The United States is “at war” with the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), White House and Pentagon officials said Friday, marking a significant departure from the more cautious rhetoric President Obama and Secretary of State John Kerry used earlier this week.
READ: Full text of Obama’s ISIS speech
“This is not the Iraq War of 2002, but make no mistake, we know we are at war with ISIL,” Pentagon press secretary Rear Adm. John Kirby said during a briefing Friday afternoon, using an alternate name for the Islamic militant group that has seized territory throughout Iraq and Syria. He qualified that the U.S. is at war “in the same way we are at war and continue to be at war with al Qaida and its affiliates.”
White House press secretary Josh Earnest echoed that language in a separate briefing moments later, acknowledging that the U.S. is “at war” with ISIS in the same way it is with al Qaida.
Both comments come less than a day after Secretary of State John Kerry explicitly told ABC News that the nation was not at war with the militant group.
“Look, we’re engaged in a counterterrorism operation of a significant order,” Kerry said in response to a question about whether the evolving military campaign constituted a war. “I think ‘war’ is the wrong reference term with respect to that, but obviously it involves kinetic military action.”









