal conflict focused almost exclusively on the [[Avengers]] and catalyzed by the cumulative collateral damage of their actions and the re-emergence of the [[Winter Soldier]]. ===== Part 2: Origin and Evolution ===== ==== Publication History and Creation ==== The //Civil War// limited series was the centerpiece of a massive 2006-2007 company-wide crossover event published by Marvel Comics. The core seven-issue miniseries was written by Mark Millar with art by penciler Steve McNiven, inker Dexter Vines, and colorist Morry Hollowell. Millar conceived of the idea years earlier, originally as a simple question: "What if superheroes' secret identities were made public?" This seed grew into a much larger and more complex narrative. The event was a direct allegory for the political climate of a post-9/11 America, specifically mirroring the debates surrounding national security versus civil liberties embodied by legislation like the USA PATRIOT Act. The conflict between Iron Man's pro-security, pro-accountability stance and Captain America's pro-freedom, anti-authoritarian position was a direct reflection of the polarized political discourse of the era. The event was a monumental commercial and critical success. Its grounded, politically relevant themes resonated with readers, and the shocking "hero vs. hero" premise was a major draw. The main series was supported by an unprecedented number of tie-in issues across dozens of Marvel titles, showing the conflict's impact on everyone from the [[Fantastic Four]] to the [[X-Men]] and individual heroes like [[Spider-Man]] and [[Wolverine]]. Its consequences were seismic, setting a new status quo that defined the Marvel Universe for the next several years, directly leading into events like //The Death of Captain America//, //World War Hulk//, and //Secret Invasion//. ==== In-Universe Origin Story ==== === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === The seeds of the Superhuman Registration Act (SRA) were sown over years of escalating superhuman-related disasters. Public sentiment, once adulatory, had grown fearful. Incidents like the Hulk's rampage in Las Vegas and the Scarlet Witch's decimation of the mutant population in //House of M// created a political climate ripe for change. The breaking point was the **Stamford Incident**. The New Warriors, a team of young heroes starring in a reality television show, tracked a group of supervillains to a residential neighborhood in Stamford, Connecticut. In a bid to boost their ratings, the team engaged the villains, including the dangerously powerful Nitro. Cornered, Nitro unleashed his full explosive power, vaporizing a significant portion of the town, including an elementary school. The blast killed over 600 civilians, 60 of whom were children. The public outcry was immediate and overwhelming. The New Warriors were vilified, and the entire superhuman community was blamed for operating without oversight or accountability. The Stamford Incident was the political ammunition Congress and S.H.I.E.L.D. needed. Miriam Sharpe, a mother whose son died in the blast, became a prominent public advocate for superhuman regulation. Riding this wave of public fear and anger, the United States government passed the Superhuman Registration Act. The SRA mandated that any individual in the U.S. with superhuman abilities must register with the government, revealing their secret identity and submitting to mandatory training and oversight. They would, in effect, become licensed government agents. To some, like Tony Stark, who felt immense guilt over his own past failings and the destructive potential of unchecked power, this was a logical, necessary step. To others, like Steve Rogers, it was a terrifying violation of civil liberties and a dangerous path toward authoritarian control. The lines were drawn, and the war for the soul of the superhuman community was about to begin. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === In the MCU, the impetus for government oversight was not a single incident but the **cumulative collateral damage** of the Avengers' world-saving efforts. The conflict was framed not by the Superhuman Registration Act, but by the **Sokovia Accords**. The chain of events leading to the Accords includes: * **The Battle of New York:** The Chitauri invasion in `The Avengers` (2012) caused massive destruction and loss of life, revealing the world-ending scale of threats the Avengers faced. * **The Fall of S.H.I.E.L.D.:** The HYDRA infiltration revealed in `Captain America: The Winter Soldier` (2014) shattered public trust in global security organizations and demonstrated the danger of unaccountable power. * **The Battle of Sokovia:** The most significant catalyst. In `Avengers: Age of Ultron` (2015), Tony Stark's creation of Ultron led to the complete destruction of the nation of Sokovia. Despite the Avengers saving the world, the human cost was immense and laid directly at their feet. The final straw occurred in Lagos, Nigeria at the start of `Captain America: Civil War` (2016). While pursuing Crossbones, Wanda Maximoff (Scarlet Witch) redirected an explosion to save Captain America, but inadvertently sent it into a nearby building, killing numerous civilians, including Wakandan humanitarian aid workers. This string of disasters led U.S. Secretary of State Thaddeus "Thunderbolt" Ross to present the Avengers with the Sokovia Accords. Ratified by 117 nations, the Accords stipulated that the Avengers would no longer be a private organization and would operate under the direct supervision of a United-Nations-controlled panel. They could only be deployed when and where that panel deemed it necessary. This created a deep philosophical rift. Tony Stark, haunted by his creation of Ultron and believing oversight was essential, became the Accords' primary proponent. Steve Rogers, having seen S.H.I.E.L.D. and the World Security Council compromised by HYDRA, fundamentally distrusted putting the world's safety in the hands of political committees. This ideological conflict was then made intensely personal by the re-emergence of Bucky Barnes, the Winter Soldier. Framed for a bombing in Vienna that killed King T'Chaka of Wakanda, Bucky became an international fugitive. Captain America's unwavering determination to protect his friend, even against the authority of the Accords, placed him in direct opposition to Iron Man and the law, transforming a political debate into a physical, emotional, and devastating civil war. ===== Part 3: Timeline, Key Turning Points & Aftermath ===== === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === The comic book Civil War was a year-long, nationwide conflict characterized by escalating battles, shifting alliances, and profound moral compromises. * **The Act's Passage & The First Shot:** Following the Stamford Incident, the SRA is passed. S.H.I.E.L.D. Commander Maria Hill attempts to force Captain America to lead the charge in apprehending unregistered heroes. He refuses, stating heroes must remain above political agendas to be trusted. He fights his way out of the Helicarrier and goes underground, forming a resistance movement dubbed the "Secret Avengers." * **Spider-Man's Unmasking:** Tony Stark, as the public face of the Pro-Registration movement, orchestrates a massive press conference where he convinces Peter Parker to unmask himself to the world. This act of "good faith" is a huge propaganda victory for the Pro-Registration side, but it places Peter and his family in immense danger and becomes a decision he will later regret. * **The Goliath Tragedy:** The first major battle occurs when Stark's forces lay a trap for Captain America's Secret Avengers. During the chaotic fight, a clone of Thor (later revealed to be named Ragnarok), created by Stark and Reed Richards, is unleashed. The clone is unstable and violent, and in a shocking display of force, it murders Bill Foster, the hero Goliath, by blasting a hole through his chest. This is the point of no return. Goliath's death horrifies both sides and causes several heroes, including Sue and Johnny Storm of the Fantastic Four, to defect to Captain America's side. * **Project 42 - The Negative Zone Prison:** It is revealed that Stark and Richards have been preparing for this conflict for some time. They constructed a massive prison in the Negative Zone, designated "Project 42," to hold captured unregistered heroes indefinitely and without trial. The discovery of this extra-dimensional gulag hardens the resolve of the resistance and causes Spider-Man to question his allegiance. After witnessing the brutal methods used to control prisoners, he defects and joins Captain America. * **The Final Battle & Surrender:** The final confrontation is an all-out war in the streets of New York City. The Secret Avengers, aided by a Trojan horse (Hulkling impersonating Hank Pym), spring the prisoners from Project 42. The battle is brutal, with The Punisher intervening to save a wounded Spider-Man and Vision disabling Iron Man's armor. As Captain America stands over a beaten Tony Stark, ready to deliver the final blow, he is tackled by a group of first responders—police officers, firefighters, and paramedics. He looks around and sees not the political battle he was fighting, but the terrified faces of the civilians he swore to protect and the catastrophic damage their war had caused. In that moment, he realizes they had stopped being heroes and had lost sight of their purpose. Steve Rogers unmasks, surrenders to the authorities, and orders his forces to stand down. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === The MCU's conflict was shorter, more contained, and driven by personal relationships rather than a broad societal schism. * **The Accords Debate:** The initial conflict is one of words. The Avengers debate the merits of the Sokovia Accords at their headquarters. Tony Stark argues for accountability, while Steve Rogers argues for freedom of choice. The team is clearly divided, with Natasha Romanoff and Vision siding with Tony, and Sam Wilson siding with Steve. * **The Vienna Bombing & Bucky's Return:** A terrorist attack at the UN summit to ratify the Accords kills King T'Chaka. Security footage implicates Bucky Barnes. T'Challa, now the Black Panther, vows vengeance. Steve, believing Bucky is innocent and being hunted, goes rogue to find him first. This act puts him in direct violation of the Accords and in the crosshairs of Tony's team. * **The Airport Showdown:** This is the centerpiece battle of the film. Captain America's team (Bucky, Falcon, Scarlet Witch, Hawkeye, Ant-Man) attempts to reach a Quinjet to pursue the real bomber, Helmut Zemo. They are confronted at the Leipzig/Halle Airport by Iron Man's team (War Machine, Black Widow, Vision, Black Panther, Spider-Man). The resulting battle is spectacular but also tragic, as friends are forced to fight friends. The fight climaxes with Vision accidentally crippling War Machine, and Steve and Bucky escaping, leaving the rest of their team to be captured and imprisoned in the high-security underwater prison, The Raft. * **The Siberian Revelation:** Iron Man learns Bucky was framed and goes to help Steve, offering a truce. They, along with Black Panther who followed them, track Zemo to a remote HYDRA facility in Siberia. There, Zemo's true plan is revealed: he has no intention of unleashing more Winter Soldiers. Instead, he shows Tony security footage from 1991, revealing that a brainwashed Bucky Barnes murdered Howard and Maria Stark. * **The Final Fight & The Breakup:** Consumed by grief and rage, Tony attacks Bucky with lethal intent. Steve is forced to defend his friend. The ensuing fight is not a battle of heroes; it is a desperate, brutal, and personal brawl in a concrete bunker. It ends with Steve disabling Tony's armor and leaving with Bucky, but not before dropping his iconic shield—a symbol of their broken friendship and the end of his identity as Captain America. Steve later breaks his allies out of The Raft, becoming the leader of a fugitive team of "Secret Avengers." The Avengers are left shattered, a state that leaves Earth vulnerable to the arrival of Thanos. ===== Part 4: Key Factions & Ideologies ===== ==== Pro-Registration / Pro-Accords Faction ==== This faction argued that superhuman activity required government oversight, accountability, and legitimacy to maintain public trust and prevent future catastrophes. * **Earth-616 Leader: [[Tony Stark|Iron Man]]** * **Motivation:** Driven by immense personal guilt (specifically over a past incident where his technology was misused and killed an innocent person) and a futurist's pragmatism. Stark believed that registration was inevitable and that it was better for the heroes to lead the process and shape it from within rather than have a more draconian version forced upon them. He saw the SRA as a necessary evolution for the superhuman community. * **Key Allies:** * **[[Reed Richards|Mister Fantastic]]:** Approached the problem with cold, detached logic. He calculated the statistical probability of future superhuman-related disasters and concluded that registration was the only logical course of action to mitigate them. * **[[Henry Pym|Yellowjacket]]:** A staunch supporter of the government and a believer in order and control. * **[[Carol Danvers|Ms. Marvel]]:** As a former military officer, she was naturally inclined to support a government-led chain of command and believed in the system. * **[[Peter Parker|Spider-Man]] (Initially):** His loyalty to his mentor, Tony Stark, and his belief in Tony's vision led him to join the pro-registration side and unmask. * **MCU Leader: [[Tony Stark|Iron Man]]** * **Motivation:** Stark's MCU motivation is even more personal. He is directly responsible for creating Ultron and causing the destruction of Sokovia. A young man, Charlie Spencer, who died in Sokovia is presented to him by the boy's mother, making his guilt tangible. He believes the Avengers need to be "put in check" and that the Sokovia Accords are the only way to earn back global trust and prevent them from becoming the villains. * **Key Allies:** * **[[James Rhodes|War Machine]]:** A military colonel, his belief in the chain of command is absolute. He sees the Accords as the law. * **[[Natasha Romanoff|Black Widow]]:** A pragmatist who, after the fall of S.H.I.E.L.D., believes that staying together as a team, even under government control, is the best way to manage political fallout. * **[[Vision]]:** An android of pure logic. He calculates that the Avengers' power has grown unchecked and that the number of global threats has risen with their emergence, concluding that oversight is a logical necessity. ==== Anti-Registration / Anti-Accords Faction ==== This faction argued that registration was a violation of civil liberties, that secret identities were necessary to protect loved ones, and that placing heroes under political control would compromise their ability to act freely for the good of all humanity. * **Earth-616 Leader: [[Steve Rogers|Captain America]]** * **Motivation:** As a man who fought against the tyrannical governments of World War II, Captain America has a deep-seated distrust of unchecked authority. He believed that forcing heroes to register was a slippery slope to them being used as weapons for political agendas. His core belief was that heroes must be free to answer a higher calling than the law, and that their greatest strength was their independence. * **Key Allies:** * **[[Luke Cage]]:** Having been unjustly imprisoned, he refused to ever willingly give up his freedom to a system he didn't trust. * **[[Daredevil]]:** A lawyer who saw the SRA as unconstitutional, and a hero whose secret identity was paramount to his crime-fighting career. * **[[The Falcon]]:** Captain America's most loyal partner. * **[[Sue Storm|Invisible Woman]]:** Initially sided with Iron Man, but defected after the death of Goliath, disgusted by the brutal tactics being employed. * **MCU Leader: [[Steve Rogers|Captain America]]** * **Motivation:** In the MCU, Steve's motivation is rooted in his experience with HYDRA's infiltration of S.H.I.E.L.D. He witnessed firsthand how a powerful organization with good intentions could be corrupted from within. He refuses to hand the Avengers' autonomy over to a political panel that could have its own agendas or be just as easily compromised. "The safest hands are still our own," he argues. This ideological stance is then fueled by his intensely personal loyalty to his friend, Bucky Barnes. * **Key Allies:** * **[[Sam Wilson|The Falcon]]:** Utterly loyal to Steve, both as a friend and as a soldier. * **[[Wanda Maximoff|Scarlet Witch]]:** Treated with fear and placed under effective house arrest by Stark, she chooses the side that offers her freedom and treats her as a person, not a weapon of mass destruction. * **[[Clint Barton|Hawkeye]]:** Comes out of retirement out of a sense of obligation to his friends and a belief that the team shouldn't be torn apart by politics. ===== Part 5: The Aftermath: A New Status Quo ===== === Earth-616: The Initiative and the Dark Reign === The surrender of Captain America did not end the conflict; it merely ended the open warfare. The Pro-Registration side won, and the SRA became the law of the land. * **The Death of Captain America:** While being led up the steps of a courthouse for his trial, Steve Rogers was assassinated by a brainwashed Sharon Carter under the manipulation of the Red Skull. This shocking event sent a seismic wave through the Marvel Universe, cementing the victory of the Pro-Registration movement and leaving a massive power vacuum. * **The Fifty-State Initiative:** With Captain America gone, Tony Stark was appointed the new Director of S.H.I.E.L.D. He implemented "The Initiative," a program to place a government-sanctioned and trained superhero team in every state. This fundamentally changed the landscape of heroism in America, institutionalizing it under federal control. * **A Fractured Community:** The hero community remained deeply divided. Those who registered were seen as heroes by the public but as traitors by the unregistered. The remaining "Secret Avengers," now led by Luke Cage, continued to operate outside the law. This division and mistrust made them vulnerable to the Skrull's //Secret Invasion//, as they were too busy fighting each other to notice the enemy within. * **The Dark Reign:** Stark's inability to prevent the Skrull invasion led to his public disgrace. The government dismantled S.H.I.E.L.D. and handed its reins to the man credited with killing the Skrull Queen: Norman Osborn. Osborn rebranded S.H.I.E.L.D. into H.A.M.M.E.R. and formed his own "Dark Avengers," ushering in an era where villains held the power, a direct and catastrophic consequence of the rifts created by Civil War. === MCU: The Avengers Disassembled === The aftermath of the MCU's Civil War was less about policy and more about the dissolution of a family. * **Fugitives and Fractures:** The Sokovia Accords remained in effect. Tony Stark's faction of the Avengers became the official, government-sanctioned team, but it was a hollowed-out shell of its former self, with Rhodes recovering from his injuries and others like Spider-Man returning to their solo lives. Steve Rogers and his allies became international fugitives, operating in the shadows as the "Secret Avengers." * **Personal Rifts:** The deepest wound was the personal one between Tony Stark and Steve Rogers. The revelation of Bucky's role in the death of Tony's parents, and Steve's admission that he knew and hid it, shattered their friendship seemingly beyond repair. This emotional schism meant that when the universe's greatest threat arrived, Earth's two most important defenders were not on speaking terms. * **Vulnerability to Thanos:** The primary consequence of the MCU's Civil War was that it perfectly set the stage for Thanos's victory in `Avengers: Infinity War`. With the Avengers broken, scattered across the globe and into space, and unable to coordinate, they were forced to fight the Black Order on multiple fronts. They were picked off one by one, unable to mount the unified defense that might have saved the universe. The Civil War ensured that when Thanos came, the Avengers had already lost. ===== Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions ===== * **Civil War II (Earth-616):** A 2016 sequel event that attempted to recapture the "hero vs. hero" theme of the original. This time, the conflict centered on predictive justice. The emergence of an Inhuman named Ulysses, who could see the future, created a new ideological divide. Captain Marvel (Carol Danvers) led the faction that wanted to use his powers proactively to stop crimes before they happened, while Iron Man led the opposition, arguing that the future isn't fixed and that you can't punish people for things they haven't done yet. The event was highly controversial and resulted in the deaths of both War Machine and Bruce Banner. * **What If?: Civil War (2007):** This one-shot comic explored two alternate outcomes. * **What if Iron Man Died?:** In this reality, Tony Stark is killed in the final battle. His death martyrs him, and Captain America, filled with regret, works with the government to create a compromise version of the SRA that respects civil liberties. He becomes President of the United States to oversee the new era of unity. * **What if Captain America Won?:** In this scenario, Captain America accepts Iron Man's surrender. However, the government refuses to repeal the SRA, leading to a prolonged and bloody guerilla war between Cap's forces and the state, fragmenting the United States and turning it into a battleground. * **Marvel: Ultimate Alliance 2 (Video Game):** The plot of this 2009 action RPG is a direct adaptation of the Civil War storyline. A key feature of the game is that the player is forced to choose a side—Pro-Registration or Anti-Registration—which determines which characters are playable and how the story unfolds. * **Secret Wars (2015) - The Warzone:** During the //Secret Wars// event, the patchwork planet of Battleworld featured a domain known as "The Warzone." This realm was locked in a perpetual state of civil war, a timeline where the conflict never ended. The SRA was passed six years prior, and the nation was split between "The Iron," led by President Stark, and "The Blue," a secessionist territory led by General America. ===== See Also ===== * [[Superhuman Registration Act]] * [[Sokovia Accords]] * [[Tony Stark]] * [[Steve Rogers]] * [[The Initiative]] * [[Secret Invasion]] * [[Mark Millar]] ===== Notes and Trivia ===== ((The original pitch for the event was titled //Secret War//, but Brian Michael Bendis had already used that name for a 2004-2005 limited series, prompting the change to //Civil War//.)) ((The X-Men, recovering from the events of //House of M//, officially declared neutrality in the conflict, with Emma Frost stating it was "the stupidest idea she'd ever heard" and that the mutants had enough problems without getting involved in a "human war." However, individual members like Wolverine and Bishop did get involved. Wolverine hunted down Nitro himself to make him pay for the Stamford incident.)) ((The Punisher's involvement was brief but memorable. He sought to join Captain America's side, but when two supervillains (Goldbug and Plunderer) also arrived to join the resistance, Punisher immediately shot and killed them, stating "We're not the same." Captain America was so disgusted by this that he brutally beat Punisher and kicked him out of the movement.)) ((Spider-Man's Iron Spider armor, a gift from Tony Stark, was a key visual of the Pro-Registration side. It was red and gold, featured three mechanical spider-arms, and was equipped with advanced technology that mirrored Iron Man's own suit.)) ((In the MCU, the film `Captain America: Civil War` is often jokingly referred to by fans as `Avengers 2.5` due to its massive ensemble cast and universe-altering consequences, which were far more significant than a typical solo character film.)) ((Source Material: Civil War (2006-2007) #1-7, along with numerous tie-in issues in titles such as The Amazing Spider-Man, Captain America, and Fantastic Four.)) ((Film Adaptation: `Captain America: Civil War` (2016), directed by Anthony and Joe Russo.))