After endless delays, it is finally here. Newarama had to give out a warning that West Coast shipping delays be dealt with maturely, or a fanboy bloodbath could ensue. And once you read the issue itself, one thing is striking; that cardboard insert ad for EMUSIC is annoying. I mean, for F's sake, they couldn't even spare their big, #1 selling, mega event from some annoying corporate greed. The insert was in almost every Marvel book this week and kind of annoyed me. Anyway, Millar does what you'd expect, and McNiven's art is wonderful as always, but the same problems that have plagued this book continue. Nearly every relevent plot "surprise" has been revealed either days, weeks, or months in advance due to sneak previews, cover solicts, interviews, or fan debate. Sue meeting with Namor is no surprise, for instance. Neither is Punisher joining the team. However, there are some details here that weren't ruined. However, this issue mostly serves to set up the explosive fight-scene for issue #7 (and seemingly all the next tie-ins) and so it feels a bit slower than many. In a way CIVIL WAR has been hampered by some of the issues that plague a lot of Millar's work; he is so quick to score a quick BANG shocker explosion that he has less left come time for the kickoff. He already used napalm in the first half of the story, so when the finale comes, gunpowder just doesn't cut it. This is what caused a lot of his ULTIMATE X-MEN finales to be hit-or-miss, and his WOLVERINE arc to slowly peter out. It's not a bad issue, though. And it is packed to the gills and VERY busy; again, after 2005's HOM taking 4 issues to really go anywhere, it can't be stretched that it is better for an event book to try to do too much than too little. 
The summary: Hank Pym and Maria Hill are training a new set of "heroes" who seem to be named after and have powers like the Greek Gods, debating about having a "second Hercules" in circulation. Reed & Co. work on fixing up Clor. Iron Man is pleased that they've gotten the crime rate so low and gets Reed to agree to the "last push" by claiming that the Pres. allowed for 12 full pardons for heroes involved in the war and that Sue & Johnny will be part of that. Meanwhile, the Punisher is working for the Secret Avengers and sneaks into a SHIELD base (backed by tech) to get data on Project 42, the N-Zone Prison where all the captured anti-SHRA heroes are kept. Spider-Man is back in his old costume and Cap plans to bust out the heroes jailed over the CW. Strangely, Tigra, who has been a pro-SHRA all along, has joined the Secret Avengers with zero fanfare. Cap is then surprised when two criminals, Goldbug and Plunderer, offer to aid his undermanned team. He seems ready to begrudgingly accept them when Punisher shoots and kills both, then takes a beating before being tossed out (seemingly).
 Sue is sent to talk to Namor about helping Cap out, since they used to be Invaders teammates. Namor refuses but claims that Sue's heart may be beating for him (which he says every time they meet, seemingly). Dr. Strange, meanwhile, talks with Watcher and hopes that whatever outcome will be for the best. Cap's Secret Avengers storm into the N-Zone Prison and take out the front guards, only to be confronted by Iron Man and his pro-SHRA forces, both hero and controlled villian. Iron Man claims he planted a mole in their team, and Cap says he knew all along, who was Tigra. He also claims that he had a mole in IM's team (y'know, "oh, yeah, I did it first!"), and it is revealed that Hank Pym is in fact Hulkling in disguise. As Hulkling could copy Pym's retna patterns, he was able to free the entire mass of N-Zone prisoners and the final battle seems about to begin in issue #7.
It was nice seeing Reed almost give a damn about doing something for his family, although doing so by making deals with devils and doesn't endear him. He hardly even feels choked up about Foster's death. The Cap/Punisher sequence is easily the best part, and it was a bit awkward that Tigra, with zero fanfare, joins as a background member only for it to be a shock that she's a mole. DUH! She's only been posing for the pro-SHRA in every issue EXCEPT this one! It was cool to see Hulkling's manuver, although how long he has been Pym seems questionable (was it only this issue? Or others?) and it may or may not mangle FRONTLINE's own traitor story. 2 traitors in one team? Seems awkward. Oh, and it was cool seeing Shroud & Prodigy amung the many heroes lined up after being freed by Hulking; now if only they won't die. The big battle is up next and lord knows we won't see it until maybe March. I don't care what Marvel says, I have no faith in the next issue shipping in Feb. It also gives off the impression that Namor & the Atlantians are planning no attack, which FRONTLINE seems to contradict. It's been a thrilling ride, unfortunately now the final round of blood begins and I have to brace again for heroes becoming mortal enemies, ruthless villians seeming to be heroes, endless potential being fed into the wood-chipper, and more grim darkness. And I bet it doesn't even end. Just leaves a finale that sets up WWH, or Silent War with the Inhumans, or Fish War with the Atlantians, or Eternal War with the Eternals, or Endless Sales War with something else. On the one hand, CW is loud, dramatic, and certainly climatic. On the other hand, the grimness, explosions, and whatnot can be draining as Marvel stretches out this crossover and will likely refuse to see it end, pumping in more and more 'roids like Barry Bonds in a home-run derby. I'm psyched for the climax, if only because I love a good fight and Millar rarely disappoints. But I also dread the shattered relationships and the mangled status quo that is to come. Joe Q wants to create a world that rehashes the 60's where all heroes are hesitant enemies at best, Spider-Man is single, Mutants are fewer in number than wild pandas, and so on. Trying to merge the social references of today with the status quo of yesteryear. Least in sales, it's working.