The
2003 invasion of Iraq, (from March 20 to May 1,
2003) was led by the United States
, backed by British
forces and
smaller contingents from Australia,
Denmark
, Poland
and Spain
. Four
countries participated with troops during the initial invasion
phase, which lasted from March 20 to May 1. These were the United
States (248,000), United Kingdom (45,000), Australia (2,000), and
Poland (194).
36 other
countries were involved in its aftermath. The
invasion marked the beginning of the current
Iraq War.
In preparation for the invasion, 100,000
US troops were assembled in Kuwait
by February
18. The United States supplied the vast majority
of the invading forces, but also received support from Kurdish troops in Iraqi Kurdistan
.
According to then
President of the United
States,
George W. Bush and then Prime Minister of the
United Kingdom, Tony Blair, the
reasons for the invasion were "to disarm Iraq
of weapons of mass destruction
(WMD), to end Saddam Hussein's
support for
terrorism, and to free the Iraqi people." According to
Blair, the trigger was Iraq's failure to take a "final opportunity"
to disarm itself of nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons that
US and British officials called an immediate and intolerable threat
to world peace. Although some remnants of pre-1991 production were
found after the end of the war, US government spokespeople
confirmed that these were not the weapons for which the US went to
war. In 2005, the
Central
Intelligence Agency released a report saying that no weapons of
mass destruction had been found in Iraq.
In a January 2003 CBS poll 64% of US nationals had approved of
military action against Iraq, however 63% wanted President Bush to
find a diplomatic solution rather than going to war, and 62%
believed the threat of terrorism would increase in the event of
war.
The
invasion of Iraq was strongly opposed by some traditional U.S.
allies, including France
, Germany
, New Zealand
, and Canada
.
Their leaders argued that there was no evidence of WMD and that
invading Iraq was not justified in the context of
UNMOVIC's February 12, 2003 report.
On February 15, 2003,
a month before the invasion, there were many worldwide protests against the Iraq war,
including a rally of three million people in Rome
, which is
listed in the Guinness Book of
Records as the largest ever anti-war
rally. According to the French
academic
Dominique Reynié, between
January 3 and April 12, 2003, 36 million people across the globe
took part in almost 3,000 protests against the Iraq
war.
The invasion was preceded by an air strike on the Iraqi
Presidential Palace on 19 March 2003. The following day allied
forces launched an incursion into southern Iraq from their massing
point near the Iraqi-Kuwaiti border.
While commandos
launched an amphibious assault from the Persian Gulf
to secure Basra
and the
surrounding oil fields, the main invasion army moved into southern
Iraq securing the region and engaging in the Battle of Nasiriyah on 23 March.
Massive air strikes across the country and against Iraqi command
and control threw the defending army into chaos and prevented an
effective resistance.
On 26 March the 173rd Airborne Brigade was airdropped near the northern city
of Kirkuk
where they
joined forces with Kurdish rebels and
fought several actions against the Iraqi
army to secure the northern part of the country.
The main body of allied forces continued their drive into the heart
of Iraq and encountered little resistance.
Most of the Iraqi
military was quickly defeated and Baghdad
was occupied on 9 April. Other operations
occurred against pockets of the Iraqi army including the capture
and occupation of Kirkuk
on April 10,
and the attack and capture of Tikrit
on 15
April. Iraqi President
Saddam Hussein and the central
leadership went into hiding as the allied forces completed the
occupation of the country. On 1 May an end of major combat
operations was declared, ending the invasion period and beginning
the occupation period.
Prelude to the invasion
The
Gulf War ended on April 11, 1991 with a
cease-fire negotiated between the US, its allies and Iraq. The U.S.
and its allies maintained a policy of â
containmentâ towards Iraq.
This policy involved
numerous economic sanctions by the
UN Security Council, US and UK
enforcement of Iraqi no-fly zones
declared by the US and the UK to protect Kurds
in Iraqi
Kurdistan
and Shias in the south, and ongoing inspections to prevent
Iraqi development of chemical, biological, and nuclear
weapons. Iraqi military helicopters and planes regularly
contested the no-fly zones.
In October 1998, removing the Hussein regime became official
US foreign policy with enactment
of the "
Iraq Liberation Act."
Enacted following the expulsion of
UN weapons inspectors the preceding
August after some had been caught spying for the US, the act
provided $97 million for Iraqi "democratic opposition
organizations" to "establish a program to support a transition to
democracy in Iraq." This legislation contrasted with the terms set
out in
United Nations
Security Council Resolution 687, which focused on weapons and
weapons programs and made no mention of regime change. One month
after the passage of the âIraq Liberation Act,â the US and UK
launched a bombardment campaign of Iraq called
Operation Desert Fox. The campaignâs
express rationale was to hamper the Hussein governmentâs ability to
produce chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons, but US
intelligence personnel also hoped it would help weaken Husseinâs
grip on power.
With the election of
George W.
Bush as
US
President in 2000, the US moved towards a more aggressive
policy toward Iraq. The
United States Republican
Party's campaign platform in the
US presidential election,
2000 called for "full implementation" of the
Iraq Liberation Act and removal of
Hussein, and key Bush advisors, including Vice President
Dick Cheney, Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld, and Rumsfeldâs Deputy
Paul Wolfowitz, had long desired to
invade Iraq. After leaving the
George W. Bush administration, former
US Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill said that an attack
on Iraq had been planned since Bush's inauguration, and that the
first
United
States National Security Council meeting involved discussion of
an invasion. O'Neill later backtracked, saying that these
discussions were part of a continuation of foreign policy first put
into place by the
Clinton
administration.
Despite the Bush administration's stated interest in liberating
Iraq, little formal movement towards an invasion occurred until the
September 11, 2001
attacks. For example, the administration prepared
Operation Desert Badger to respond
aggressively in the event that any
US Air
Force pilot was shot down while flying over Iraq, but this
didn't happen. According to aides who were with Rumsfeld in the
National Military
Command Center on September 11, Rumsfeld asked for: "best info
fast. Judge whether good enough hit Saddam Hussein at same time.
Not only
Osama bin Laden." The
rationale for invading Iraq as a response to 9/11 has been widely
questioned, as there was no cooperation between
Saddam Hussein and
al-Qaeda.
Shortly after September 11, 2001 (on September 20), President Bush
addressed a joint session of the
US
Congress (which was simulcast live to the world), and announced
his new "
War on Terrorism". This
announcement was accompanied by the doctrine of 'pre-emptive'
military action, later termed the
Bush
Doctrine. Some Bush advisers favored an immediate invasion of
Iraq, while others advocated building an international coalition
and obtaining
United Nations
authorization. Bush eventually decided to seek UN authorization,
while still reserving the option of invading without it.
Preparations for war
While there had been some earlier talk of action against Iraq, the
Bush administration waited until September 2002 to call for action,
with
White House Chief of
Staff Andrew Card saying, "From a
marketing point of view, you don't introduce new products in
August." Bush began formally making his case to the international
community for an invasion of Iraq in his September 12, 2002 address
to the
UN Security Council.
Key US
allies in NATO
, such as the
United Kingdom, agreed with the US actions, while France and
Germany were critical of plans to invade Iraq, arguing instead for
continued diplomacy and weapons inspections. After
considerable debate, the
UN Security Council
adopted a compromise resolution,
UN Security Council
Resolution 1441, which authorized the resumption of weapons
inspections and promised "serious consequences" for noncompliance.
Security Council members France and Russia made clear that they did
not consider these consequences to include the use of force to
overthrow the Iraqi government.Both the US ambassador to the UN,
John Negroponte, and the UK
ambassador
Jeremy Greenstock
publicly confirmed this reading of the resolution, assuring that
Resolution 1441 provided no "automaticity" or "hidden triggers" for
an invasion without further consultation of the Security
Council.
Resolution 1441 gave Iraq "a final
opportunity to comply with its disarmament obligations" and set up
inspections by the
United Nations Monitoring, Verification and Inspection
Commission (UNMOVIC) and the International Atomic Energy
Agency
(IAEA). Hussein accepted the resolution on
November 13 and inspectors returned to Iraq under the direction of
UNMOVIC chairman
Hans Blix and IAEA
Director General
Mohamed
ElBaradei. As of February 2003, the IAEA "found no evidence or
plausible indication of the revival of a nuclear weapons programme
in Iraq"; the IAEA concluded that certain items which could have
been used in nuclear enrichment centrifuges, such as aluminum
tubes, were in fact intended for other uses. UNMOVIC "did not find
evidence of the continuation or resumption of programmes of weapons
of mass destruction" or significant quantities of proscribed items.
UNMOVIC did supervise the destruction of a small number of empty
chemical rocket warheads, 50 liters of mustard gas that had been
declared by Iraq and sealed by UNSCOM in 1998, and laboratory
quantities of a mustard gas precursor, along with about 50
Al-Samoud missiles of a design that Iraq claimed did not exceed the
permitted 150 km range, but which had travelled up to
183 km in tests. Shortly before the invasion, UNMOVIC stated
that it would take "months" to verify Iraqi compliance with
resolution 1441.
In October 2002 the US Congress passed a "
Joint
Resolution to Authorize the Use of United States Armed Forces
Against Iraq". The resolution authorized the President to "use
any means necessary" against Iraq, Americans polled in January 2003
widely favored further diplomacy over an invasion. Later that year,
however, Americans began to agree with Bush's plan. The US
government engaged in an elaborate
domestic
public relations campaign to market the war to its citizens.
Americans overwhelmingly believed Hussein did have weapons of mass
destruction: 85% said so, even though the inspectors had not
uncovered those weapons. Of those who thought Iraq had weapons
stashed somewhere, about half were pessimistic that they would ever
turn up. By February 2003, 74% of Americans supported taking
military action to remove Hussein from power.
The
Central Intelligence
Agency's
Special
Activities Division (SAD) teams were the first US forces to
enter Iraq, in July 2002, prior to the main invasion. Once on the
ground, they prepared for the subsequent arrival of
US Army Special Forces to organize
the
Kurdish Peshmerga.
This joint team (called the Northern Iraq
Liaison Element (NILE)) combined to defeat Ansar al-Islam, a group with ties to al Qaeda, in Iraqi Kurdistan
. This battle was for control of the
territory that was occupied by Ansar al-Islam and took place prior
to the invasion. It was carried out by Paramilitary Operations
Officers from SAD and the Army's
10th Special Forces
Group. This battle resulted in the defeat of Ansar and the
capture of a
chemical weapons
facility at
Sargat. Sargat was the only
facility of its type discovered in the Iraq war.
SAD teams also conducted missions behind enemy lines to identify
leadership targets. These missions led to the initial
air strikes against Hussein and his generals.
Although the strike against Hussein was unsuccessful in killing
him, effectively ended his ability to command and control his
forces. Strikes against Iraq's generals were more successful and
significantly degraded the Iraqi command's ability to react to, and
maneuver against the US-led invasion force. SAD operations officers
were also successful in convincing key Iraqi Army officers into
surrendering their units once the fighting started.
NATO
member Turkey
refused to
allow the US army across its territory into northern Iraq
. Therefore, joint SAD and Army Special
forces teams and the Pershmerga were the entire Northern force
against the Iraqi army. They managed to keep the northern divisions
in place rather than allowing them to aid their colleagues against
the US led coalition force coming from the south. . Four of these
CIA officers were awarded the
Intelligence Star for their actions.
In February 2003,
US
Secretary of State Colin Powell
addressed the
United
Nations General Assembly, continuing US efforts to gain UN
authorization for an invasion. Powell presented evidence alleging
that Iraq was actively producing chemical and biological weapons
and
had ties to al-Qaeda
As a follow-up to Powellâs presentation, the United States, United
Kingdom, Poland, Italy, Australia, Denmark, Japan, and Spain
proposed a resolution authorizing the use of force in Iraq, but
NATO members like Canada, France, and Germany, together with
Russia, strongly urged continued diplomacy. Facing a losing vote as
well as a likely veto from France and Russia, the US, UK, Spain,
Poland, Denmark, Italy, Japan, and Australia eventually withdrew
their resolution.
With the failure of its resolution, the US and their supporters
abandoned the Security Council procedures and decided to pursue the
invasion without UN authorization, a decision of questionable
legality under
international law.
This decision was widely unpopular worldwide, and opposition to the
invasion coalesced on February 15 in a worldwide
anti-war protest that
attracted between six and ten million people in more than 800
cities, the largest such protest in human history according to the
Guinness Book of World
Records.
In March 2003, the United States, United Kingdom, Spain, Australia,
Poland, Denmark, and Italy began
preparing for the
invasion of Iraq, with a host of
public
relations, and military moves. In his March 17, 2003 address to
the nation, Bush demanded that Hussein and his two sons
Uday and
Qusay
surrender and leave Iraq, giving them a 48-hour deadline. But then
the US began the bombing of Iraq on March 18, the day before the
deadline expired. On March 18, 2003, the bombing of Iraq by the
United States, the United Kingdom, Spain, Italy, Poland, Australia,
and Denmark began. Unlike the first Gulf War or the
war in Afghanistan
, this war had no explicit UN authorisation.
The UK Parliament held a debate on going to war on 18-Mar-2003
where the government motion was approved 412 to 149. During that
debate it was stated that the
Attorney
General had advised that the war was legal under previous UN
Resolutions.
Attempts to avoid war
In December 2002, a representative of the head of
Iraqi Intelligence, General
Tahir Jalil Habbush
al-Tikriti, contacted former
Central Intelligence Agency
Counterterrorism Department head
Vincent Cannistraro stating that
Hussein "knew there was a campaign to link him to September 11 and
prove he had weapons of mass destruction (WMDs)." Cannistrano
further added that "the Iraqis were prepared to satisfy these
concerns. I reported the conversation to senior levels of the state
department and I was told to stand aside and they would handle it."
Cannistrano stated that the offers made were all "killed" by the
George W. Bush administration because
they allowed Hussein to remain in power â an outcome viewed as
unacceptable. It has been suggested that Saddam Hussein was
prepared to go into exile if allowed to keep $1 billion USD.
Egyptian
president Hosni Mubarak's national
security advisor, Osama El-Baz, sent a
message to the US State Department
that the Iraqis wanted to discuss the accusations
that the country had weapons of mass destruction and ties with
al-Qaeda. Iraq also attempted to reach the US through the
Syrian, French, German, and Russian intelligence services. Nothing
came of the attempts.
In
January 2003, Lebanese-American
Imad Hage met with Michael Maloof of the US
Department of Defense
's Office of
Special Plans. Hage, a resident of Beirut
, had been
recruited by the department to assist in the "War on Terrorism". He reported that
Mohammed Nassif, a close aide to
Syrian president
Bashar al-Assad,
had expressed frustrations about the difficulties of Syria
contacting the United States, and had attempted to use him as an
intermediary. Maloof arranged for Hage to meet with civilian
Richard Perle, then head of the
Defense Policy Board.
In February 2003, Hage met with the chief of Iraqi intelligence's
foreign operations,
Hassan
al-Obeidi. Obeidi told Hage that Baghdad didn't understand why
they were being targeted, and that they had no WMDs; he then made
the offer for Washington to send in 2000 FBI agents to confirm
this. He additionally offered petroleum concessions, but stopped
short of having Hussein give up power, instead suggesting that
elections could be held in two years. Later, Obeidi suggested that
Hage travel to Baghdad for talks; he accepted.
Later that month, Hage met with General Habbush in addition to
Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister
Tariq Aziz.
He was offered top priority to US firms in oil and mining rights,
UN-supervised elections, US inspections (with up to 5,000
inspectors), to have al-Qaeda agent
Abdul Rahman Yasin (in Iraqi custody
since 1994) handed over as a sign of good faith, and to give "full
support for any US plan" in the
Arab-Israeli peace process. They
also wished to meet with high-ranking US officials. On February 19,
Hage faxed Maloof his report of the trip. Maloof reports having
brought the proposal to
Jamie Duran.
The Pentagon
denies that either Wolfowitz or Rumsfeld, Duran's
bosses, were aware of the plan.
On February 21, Maloof informed Duran in an email that Richard
Perle wished to meet with Hage and the Iraqis if the Pentagon would
clear it. Duran responded "Mike, working this. Keep this close
hold."
On
March 7, Perle met with Hage in Knightsbridge
, and stated that he wanted to pursue the matter
further with people in Washington (both have acknowledged the
meeting). A few days later, he informed Hage that Washington
refused to let him meet with Habbush to discuss the offer (Hage
stated that Perle's response was "that the consensus in Washington
was it was a no-go"). Perle told
The
Times, "The message was 'Tell them that we will see them
in Baghdad."
Casus belli and rationale
George Bush, speaking in October 2002, said that âThe stated policy
of the United States is regime change⊠However, if Hussein were to
meet all the conditions of the United Nations, the conditions that
I have described very clearly in terms that everybody can
understand, that in itself will signal the regime has changedâ.
Based on claims from certain intelligence sources, Bush stated on
March 6, 2003 that he believed that Hussein was not complying with
UN Resolution 1441.
In September 2002, Tony Blair stated, in an answer to a
parliamentary question, that âRegime change in Iraq would be a
wonderful thing. That is not the purpose of our action; our purpose
is to disarm Iraq of weapons of mass destructionâŠâ In November of
that year, Blair further stated that âSo far as our objective, it
is disarmament, not régime change - that is our objective. Now I
happen to believe the regime of Saddam is a very brutal and
repressive regime, I think it does enormous damage to the Iraqi
people... so I have got no doubt Saddam is very bad for Iraq, but
on the other hand I have got no doubt either that the purpose of
our challenge from the United Nations is disarmament of weapons of
mass destruction, it is not regime change.â
At a press conference on January 31, 2003, Bush again reiterated
that the single trigger for the invasion would be Iraqâs failure to
disarm: âSaddam Hussein must understand that if he does not disarm,
for the sake of peace, we, along with others, will go disarm Saddam
Hussein.â As late as February 25, 2003, it was still the official
line that the only cause of invasion would be a failure to disarm.
As Blair made clear in a statement to the House of Commons: âI
detest his regime. But even now he can save it by complying with
the UN's demand. Even now, we are prepared to go the extra step to
achieve disarmament peacefully.â
Additional justifications used at various times included Iraqi
violation of UN resolutions, the Iraqi government's repression of
its citizens and Iraqi violations of the 1991 cease-fire.
The main allegations were that Hussein was in possession of, or was
attempting to produce,
weapons of mass
destruction particularly in light of two previous attacks on
Baghdad nuclear weapons production facilities by both Iran and
Israel which was alleged to have postponed weapons development
progress; and that he had ties to
terrorists, specifically
al-Qaeda. While it never made an explicit
connection between Iraq and the
September 11 attacks, the
George W. Bush administration repeatedly
insinuated a link, thereby creating a false impression for the US
public.
Grand jury testimony from the 1993 World
Trade Center attack
trials cited numerous direct linkages from the
bombers to Baghdad and Department 13 of the Iraqi Intelligence Service in
that initial attack marking the second anniversary to vindicate the
surrender of Iraqi armed forces in Operation Desert Storm. For
example,
The Washington
Post has noted that
Steven Kull, director of the Program on
International Policy Attitudes (PIPA) at the University
of Maryland
, observed in March 2003 that "The administration
has succeeded in creating a sense that there is some connection
[between Sept. 11 and Saddam Hussein]". This was following a
New York Times/
CBS poll that showed 45% of Americans believing Saddam
Hussein was "personally involved" in the September 11 atrocities.
As the
Christian Science
Monitor observed at the time, while "Sources knowledgeable
about US intelligence say there is no evidence that Hussein played
a role in the Sept. 11 attacks, nor that he has been or is
currently aiding Al Qaeda... the White House appears to be
encouraging this false impression, as it seeks to maintain American
support for a possible war against Iraq and demonstrate seriousness
of purpose to Hussein's regime." The CSM went on to report that,
while polling data collected "right after Sept. 11, 2001" showed
that only 3 percent mentioned Iraq or Saddam Hussein, by January
2003 attitudes "had been transformed" with a Knight Ridder poll
showing that 44% of Americans believed "most" or "some" of the
September 11 hijackers were Iraqi citizens.
The
BBC has also noted that while President Bush
"never directly accused the former Iraqi leader of having a hand in
the attacks on New York and Washington", he "repeatedly associated
the two in keynote addresses delivered since September 11", adding
that "Senior members of his administration have similarly conflated
the two." For instance, the BBC report quotes Colin Powell in
February 2003, stating that "We've learned that Iraq has trained
al-Qaeda members in bomb-making and poisons and deadly gases. And
we know that after September 11, Saddam Hussein's regime gleefully
celebrated the terrorist attacks on America." The same BBC report,
from September 2003, also noted the results of a recent opinion
poll, which suggested that "70% of Americans believe the Iraqi
leader was personally involved in the attacks."
Also in September 2003, the Boston Globe reported that "Vice
President Dick Cheney, anxious to defend the White House foreign
policy amid ongoing violence in Iraq, stunned intelligence analysts
and even members of his own administration this week by failing to
dismiss a widely discredited claim: that Saddam Hussein might have
played a role in the Sept. 11 attacks." A year later, presidential
candidate
John Kerry alleged that Cheney
was continuing "to intentionally mislead the American public by
drawing a link between Saddam Hussein and 9/11 in an attempt to
make the invasion of Iraq part of the global war on terror."
Throughout 2002, the Bush administration insisted that removing
Hussein from power in order to restore international peace and
security was a major goal. The principal stated justifications for
this policy of "regime change" were that Iraq's
continuing production of
weapons of mass destruction and
known ties to terrorist
organizations, as well as Iraq's continued violations of UN
Security Council resolutions, amounted to a threat to the US and
the world community.
The Bush administration's overall rationale for the invasion of
Iraq was presented in detail by
US
Secretary of State Colin Powell to the
United Nations Security
Council on February 5, 2003; in summary, he stated:
Since the invasion, the US and British government claims concerning
Iraqi weapons
programs and links to terrorist organizations have been
discredited. While the debate of whether Iraq intended to develop
chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons in the future remains
open, no WMDs have been found in Iraq since the invasion despite
comprehensive inspections lasting more than 18 months. In Cairo, on
February 24, 2001, Colin Powell had predicted as much, saying "He
[Hussein] has not developed any significant capability with respect
to weapons of mass destruction. He is unable to project
conventional power against his neighbours." Similarly, assertions
of significant operational links between the Iraqi regime and al
Qaeda have largely been discredited by the intelligence community,
and Secretary Powell himself eventually admitted he had no
incontrovertible proof.
In September 2002, the Bush administration said attempts by Iraq to
acquire thousands of high-strength
aluminium tubes pointed to a
clandestine program to make enriched uranium for nuclear bombs.
Powell, in his address to the UN Security Council just prior to the
war, made reference to the aluminium tubes. But a report released
by the
Institute for
Science and International Security in 2002 reported that it was
highly unlikely that the tubes could be used to enrich uranium.
Powell later admitted he had presented an inaccurate case to the
United Nations on Iraqi weapons, based on sourcing that was wrong
and in some cases "deliberately misleading."
The Bush administration asserted that the Hussein government had
sought to purchase
yellowcake
uranium from Niger.
On March 7, 2003, the US submitted
intelligence documents as evidence to the International Atomic Energy
Agency
. These documents were dismissed by the IAEA
as forgeries, with the concurrence in that judgment of outside
experts. At the time, a US official claimed that the evidence was
submitted to the IAEA without knowledge of its provenance, and
characterized any mistakes as "more likely due to incompetence not
malice".
Unmanned Iraqi drones
In October 2002, a few days before the
US Senate vote on the
Authorization for Use of
Military Force Against Iraq Resolution, about 75 senators were
told in
closed session that the Iraqi
government had the means of delivering
biological and
chemical weapons of mass destruction by
unmanned aerial vehicle
(UAV) drones that could be launched from ships off the US' Atlantic
coast to attack
US
eastern seaboard cities.
Colin
Powell suggested in his presentation to the United Nations that
UAVs were transported out of Iraq and could be launched against the
US. In fact, Iraq had no offensive UAV fleet or any capability of
putting UAVs on ships. Iraq's UAV fleet consisted of less than a
handful of outdated Czech training drones. At the time, there was a
vigorous dispute within the intelligence community as to whether
the CIA's conclusions about Iraq's UAV fleet were accurate. The
US Air Force agency denied outright
that Iraq possessed any offensive UAV capability.
Human rights
As evidence supporting U.S. and British claims about Iraqi WMDs and
links to terrorism weakened, some claim supporters of the invasion
have increasingly shifted their justification to the
human rights violations of the
Hussein government. Leading human rights groups such as
Human Rights Watch have argued,
however, that they believe human rights concerns were never a
central justification for the invasion, nor do they believe that
military intervention was justifiable on humanitarian grounds, most
significantly because "the killing in Iraq at the time was not of
the exceptional nature that would justify such intervention." Many
supporters of the war, however, claim from the start human rights
concerns were among the reasons given for the invasion, and that
the threat of weapons of mass destruction was emphasized at the
United Nations, since this dealt with Iraq flouting UN resolutions.
They further claim human rights groups that oppose the war have no
objective standard regarding when to invade a country.
Legality of invasion
The
Authorization for Use of Military
Force Against Iraq Resolution of 2002 was passed by congress
with Democrats voting 58% in favor in the Senate, and 61% opposed
in the House. Republicans supported the
joint resolution 98% and 97% in the Senate
and House respectively. The resolution asserts the authorization by
the
Constitution of
the United States and the Congress for the President to fight
anti-United States terrorism. Citing the
Iraq Liberation Act of 1998, the
resolution reiterated that it should be the policy of the United
States to remove the Saddam Hussein regime and promote a democratic
replacement. The resolution "supported" and "encouraged" diplomatic
efforts by President
George W.
Bush to "strictly enforce through the
U.N. Security Council all relevant Security Council resolutions
regarding Iraq" and "obtain prompt and decisive action by the
Security Council to ensure that Iraq abandons its strategy of
delay, evasion, and noncompliance and promptly and strictly
complies with all relevant Security Council resolutions regarding
Iraq." The resolution authorized President Bush to use the
Armed Forces of the United
States "as he determines to be necessary and appropriate" in
order to "defend the national security of the United States against
the continuing threat posed by Iraq; and enforce all relevant
United Nations Security
Council Resolutions regarding Iraq."
The legality of the invasion of Iraq has been challenged since its
inception on a number of fronts, and several prominent supporters
of the invasion in all the invading nations have publicly and
privately cast doubt on its legality. It is claimed that the
invasion was fully legal because authorization was implied by the
United Nations Security
Council. International legal experts, including the
International Commission of
Jurists, a group of 31 leading Canadian law professors, and the
U.S.-based Lawyers Committee on Nuclear Policy have denounced both
of these rationales.
On Thursday November 20, 2003, an article published in the Guardian
alleged that
Richard Perle,a senior
member of the administration's
Defense Policy Board
Advisory Committee, conceded that the invasion was illegal but
still justified.
The United Nations Security Council has passed nearly 60
resolutions on Iraq and Kuwait since Iraq's invasion of Kuwait in
1990. The most relevant to this issue is Resolution
678, passed
on November 29, 1990. It authorizes "member states co-operating
with the Government of Kuwait... to use all necessary means" to (1)
implement Security Council Resolution
660 and other
resolutions calling for the end of Iraq's occupation of Kuwait and
withdrawal of Iraqi forces from Kuwaiti territory and (2) "restore
international peace and security in the area." Resolution
678 has not
been rescinded or nullified by succeeding resolutions and Iraq was
not alleged after 1991 to invade Kuwait or to threaten do so.
Resolution
1441 was
most prominent during the run up to the war and formed the main
backdrop for Secretary of State
Colin
Powell's address to the Security Council one month before the
invasion. At the same time, Bush Administration officials advanced
a parallel legal argument using the earlier resolutions, which
authorized force in response to Iraq's 1991
invasion of Kuwait. Under this reasoning,
by failing to disarm and submit to weapons inspections, Iraq was in
violation of
U.N. Security Council Resolutions 660 and
678, and the U.S. could legally compel Iraq's compliance through
military means.
Critics and proponents of the legal rationale based on the U.N.
resolutions argue that the legal right to determine how to enforce
its resolutions lies with the Security Council alone, not with
individual nations.
In February 2006,
Luis
Moreno-Ocampo, the lead prosecutor for the
International Criminal Court,
reported that he had received 240 separate communications regarding
the legality of the war, many of which concerned British
participation in the invasion. In a letter addressed to the
complainants, Mr. Moreno-Ocampo explained that he could only
consider issues related to conduct during the war and not to its
underlying legality as a possible crime of aggression because no
provision had yet been adopted which "defines the crime and sets
out the conditions under which the Court may exercise jurisdiction
with respect to it." In a March 2007 interview with the
Sunday Telegraph, Moreno-Ocampo encouraged
Iraq to sign up with the court so that it could bring cases related
to alleged war crimes.
United States Ohio Congressman
Dennis
Kucinich held a press conference on the evening of April 24,
2007, revealing
US House
Resolution 333 and the three articles of impeachment against
Vice President
Dick Cheney. He charges
Cheney with manipulating the evidence of Iraq's weapons program,
deceiving the nation about Iraq's connection to al-Qaeda, and
threatening aggression against Iran in violation of the
United Nations Charter.
Military aspects
United States military operations were conducted under the codename
Operation Iraqi Liberation (OIL). The codename was later
changed to
Operation Iraqi Freedom, due to the unfortunate
acronym. The United Kingdom military
operation was named
Operation
Telic.
Multilateral support
In November 2002,
U.S.
President George W. Bush, visiting
Europe for a NATO
summit,
declared that "should Iraqi President Saddam Hussein choose not to disarm, the
United States will lead a coalition of the willing to disarm
him."
Thereafter, the Bush administration briefly used the term Coalition
of the Willing to refer to the countries who supported, militarily
or verbally, the military action in Iraq and subsequent military
presence in
post-invasion Iraq
since 2003. The original list prepared in March 2003 included
49 members.
Of those 49, only six besides the U.S.
contributed troops to the invasion force (the United Kingdom
, Spain
, Australia, Poland
, Portugal
and Denmark
), 33
provided some number of troops to support the occupation after the
invasion was complete. Six members have no military.
Invasion force
Approximately 248,000 Soldiers and Marines
from the United
States
, 45,000 British soldiers, 2,000 Australian
soldiers, 1,300 Spanish soldiers, 500 Danish soldiers and 194
Polish soldiers from Special Forces
unit GROM were sent to Kuwait for the
invasion. The invasion force was also supported by Iraqi
Kurdish militia
troops, estimated to number upwards of 70,000. In the latter
stages of the invasion 620 troops of the
Iraqi National Congress opposition
group were deployed to southern Iraq.
A U.S. Central Command, Combined Forces Air Component Commander
report, indicated that as of April 30, 2003, there were a total of
466,985 U.S. personnel deployed for Operation Iraqi Freedom. This
included USAF, 54,955; USAF Reserve, 2,084; Air National Guard,
7,207; USMC, 74,405; USMC Reserve, 9,501; USN, 61,296 (681 are
members of the U.S. Coast Guard); USN Reserve, 2,056; and US Army,
233,342; US Army Reserve, 10,683; and Army National Guard,
8,866.
Plans for
opening a second front in the north were severely hampered when
Turkey
refused the
use of its territory for such purposes. In response to
Turkey's decision, the United States dropped several thousand
paratroopers from the 173rd Airborne Brigade into northern Iraq, a
number significantly less than the 15,000 strong 4th Mechanized
Infantry Division that the U.S. originally planned to use for
opening the northern front.
Preparation
CIA
Special Activities
Division (SAD) Paramilitary teams entered Iraq in July 2002
prior to the 2003 invasion. Once on the ground they prepared for
the subsequent arrival of US military forces. SAD teams then
combined with
US Army Special
Forces to organize the
Kurdish
Peshmerga. This joint team combined to
defeat
Ansar al-Islam, an ally of
Al Qaida, in a battle in the northeast
corner of Iraq. The US side was carried out by Paramilitary
Officers from SAD and the Army's
10th Special Forces
Group.
SAD teams also conducted high risk special reconnaissance missions
behind Iraqi lines to identify senior leadership targets. These
missions led to the initial strikes against
Saddam Hussein and his key generals. Although
the initial strike against Hussein was unsuccessful in killing the
dictator, it was successful in effectively ending his ability to
command and control his forces. Other strikes against key generals
were successful and significantly degraded the command's ability to
react to and maneuver against the US-led invasion force coming from
the south.
SAD operations officers were also successful in convincing key
Iraqi Army officers to surrender their
units once the fighting started and/or not to oppose the invasion
force.
NATO member Turkey
refused to
allow its territory to be used for the invasion. As a
result, the SAD/SOG and US Army Special Forces joint teams and the
Kurdish Peshmerga were the entire northern force against government
forces during the invasion. Their efforts kept the 5th Corps of the
Iraqi army in place to defend against the Kurds rather than their
moving to contest the coalition force.
According to
General Tommy Franks,
April Fool, an American officer
working
undercover as a
diplomat, was approached by an Iraqi
intelligence agent.
April Fool
then sold to the Iraqi false "top secret" invasion plans provided
by Franks' team.
This decoy deception
successfully misled the Iraqi military into deploying major forces
in Northern and Western Iraq in anticipation of attacks via
Turkey
or Jordan
, which never
took place. This greatly reduced the defensive capacity
in the rest of Iraq and significantly facilitated the actual
attacks via Kuwait
and the
Persian
Gulf
in the southeast.
Defending force
The number of personnel in the
Iraqi
military prior to the war was uncertain, but it was believed to
have been poorly equipped. The International Institute for
Strategic Studies estimated the Iraqi armed forces to number
538,000 (army 375,000, navy 2,000, air force 20,000 and air defense
17,000), the
paramilitary Fedayeen Saddam 44,000,republican guard
80,000 and reserves 650,000. Another estimate numbers the army and
Republican Guard at between
280,000 to 350,000 and 50,000 to 80,000, respectively, and the
paramilitary between 20,000 and 40,000. There were an estimated
thirteen
infantry divisions, ten
mechanized and
armored divisions, as well as some
special forces units. The
Iraqi Air Force and
Iraqi Navy played a negligible role in the
conflict.
In
addition to Iraqi forces, during the invasion foreign volunteers
from Syria
traveled to
Iraq and took part in the fighting, usually under the command of
the Saddam Fedayeen. It is
not known for certain how many foreign fighters fought in Iraq in
2003, however, intelligence officers of the U.S. First Marine
Division estimated that 50% of all Iraqi combatants in central Iraq
were foreigners.
In addition, the terrorist group
Ansar
al-Islam controlled a small section of northern Iraq in an area
outside of Saddam Hussein's control. Ansar al-Islam had been
fighting against Kurdish forces since 2001. At the time of the
invasion they fielded an estimated 600 to 800 fighters. Ansar
al-Islam was led by the Jordanian-born militant
Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, who would later
become an important leader in the
Iraqi
insurgency. Ansar al-Islam was driven out of Iraq in late March
by a joint American-Kurdish force during
Operation Viking Hammer.
Invasion

Routes and major battles fought by
invasion force and afterwards
Since the 1991
Persian Gulf War, the U.S.
and UK had been engaged in low-level attacks on Iraqi air defenses
which targeted them while enforcing
Iraqi no-fly zones. These zones, and the
attacks to enforce them, were described as illegal by the former UN
Secretary General, Boutros Boutros-Ghali and the then French
foreign minister, Hubert Vedrine. Other countries, notably Russia
and China, also condemned the zones as a violation of Iraqi
sovereignty. In mid-2002, the U.S. began more carefully selecting
targets in the southern part of the country to disrupt the military
command structure in Iraq. A change in enforcement tactics was
acknowledged at the time, but it was not made public that this was
part of a plan known as
Operation Southern Focus.
The amount of ordnance dropped on Iraqi positions by Coalition
aircraft in 2001 and 2002 was less than in 1999 and 2000 which was
during the Clinton administration. This information has been used
to attempt to refute the theory that the Bush administration had
already decided to go to war against Iraq before coming to office
and that the bombing during 2001 and 2002 was laying the ground
work for the eventual invasion in 2003. However, information
obtained by the UK
Liberal
Democrats showed that the UK dropped twice as many bombs on
Iraq in the second half of 2002 as they did during the whole of
2001. The tonnage of UK bombs dropped increased from 0 in March
2002 and 0.3 in April 2002 to between 7 and 14 tons per month
in May-August, reaching a pre-war peak of 54.6 tons in
September â prior to Congress' October 11
authorization of the invasion.
The September 5 attacks included a 100+ aircraft attack on the main
air defense site in western Iraq. According to an editorial in
New Statesman this was
"Located at the furthest extreme of the southern no-fly zone, far
away from the areas that needed to be patrolled to prevent attacks
on the Shias, it was destroyed not because it was a threat to the
patrols, but to allow allied special forces operating from Jordan
to enter Iraq undetected."
Tommy Franks, who commanded the invasion of Iraq, has since
admitted that the bombing was designed to âdegradeâ Iraqi air
defences in the same way as the air attacks that began the 1991
Gulf War. These "spikes of activity" were, in the words of then
British Defence Secretary,
Geoff Hoon,
designed to 'put pressure on the Iraqi regime' or, as
The Times reported, to "provoke Saddam
Hussein into giving the allies an excuse for war". In this respect,
as provocations designed to start a war, leaked British Foreign
Office legal advice concluded that such attacks were illegal under
international law.
Another attempt at provoking the war was mentioned in a leaked memo
from a meeting between
George W.
Bush and
Tony
Blair on January 31, 2003 at which Bush allegedly told Blair
that "The US was thinking of flying U2 reconnaissance aircraft with
fighter cover over Iraq, painted in UN colours. If Saddam fired on
them, he would be in breach."
Opening salvo: the Dora Farms strike
The early
morning of March 19, 2003, U.S. forces abandoned the plan for
initial, non-nuclear decapitation
strikes against fifty-five top Iraqi officials, in light of
reports that Saddam Hussein was visiting his daughters and sons,
Uday and Qusay at Dora Farms, within the al-Dora
farming community on the outskirts of Baghdad
. At approximately 05:30
UTC two
F-117 Nighthawks
from the 8th Expeditionary Fighter Squadron dropped four enhanced,
satellite-guided 2,000-pound
Bunker
Busters GBU-27 on the compound.
Complementing the aerial bombardment were 4
Tomahawk cruise missiles
fired from at least four ships, including the Arleigh Burke class destroyer,
the USS Donald Cook, and
two submarines in the Red
Sea
and Persian
Gulf
.
One missed the compound entirely and the other three missed their
target landing on the other side of the wall of the palace
compound. Saddam Hussein was not present nor were any members of
the Iraqi leadership or Hussein family. The attack killed one
civilian and injured fourteen others, including nine women and one
child. Later investigation revealed that Saddam Hussein had not
visited the farm since 1995.
Opening attack
On March 20, 2003 at approximately 02:30
UTC or
about 90 minutes after the lapse of the 48-hour deadline, at 05:33
local time, explosions were heard in Baghdad. Special operations
commandos from the CIA's
Special Activities Division from
the Northern Iraq Liaison Element infiltrated throughout Iraq and
called in the early air strikes. At 03:15 UTC, or 10:15 p.m. EST,
George W. Bush announced that he had ordered an "attack of
opportunity" against targets in Iraq. As soon as this word was
given the troops on standby crossed the border into Iraq.
Before the invasion, many observers had expected a lengthy campaign
of aerial bombing in advance of any ground action, taking as
examples the
1991 Persian Gulf War or the
2001 invasion
of Afghanistan. In practice, U.S. plans envisioned simultaneous
air and ground assaults to decapitate the Iraqi forces as fast as
possible (see
Shock and Awe),
attempting to bypass Iraqi military units and cities in most cases.
The assumption was that superior mobility and coordination of
Coalition forces would allow them to attack the heart of the Iraqi
command structure and destroy it in a short time, and that this
would minimize civilian deaths and damage to infrastructure. It was
expected that the elimination of the leadership would lead to the
collapse of the Iraqi Forces and the government, and that much of
the population would support the invaders once the government had
been weakened. Occupation of cities and attacks on peripheral
military units were viewed as undesirable distractions.
Following
Turkey
's decision
to deny any official use of its territory, the Coalition was forced
to modify the planned simultaneous attack from north and
south. Special Operations forces from the CIA and US Army
managed to build and lead the Kurdish Peshmerga into an effective
force and assault for the North.
The primary bases for the invasion were
in Kuwait
and other
Persian
Gulf
nations. One result of this was that one of
the divisions intended for the invasion was forced to relocate and
was unable to take part in the invasion until well into the war.
Many observers felt that the Coalition devoted sufficient numbers
of troops to the invasion, but too many were withdrawn after it
ended, and that the failure to occupy cities put them at a major
disadvantage in achieving security and order throughout the country
when local support failed to meet expectations.
The invasion was swift, leading to the collapse of the Iraq
government and the
military of Iraq
in about three weeks. The oil infrastructure of Iraq was rapidly
seized and secured with limited damage in that time. Securing the
oil infrastructure was considered of great importance. In the
Persian Gulf War, while retreating from
Kuwait, the Iraqi army had set many oil wells on fire, in an
attempt to disguise troop movements and to distract Coalition
forces.
Prior to the 2003 invasion, Iraqi forces had
mined some 400 oil wells around Basra
and the
Al-Faw peninsula with
explosives. Coalition troops launched an air and
amphibious assault on the
Al-Faw peninsula during the closing hours
of March 20 to secure the oil fields there; the amphibious assault
was supported by warships of the
Royal
Navy,
Polish Navy, and
Royal Australian Navy.
The
United States Marine
Corps' 15th Marine
Expeditionary Unit, attached to 3 Commando Brigade and the
Polish
Special Forces unit GROM
attacked the port of Umm
Qasr
. There they encountered heavy resistance by
Iraqi troops.
The British
Army's 16 Air
Assault Brigade
also secured the oilfields in southern Iraq in
places like Rumaila
while the Polish commandos captured offshore oil
platforms near the port, preventing their destruction.
Despite the rapid advance of the invasion forces, some 44 oil wells
were destroyed and set ablaze by Iraqi explosives or by incidental
fire. However, the wells were quickly capped and the fires put out,
preventing the ecological damage and loss of oil production
capacity that had occurred at the end of the
Persian Gulf War.
In keeping with the rapid advance plan, the
U.S. 3rd Infantry Division moved
westward and then northward through the western desert toward
Baghdad, while the
1st
Marine Expeditionary Force moved along Highway 1 through the
center of the country, and
1
Armoured Division moved northward through the eastern
marshland. Spanish units moved south to the Saudi-Iraqi border,
then drove north to join U.S. forces. Polish troops moved with U.S.
Marines, and Danish soldiers fought with the British and
Australians in southern Iraq.
Battle of Nasiriyah
Initially, the U.S.
1st Marine Division fought through the
Rumaila oil fields, and moved north to Nasiriyah
âa moderate-sized, Shi'ite dominated city with
important strategic significance as a major road junction and its
proximity to nearby Talil
Airfield
. It
was also situated near a number of strategically important bridges
over the
Euphrates River. The United
States Army 3rd Infantry Division defeated Iraqi forces entrenched
in and around the airfield and bypassed the city to the west. On
March 23, a convoy from the 3rd Infantry Division, including the
female American soldiers
Jessica Lynch
and
Lori Piestewa, was ambushed after
taking a wrong turn into the city. Eleven U.S. soldiers were
killed, and seven, including Lynch and Piestewa, were captured.
Piestewa died of wounds shortly after capture, while the remaining
five prisoners of war were later rescued.
Piestewa, who was
from Tuba
City
, Arizona, and an enrolled member of the Hopi Tribe, was believed to have been the first Native
American woman killed in combat in a foreign war.
On the same day, U.S Marines entered Nasiriyah in force, facing
heavy resistance as they moved to secure two major bridges in the
city. American Marines suffered several fatalities during a
firefight with
Fedayeen in the urban
fighting. An
Air Force A-10 was
involved in a case of
friendly fire
that resulted in the death of six Marines when it accidentally
attacked an American amphibious vehicle. Two other vehicles were
destroyed when a barrage of RPG and small arms fire killed most of
the Marines inside. Because of Nasiriyah's strategic position as a
road junction, a significant gridlock occurred as U.S. forces
moving north converged on the city's surrounding highways.
With the Nasiriyah and Talil Airfields secured, Coalition forces
gained an important logistical center in southern Iraq and
established FOB/EAF
Jalibah, some outside of
Nasiriyah. Additional troops and supplies were soon brought through
this forward operating base and Italian and Spanish soldiers were
now arriving to advance south of the U.S. Army's advance. The
101st Airborne Division
continued its attack north in support of the 3rd Infantry Division.
Spanish, British, and Australian paratroopers moved to Talil.
By 27 March 28, a severe sand storm slowed the Coalition advance as
the 3rd Infantry Division halted its northward drive half way
between Najaf and Karbala. As a result of heavy rains that occurred
along with the sand storm, orange-colored mud fell on some parts of
the invasion force in the area. Air operations by helicopters,
poised to bring reinforcements from the 101st Airborne, were
blocked for three days. There was particularly heavy fighting in
and around the bridge adjacent to the town of Kufl. Another fierce
battle was at Najaf, where American Airborne and Armored units with
British air support fought a fierce battle in Najaf with Iraqi
Regulars, Republican Guard units, and paramilitary forces. The
battle lasted from March 24 to April 4, and resulted in a Coalition
victory. 4 American soldiers and 590â780 Iraqi soldiers were
killed.
Basra
The Iraqi
port city of Umm
Qasr
was the first British obstacle. A joint
Polish-British-American force ran into unexpectedly stiff
resistance, and it took several days to clear the Iraqi forces out.
14 Coalition soldiers and 30 Iraqi soldiers were killed.
Farther
north, the British units fought their way into Iraq's
second-largest city, Basra
, on April 6,
coming under constant attack by regulars and Fedayeen, while the
British Red
Devils cleared the 'old quarter' of the city that was
inaccessible to vehicles. Entering Basra was achieved after
two weeks of fierce fighting.
Elements
of 1 Armoured Division
began to advance north towards U.S. positions around Al Amarah
on April 9. Pre-existing electrical and
water shortages continued throughout the conflict and looting began
as Iraqi forces collapsed.
While Coalition forces began working with
local Iraqi Police to enforce order, a joint team composed of
Royal Engineers and the Royal
Logistics Corps of the British Army rapidly set up and repaired
dockyard facilities to allow humanitarian aid to begin to arrive
from ships arriving in the port city of Umm Qasr
.
After a
rapid initial advance, the first major pause occurred in the
vicinity of Karbala
. There, U.S. Army elements met resistance
from Iraqi troops defending cities and key bridges along the
Euphrates River. These forces threatened to interdict supply routes
as American forces moved north. Eventually, troops from the 101st
Airborne Division of the U.S Army secured the cities of Najaf and
Karbala to prevent any Iraqi counterattacks on the 3rd Infantry
Division's lines of communication as the division pressed its
advance toward Baghdad.
Special operations

The northern front during March and
April 2003
The 2nd
Battalion of the U.S.
5th Special Forces Group, United States Army Special
Forces (Green Berets) conducted reconnaissance in the cities of
Basra
, Karbala
and various other locations.
In the
North, the 10th Special Forces
Group (10th SFG) and CIA paramilitary officers from their
Special Activities
Division had the mission of aiding the Kurdish parties, the
Patriotic Union of
Kurdistan and the Kurdistan Democratic Party, de
facto rulers of Iraqi Kurdistan
since 1991, and employing them against the 13 Iraqi
Divisions located in the vicinity of Kirkuk and Mosul.
Turkey
had
officially forbidden any Coalition troops from using their bases or
airspace, so lead elements of the 10th SFG had to make a detour
infiltration; their flight was supposed to take four hours but
instead took ten.
Hours after the first of such flights, Turkey did allow the use of
its air space and the rest of the 10th SFG infiltrated in. The
preliminary mission was to destroy the base of the Kurdish
terrorist group
Ansar al-Islam,
believed to be linked to Al Qaeda. Concurrent and follow-on
missions involved attacking and fixing Iraqi forces in the north,
thus preventing their deployment to the southern front and the main
effort of the invasion.
On March 26, 2003, the
173rd
Airborne Brigade augmented the invasion's northern front by
parachuting into northern Iraq onto Bashur Airfield, controlled at
the time by elements of 10th SFG and Kurdish peshmerga. The fall of
Kirkuk on April 10, 2003 to the 10th SFG, CIA Paramilitary Teams
and Kurdish peshmerga precipitated the 173rd's planned assault,
preventing the unit's involvement in combat against Iraqi forces
during the invasion. The successful occupation of Kirkuk came as a
result of approximately two weeks of fighting that included the
Battle of the Green Line (the unofficial border of the Kurdish
autonomous zone) and the subsequent Battle of Kani Domlan Ridge
(the ridgeline running northwest to southeast of Kirkuk), the
latter fought exclusively by 3rd Battalion, 10th SFG and Kurdish
peshmerga against the Iraqi I Corps. The 173rd Brigade would
eventually take responsibility for Kirkuk days later, becoming
involved in the counterinsurgency fight and remain there until
redeploying a year later.
Further reinforcing operations in Northern Iraq, the 26th Marine
Expeditionary Unit (Special Operations Capable), serving as Landing
Force Sixth Fleet, deployed in April to Erbil and subsequently
Mosul via Marine KC-130 flights. The 26 MEU(SOC) maintained
security of the Mosul airfield and surrounding area until relief by
the 101st Airborne Division.
After
Sargat was taken, Bravo Company, 3rd Battalion, 10th SFG and CIA
paramilitary officers along with their Kurdish allies pushed south
towards Tikrit
and the
surrounding towns of Northern Iraq. Previously, during the
Battle of the Green Line, Bravo Company, 3/10 with their Kurdish
allies pushed back, destroyed, or routed the 13th Iraqi Infantry
Division. The same company took Tikrit. Iraq was the largest
deployment of
Special Forces since
Vietnam.
Fall of Baghdad (April 2003)
Three
weeks into the invasion, US-led Coalition forces moved
into Baghdad
. Initial plans were for Coalition units to
surround the city and gradually move in, forcing Iraqi armor and
ground units to cluster into a central pocket in the city, and then
attack with air and artillery forces. This plan soon became
unnecessary, as an initial engagement of armored units south of the
city saw most of the Republican Guard's assets destroyed and routes
in the southern outskirts of the city occupied. On April 5 Task
Force 1-64 Armor of the U.S.
Army's Third Infantry Division executed a
raid, later called the "Thunder Run", to test remaining Iraqi
defenses, with 29 tanks and 14 Bradley Armored Fighting Vehicles
advancing to the Baghdad
airport
.
They met heavy resistance, but were successful in reaching the
airport. US troops faced heavy fighting in the airport, and were
even temporarily pushed out, but eventually secured the airport.
The next day, another brigade of the 3rd I.D. attacked into
downtown Baghdad and occupied one of the palaces of Saddam Hussein
in fierce fighting. US Marines also faced heavy shelling from Iraqi
artillery as they attempted to cross a river bridge. The Iraqi
commander directed the fire, and one shell from an Iraqi gun killed
or wounded four Marines, but the river crossing was successful. The
Iraqis managed to inflict heavy casualties on the American forces
near the airport from defensive positions but suffered severe
casualties from air bombardment.
Within hours of the palace seizure and with television coverage of
this spreading through Iraq, U.S. forces ordered Iraqi forces
within Baghdad to surrender, or the city would face a full-scale
assault. Iraqi government officials had either disappeared or had
conceded defeat, and on April 9, 2003, Baghdad was formally
occupied by Coalition forces and the 24-year dictatorship of Saddam
Hussein in Iraq was toppled. Much of Baghdad remained unsecured
however, and fighting continued within the city and its outskirts
well into the period of occupation. Saddam had vanished, and his
whereabouts were unknown. Many Iraqis celebrated the downfall of
Saddam by vandalizing the many portraits and statues of him
together with other pieces of his
cult of personality.
One widely publicized event was the dramatic toppling of a large
statue of Saddam in Baghdad's Fardus Square. This attracted
considerable media coverage at the time. As the British
Daily Mirror reported,
"For an oppressed people this final act in the fading
daylight, the wrenching down of this ghastly symbol of the regime,
is their Berlin Wall moment.
Big Moustache has had his day."
As Staff Sergeant Brian Plesich reported in
On Point: The
United States Army in Operation Iraqi Freedom,
"The Marine Corps colonel in the area saw the Saddam
statue as a target of opportunity and decided that the statue must
come down.
Since we were right there, we chimed in with some
loudspeaker support to let the Iraqis know what it was we were
attempting to do..."
"Somehow along the way, somebody had gotten the idea to put a bunch
of Iraqi kids onto the wrecker that was to pull the statue down.
While the wrecker was pulling the statue down, there were Iraqi
children crawling all over it. Finally they brought the statue
down"
The fall of Baghdad saw the outbreak of regional, sectarian
violence throughout the country, as Iraqi tribes and cities began
to fight each other over old grudges.
The Iraqi cities of
Al-Kut and Nasiriyah
launched attacks on each other immediately
following the fall of Baghdad to establish dominance in the new
country, and the US-led Coalition quickly found themselves
embroiled in a potential civil war. US-led Coalition forces
ordered the cities to cease hostilities immediately, explaining
that Baghdad would remain the capital of the new Iraqi government.
Nasiriyah responded favorably and quickly backed down; however,
Al-Kut placed snipers on the main roadways into town, with orders
that invading forces were not to enter the city. After several
minor skirmishes, the snipers were removed, but tensions and
violence between regional, city, tribal, and familial groups
continued.
US General
Tommy Franks assumed control
of Iraq as the supreme commander of the coalition occupation
forces. Shortly after the sudden collapse of the defense of
Baghdad, rumors were circulating in Iraq and elsewhere that there
had been a deal struck (a "safqua") wherein the US-led Coalition
had bribed key members of the Iraqi military elite and/or the
Ba'ath party itself to stand down. In May 2003, General Franks
retired, and confirmed in an interview with Defense Week that the
US-led Coalition had paid Iraqi military leaders to defect. The
extent of the defections and their effect on the war are
unclear.
US-led Coalition troops promptly began searching for the key
members of Saddam Hussein's government. These individuals were
identified by a variety of means, most famously through sets of
most-wanted Iraqi
playing cards.
On July
22, 2003 during a raid by the U.S.
101st Airborne Division and
men from
Task Force 20, Saddam
Hussein's sons
Uday and
Qusay, and one of his grandsons were killed in
a massive fire-fight.
Saddam Hussein was captured on December 13,
2003 by the U.S.
Army's 4th Infantry Division and members
of
Task Force 121 during
Operation Red Dawn.
Other areas
In the north, Kurdish forces opposed to Saddam Hussein had already
occupied for years an autonomous area in northern Iraq. With the
assistance of U.S.
Special Forces and air strikes, they were
able to rout the Iraqi units near them and to occupy oil-rich
Kirkuk
on April
10.
U.S.
special forces had also been involved in the extreme south of Iraq,
attempting to occupy key roads to Syria
and
airbases. In one case two armored platoons were used to
convince Iraqi leadership that an entire armored battalion was
entrenched in the west of Iraq.
On April
15, U.S. forces took control of Tikrit
, the last
major outpost in central Iraq, with an attack led by the Marines'
Task Force Tripoli. About
a week later the Marines were relieved in place by the Army's
4th Infantry
Division.
Summary of the invasion
The US-led Coalition forces toppled the government and captured the
key cities of a large nation in only 21 days. The invasion did
require a large army build-up like the 1991 Gulf War, but many
didn't see combat and many were withdrawn after the invasion ended.
This proved to be short-sighted, however, due to the requirement
for a much larger force to combat the irregular Iraqi forces in the
aftermath of the
war. General
Eric Shinseki, Army
Chief of Staff, recommended "several hundred thousand" troops be
used to maintain post-war order, but then Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeldâand especially his
deputy, civilian
Paul
Wolfowitzâstrongly disagreed.
General Abizaid later said General Shinseki
had been right.
The Iraqi army, armed mainly with Soviet-built equipment, was
overall ill-equipped in comparison to the U.S. and UK forces.
Attacks on U.S.
supply routes by
Fedayeen militiamen were repulsed. The
Iraqis' artillery proved largely ineffective, and they were unable
to mobilize their air force to attempt a defense. The Iraqi
T-72 tanks, the heaviest armored vehicles in
the Iraqi Army, were both outdated and ill-maintained, and when
they were mobilized they were rapidly destroyed, thanks in part to
U.S. and UK
air supremacy. The
U.S. Air
Force, Marine Corps, Naval Aviation, and British
Royal Air Force operated with impunity
throughout the country, pinpointing heavily defended resistance
targets and destroying them before ground troops arrived.
The
main battle tanks (MBT) of the
U.S. and UK forces, the U.S.
M1 Abrams and
British
Challenger 2, proved worthy in
the rapid advance across the country. With the large number of
rocket propelled grenade
(RPG) attacks by irregular Iraqi forces, few U.S. and UK tanks were
lost and no tank crewmen were killed by hostile fire. The only tank
loss sustained by the British Army was a Challenger 2 of the
Queen's Royal Lancers that was
hit by another Challenger 2, killing two crewmen. All three British
tank crew fatalities were a result of
friendly fire.
The Iraqi Army suffered from poor morale, even amongst the elite
Republican Guard. Entire units disbanded into the crowds upon the
approach of invading troops, or actually sought out U.S. and UK
forces out to surrender. In one case, a force of roughly 20â30
Iraqis attempted to surrender to a two-man vehicle repair and
recovery team, invoking similar instances of Iraqis surrendering to
news crews during the
Persian Gulf War.
Other Iraqi Army officers were bribed by the
Central Intelligence Agency
(CIA) or coerced into surrendering.
Worse,
the Iraqi Army had incompetent leadership â reports state that
Qusay Hussein, charged with the
defense of Baghdad
, dramatically shifted the positions of the two main
divisions protecting Baghdad several times in the days before the
arrival of U.S. forces, and as a result the units within were both
confused and further demoralized when U.S. Marine and
British forces attacked. By no means did the invasion force see the
entire Iraqi military thrown against it; U.S. and UK units had
orders to move to and seize objective target-points rather than
seek engagements with Iraqi units. This resulted in most regular
Iraqi military units emerging from the war fully intact and without
ever having been engaged by U.S. forces, especially in southern
Iraq. It is assumed that most units disintegrated to either join
the growing
Iraqi insurgency or
returned to their homes.
According
to the declassified Pentagon
report, "The largest contributing factor to the
complete defeat of Iraq's military forces was the continued
interference by Saddam." The report, designed to help U.S.
officials understand in hindsight how Saddam and his military
commanders prepared for and fought the invasion, paints a picture
of an Iraqi government blind to the threat it faced, hampered by
Saddam's inept military leadership and deceived by its own
propaganda and inability to believe the United
States would invade a sovereign country without provocation.
According to the BBC, the report portrays Saddam Hussein as
"chronically out of touch with reality - preoccupied with the
prevention of domestic unrest and with the threat posed by
Iran."
Security, looting and war damage
Looting took place in the days following the 2003 invasion. Similar
looting occurred for two weeks following the 1989 U.S. invasion of
Panama.
It was
reported that the National Museum of Iraq
was among the looted sites. Most initial
news reports were that 100 percent of the museum's artifacts had
been removed by looters. In fact, no more than 3 percent of its
contents were removed by thieves.
An assertion that U.S. forces did not guard the museum because they
were guarding the Ministry of Oil and Ministry of Interior is
disputed by investigator Col. Matthew Bogdanos in his 2005 book,
"Thieves of Baghdad." Bogdanos notes that the Ministry of Oil
building was bombed, but the museum complex, which took some fire,
was not bombed. He also writes that Saddam Hussein's troops set up
sniper's nests inside and on top of the museum, and nevertheless
U.S. Marines and soldiers stayed close enough to prevent wholesale
looting.
Early on, U.S. officials reacted defensively to the first, false
news reports of 100 percent looting. According to U.S. officials,
the "reality of the situation on the ground" was that hospitals,
water plants, and ministries with vital intelligence needed
security more than other sites. There were only enough U.S. troops
on the ground to guard a certain number of the many sites that
ideally needed protection, and so, apparently, some "hard choices"
were made.
The
FBI
was soon called into Iraq to track down the stolen
items. It was found that the initial claims of looting of
substantial portions of the collection were heavily
exaggerated.Initial reports claimed a near-total looting of the
museum, estimated at upwards of 170,000 inventory lots, or about
501,000 pieces. The most recent estimate places the number of
stolen pieces at around 15,000, and about 10,000 of them probably
were taken in an "inside job" before U.S. troops arrived, according
to Bogdanos. Over 5,000 looted items have since been
recovered.
There has been speculation that some objects still missing were not
taken by looters during the invasion, but were taken by Saddam
Hussein or his entourage before or during the fighting. There have
also been reports that early looters had keys to vaults that held
rarer pieces, and some have speculated as to the pre-meditated
systematic removal of key artifacts.
The
National
Museum of Iraq
was only one of many museums and sites of cultural
significance that were affected by the war. Many in the arts
and antiquities communities briefed policy makers in advance of the
need to secure Iraqi museums. Despite the looting being lighter
than initially feared, the cultural loss of items from ancient
Sumer is significant.
More serious for the post-war state of Iraq was the looting of
cached weaponry and ordnance which fueled the subsequent
insurgency. As many as 250,000 tons of
explosives were unaccounted for by October 2004.
Disputes within the
US Defense
Department
led to delays in the post-invasion assessment and
protection of Iraqi nuclear facilities. Tuwaitha
, the Iraqi site most scrutinized by UN inspectors
since 1991, was left unguarded and was looted.
Zainab Bahrani, professor of Ancient Near
Eastern Art History and Archaeology at Columbia University, reported that a
helicopter landing pad was constructed in the heart of the ancient
city of Babylon
, and "removed layers of archeological earth from
the site. The daily flights of the helicopters rattle the
ancient walls and the winds created by their rotors blast sand
against the fragile bricks. When my colleague at the site, Maryam
Moussa, and I asked military personnel in charge that the helipad
be shut down, the response was that it had to remain open for
security reasons, for the safety of the troops."
Bahrani also reported that in the summer of 2004, "the wall of the
Temple of Nabu and the roof of the Temple of Ninmah, both sixth
century BC, collapsed as a result of the movement of helicopters."
Electrical power is scarce in post-war Iraq, Bahrani reported, and
some fragile artifacts, including the Ottoman Archive, would not
survive the loss of refrigeration.
Bush declares "End of major combat operations" (May 2003)

George W.
Bush on the Abraham Lincoln wearing a flight suit
after landing on the aircraft carrier in a military jet.

Occupation zones in Iraq as of
September 2003
On May 1,
2003, Bush landed on the aircraft carrier USS
Abraham Lincoln
, in a Lockheed
S-3 Viking, where he gave a speech
announcing the end of major combat operations in the Iraq
war. Bush's landing was criticized by opponents as an overly
theatrical and expensive stunt. Clearly visible in the background
was a banner stating "Mission Accomplished."
The banner, made by
White
House
staff and supplied by request of the United States
Navy, was criticized as premature. The White House
subsequently released a statement that the sign and Bush's visit
referred to the initial invasion of Iraq and disputing the claim of
theatrics. The speech itself noted: "We have difficult work to do
in Iraq. We are bringing order to parts of that country that remain
dangerous."
Post-invasion
Iraq has been marked by violent conflict between U.S.-led soldiers
and
insurgents. The ongoing
resistance in Iraq was concentrated in, but not limited to, an area
referred to as the
Sunni triangle and
Baghdad.
This resistance may be described as
guerrilla warfare. The tactics in use were
to include mortars, suicide bombers, roadside bombs, small arms
fire,
improvised explosive
devices (IED's), and
handheld antitank grenade-launchers
(RPG's), as well as sabotage against the oil infrastructure. There
were also attacks toward the power and water infrastructure.
There is evidence that some of the resistance was organized,
perhaps by the
fedayeen and other Saddam
Hussein or Ba'ath loyalists, religious radicals, Iraqis angered by
the occupation, and foreign fighters.
Casualties
Death toll
While estimates on the number of casualties during the invasion in
Iraq vary widely, the majority of deaths and injuries have occurred
after U.S. President Bush declared the end of "major combat
operations" on May 1, 2003. According to
CNN,
the U.S. government reported that 139 American military personnel
were killed before May 1, 2003, while over 4,000 have been killed
since 2003. Estimates on civilian casualties are more variable than
those for military personnel. According to
Iraq Body
Count, a group that relies on Western press reports to measure
civilian casualties, approximately 7,500 civilians were killed
during the invasion phase, while more than 60,000 civilians have
been killed as of April 2007.
In November 2006
Iraq's
Health Minister Ali al-Shemari
said that since the March 2003 invasion between 100,000 and 150,000
Iraqis have been killed. Al-Shemari based his figure on an estimate
of 100 bodies per day brought to morgues and hospitals â such a
calculation would come out closer to 130,000 in total.
The
Lancet
surveys of casualties of the Iraq War, conducted by researchers
at
Johns Hopkins
University, estimates much higher civilian casualties, but does
not differentiate between the invasion phase (March-May 2003) and
the occupation phase (post May 2003). The Lancet survey estimates
that over 650,000 Iraqi civilians have died as a result of the
conflict, with the vast majority of these deaths occurring after
May 2003. These studies were highly controversial at their time of
publication, attracting considerable criticism from predominantly
non-scientific sources.
A September 14, 2007
estimate by ORB
(Opinion Research Business), an independent British polling agency,
suggests that the total Iraqi violent death toll due to the Iraq
War since the US-led invasion is in excess of 1.2 million
(1,220,580). Although higher than the
2006 Lancet
estimate, these results, which were based on a survey of 1499
adults in Iraq from August 12â19, 2007, are more or less consistent
with the figures that were published in the Lancet study.
On January 28, 2008, ORB published an update based on additional
work carried out in rural areas of Iraq. Some 600 additional
interviews were undertaken and as a result of this the death
estimate was revised to 1,033,000 with a given range of 946,000 to
1,120,000.
Iraqi refugees

Iraqis fleeing to neighboring
countries.
Over 4.2 million Iraqis, more than 16% of the Iraqi population,
have lost their homes and become
refugees
since 2003. As of June 21, 2007, the
United Nations
High Commissioner for Refugees estimated that 2.2 million
Iraqis had been displaced to neighboring countries, and 2 million
were displaced internally, with nearly 100,000 Iraqis fleeing to
Syria and Jordan each month. Roughly 40% of Iraq's
middle class is believed to have fled, the U.N.
said. Most are fleeing systematic persecution and have no desire to
return. All kinds of people, from university professors to bakers,
have been targeted by
militias,
insurgents and criminals. An estimated 331
school teachers were slain in the first four months of 2006,
according to Human Rights Watch, and at least 2,000 Iraqi doctors
have been killed and 250 kidnapped since the 2003 U.S.
invasion.
The UN reports that although
Christians
comprise less than 5% of Iraq's population, they make up nearly 40%
of the refugees fleeing Iraq. More than 50% of
Iraqi Christians have already left the
country. In 1987, the last Iraqi census counted 1.4 million
Christians.
But as the war has radicalized Islamic
sensibilities, Christians' total numbers slumped to about 500,000,
of whom 250,000 live in Baghdad
. Furthermore, the
Mandaean and
Yazidi
communities are at the risk of elimination due to
ethnic cleansing by
Islamic extremists. As many as 110,000 Iraqis could
be targeted as
collaborators
because of their work for coalition forces.
A May 25,
2007 article notes that in the past seven months only 69 people
from Iraq have been granted refugee
status in the United
States
.
War Crimes
After the ambush of the
507th
Maintenance Company during the
battle of Nasiriyah on March 23, the
bodies of several American soldiers who had been killed in the
ambush were shown on Iraqi television. Some of these soldiers had
visible gunshot wounds to head, leading to speculation that they
had been executed. With the exception of Sgt.
Donald Walters, no evidence has since
surfaced to support this scenario and it is generally accepted that
the soldiers were killed in action. Five live prisoners of war were
also interviewed on the air, a violation of the
Geneva Conventions.
Sergeant
Donald Walters was initially
reported to have been killed in the March 23 ambush of the
507th Maintenance Company after
killing several Fedayeen before running out of ammunition. However,
an eyewitness later reported that he had seen Walters being guarded
by several Fedayeen in front of a building. Forensics work later
found Walters' blood in front of the building and blood spatter
suggesting he died from two gunshot wounds to the back at close
range. This led the Army to conclude that Walters had been executed
after being captured, and he was posthumously awarded the
Prisoner of War Medal in 2004.
It was alleged in the authorized biography of Pfc.
Jessica Lynch that she was raped by her
captors after her capture as part of the
507th Maintenance Company, based
on medical reports and the pattern of her injuries, though this is
not supported by Ms Lynch.
Mohammed Odeh al-Rehaief, who later
helped American forces rescue Lynch, stated that he saw an Iraqi
Colonel slap Lynch while she was in her hospital bed. The staff at
the hospital where Lynch was held later denied both stories, saying
that Lynch was well cared for. While Lynch suffers from
amnesia due to her injuries, Lynch herself has
denied any mistreatment whilst in captivity.
Also on
March 23, a British Army engineering unit made a wrong turn near
the town of Az
Zubayr
, which was still held by Iraqi forces. The
unit was ambushed and Sapper Luke Allsopp and Staff Sergeant Simon
Cullingworth became separated from the rest. Both were captured and
executed by Iraqi irregular forces. In 2006, a video of Allsopp
lying on the ground surrounded by Iraqi irregular forces was
discovered.
Marine
Sergeant Fernando Padilla-Ramirez was reported missing from his
supply unit after an ambush north of Nasiriyah
on March 28. His body was later dragged through the
streets of Ash-Shatrah
and hung in the town square. His body was
later taken down and buried by sympathetic locals. His body was
discovered by American forces on April 10.
During the
Battle of Nasiriyah,
there was an incident where Iraqi irregulars feigned surrender in
order to approach an American Marine unit securing a bridge. After
getting close to the Marines, the Iraqis suddenly opened
fire,killing 10 Marines and wounding 40. Word of this quickly
spread through the ranks, and American forces reinforced security
procedures for dealing with prisoners of war.
On March 30, soldiers from the British
Royal Scots Dragoon Guards
reported that they had observed Fedayeen fighters using children as
human shields in the village of Kuj Al Mum. On March 31,
Iraqi Republican Guard units were
reported to be using women as human shields outside of Hindiyah.
Many other incidents of Fedayeen fighters using human shields were
reported from various towns in Iraq.
Some reports indicate that the Fedayeen used ambulances to deliver
messages and transport fighters into combat.
On March 31, Fedayeen
forces in a Red
Crescent
marked
ambulance attacked American soldiers outside of Nasiriyah, wounding
3.
During the
Battle of Basra,
British forces of the
Black Watch reported
that on March 28, Fedayeen forces opened fire on thousands of
civilian refugees fleeing the city, wounding several people.
Fedayeen and Republican Guard forces were reported to have executed
Iraqi soldiers who tried to surrender on multiple occasions, as
well as threatening the families of those who refused to fight. One
such incident was directly observed during the
Battle of Debecka Pass.
Media coverage
U.S. media coverage
The U.S. invasion of Iraq was the most widely and closely reported
war in military history. Television network coverage was largely
pro-war and viewers were six times more likely to see a pro-war
source as one who was anti-war. The New York Times ran a number of
articles describing Saddam Hussein's attempts to build weapons of
mass destruction. The September 8, 2002 article titled "U.S. Says
Hussein Intensifies Quest for A-Bomb Parts" would be discredited,
leading the New York Times to issue a public statement admitting it
was not as rigorous as it should have been.
At the start of the war in March 2003, as many as 775 reporters and
photographers were traveling as
embedded journalists. These reporters
signed contracts with the military that limited what they were
allowed to report on. When asked why the military decided to embed
journalists with the troops, Lt. Col. Rick Long of the U.S. Marine
Corps replied, âFrankly, our job is to win the war. Part of that is
information warfare. So we are
going to attempt to dominate the information environment.â
A September 2003 poll revealed that seventy percent of Americans
believed there was a link between Saddam Hussein and the attacks of
9/11. 80% of Fox viewers were found to hold at least one such
belief about the invasion, compared to 23% of PBS viewers.
Ted Turner, founder of CNN, said that
Rupert Murdoch was using Fox News to advocate
an invasion. Critics have argued that this statistic is indicative
of misleading coverage by the U.S. media since viewers in other
countries were less likely to have these beliefs. A post-2008
election poll by
FactCheck.org found
that 48% of Americans believe Hussein played a role in the 9/11
attacks, the group concluded that "voters, once deceived, tend to
stay that way despite all evidence."
Independent media coverage
Independent media also played a
prominent role in covering the invasion. The
Indymedia network, among many other independent
networks including many journalists from the invading countries,
provided reports in a way difficult to control by any government,
corporation or political party. In the United States
Democracy Now, hosted by
Amy Goodman has been critical of the reasons for
the 2003 invasion and the alleged crimes committed by the U.S.
authorities in Iraq.
On the other side, among media not opposing to the invasion,
The Economist stated in an article on
the matter that "the normal diplomatic toolsâsanctions, persuasion,
pressure, UN resolutionsâhave all been tried, during 12 deadly but
failed years" then giving a mild conditional support to the war
stating that "if Mr Hussein refuses to disarm, it would be right to
go to war".
Australian
war artist George Gittoes collected independent
interviews with soldiers while producing his documentary
Soundtrack To War. The war in Iraq
provided the first time in history that military on the front lines
were able to provide direct, uncensored reportage themselves,
thanks to
blogging software and the reach of
the
internet. Dozens of such reporting
sites, known as
soldier blogs or milblogs,
were started during the war. These blogs were more often than not
largely pro-war and stated various reasons why the soldiers and
Marines felt they were doing the right thing.
International media coverage
International coverage of the war differed from coverage in the
U.S. in a number of ways.The Arab-language news channel Al Jazeera
and the German Satellite channel DeutscheWelle featured almost
twice as much information on the political background of the war.
Al Jazeera also showed scenes of civilian casualties which were
rarely seen in the U.S.
Criticisms
Opponents of military intervention in Iraq have attacked the
decision to invade Iraq along a number of lines, including calling
into question the
evidence used to justify the
war, arguing for continued diplomacy, challenging the warâs
legality,
suggesting that the U.S. had other more pressing security
priorities, (i.e.
Afghanistan and North Korea
) and predicting that the war would destabilize the
Middle East region.The breadth and depth of the criticism
was particularly notable in comparison with the first
Gulf War, which met with considerably less domestic
and international opposition, although the geopolitical situation
had evolved since the last decade. Others criticize the war in
Iraq, actually invoking the word "terrorism" in an attempt to
parallel the perceived violences in the US (9/11) to what Iraqis
experienced daily during 2003 and thereafter. Particular to many
criticisms is the perceived colonial impetus to erase certain
histories while imposing others, perhaps best demonstrated by the
US led coalition's destruction of every mural and statue of Saddam
Hussein to the October 2003 installation of the new dinar, erasing
the face of Saddam Hussein and putting on the new currency AbĆ« ÊżAlÄ«
al-កasan ibn al-កasan ibn al-Haytham, 10th century mathematician
and scientist.
Rationale based on faulty evidence
The central U.S. justification for launching the Iraq War was that
Saddam Hussein's alleged development of nuclear and biological
weapons and purported ties to al-Qaeda made his regime a "grave and
growing" threat to the United States and the world community.
During the lead-up to the war and the aftermath of the invasion,
critics cast doubt on the evidence supporting this rationale.
Concerning Iraqâs weapons programs, prominent critics included
Scott Ritter, a former U.N. weapons
inspector who argued in 2002 that inspections had eliminated the
nuclear and chemical weapons programs, and that evidence of their
reconstitution would âhave been eminently detectable by
intelligence services âŠ.â Although it is popularly believed that
Saddam Hussein had forced the IAEA weapons inspectors to leave
Iraq, they were in fact withdrawn at the request of US Ambassador
Peter Burleigh in advance of
Operation Desert Fox, the 1998 American
bombing campaign. After the build-up of U.S. troops in neighboring
states, Hussein welcomed them back and promised complete
cooperation with their demands. Experienced IAEA inspection teams
were already back in Iraq and had made some interim reports on its
search for various forms of WMD.
Joseph
C. Wilson, an American diplomat
investigated claims that Iraq had sought uranium for nuclear
weapons in
Niger and
reported that they had no substance.
Similarly, alleged links between Iraq and al-Qaeda were called into
question during the lead up to the war, and were discredited by an
October 21, 2004 report from U.S. Senator
Carl Levin, which was later corroborated by an
April 2006 report from the Defense Departmentâs inspector general.
These reports further alleged that Bush Administration officials,
particularly former undersecretary of defense
Douglas J. Feith, manipulated evidence to support
links between al-Qaeda and Iraq.
Lack of a U.N. mandate
One of the main questions in the lead-up to the war was whether the
United Nations Security
Council would authorize military intervention in Iraq. When it
became increasingly clear that U.N. authorization would require
significant further weapons inspections, and that the U.S. and the
UK planned to invade Iraq regardless, many criticized their effort
as unwise, immoral, and illegal.
Robin Cook,
then the leader of the British House of Commons
and a former foreign secretary, resigned from
Tony Blair's cabinet in protest over the
UKâs decision to invade without the authorization of a U.N.
resolution. Cook said at the time that: "In principle I
believe it is wrong to embark on military action without broad
international support. In practice I believe it is against
Britain's interests to create a precedent for unilateral military
action.âIn addition, senior government legal advisor
Elizabeth Wilmshurst resigned, stating
her legal opinion that an invasion would be illegal.
United Nations
Secretary-General Kofi Annan said in
an interview with the BBC in September 2004, "[F]rom our point of
view and from the Charter point of view [the war] was illegal."
This drew immediate criticism from the United States and was
immediately played down." His annual report to the
General Assembly for 2003
included no more than the statement: "Following the end of major
hostilities which resulted in the occupation of Iraq..." A similar
report from the Security Council was similarly terse in its
reference to the event: "Following the cessation of hostilities in
Iraq in April 2003..."
However, some argue that Kofi Annan was simply picking sides and
playing politics. The United Nations Security Council has passed
nearly 60 resolutions on Iraq and Kuwait since Iraq's invasion of
Kuwait in 1990. The most relevant to this issue is Resolution
678,
passed on November 29, 1990. It authorizes "member states
co-operating with the Government of Kuwait...to use all necessary
means" to (1) implement Security Council Resolution
660 and other
resolutions calling for the end of Iraq's occupation of Kuwait and
withdrawal of Iraqi forces from Kuwaiti territory and (2) "restore
international peace and security in the area." However, the phrase
"restore international peace and security in the area" was widely
understood to refer to Iraq's invasion of Kuwait and was not a
blank check for future military aggression against Iraq.
Military intervention vs diplomatic solution
Criticisms about the evidence used to justify the war
notwithstanding, many opponents of military intervention objected
on the grounds that a diplomatic solution would be preferable, and
that war should be reserved as a truly last resort. This position
was exemplified by French Foreign Minister
Dominique de Villepin, who responded
to U.S. Secretary of State
Colin
Powell's February 5, 2003 presentation to the U.N Security
Council by saying that: "Given the choice between military
intervention and an inspections regime that is inadequate because
of a failure to cooperate on Iraq's part, we must choose the
decisive reinforcement of the means of inspections."
On February 12, 2003 following the U.N. inspection report delivery,
each one of the 15 representative of the U.N Security Council were
given a 10 minute speech to expose the position they chose for
their country. The
Hans Blix-led
United Nations Monitoring, Verification and Inspection
Commission report concluded on "no evidence of forbidden
military nuclear activities", "no evidence of mass destruction
weapon" (Iraqâs unconventional weapons program would had been
successfully dismantled during the 1990s), but "Baghdad must
cooperate more".
First
speaker was the Syrian Arab Republic
representative âsole Arab state in the councilâ who
strongly supported the continuation of the inspections, arguing
that Iraq was accused to not respect the UN resolutions while
Israel
ignored
more than 500 of them and owned mass destruction weapons as
well.
Next was de Villepin. Some excerpts that voice opposition to
immediate use of military force: âIn adopting unanimously
resolution 1441, we have collectively shown our agreement on
proceeding with two steps: the choice of disarmament by way of
inspections, and, in case of failure of this strategy, the
examination by the Security Council of all options, including that
of recourse to force. It's in this scenario of failure of the
inspections, and in this case only, that a second resolution can be
justified. ⊠France has two convictions: first, that the option of
inspections hasn't been carried through to its conclusion and can
bring an effective response to the imperative to disarm Iraq; and
second, that a use of force would have such heavy consequences for
people, for the region et for international stability, that it
couldnât be envisaged except as a last resort. ⊠We have just heard
[in the report from Mr Blix and Mr El BaradeĂŻ] that the inspections
are giving results. Of course, each of us wants more, and we
continue together to put pressure on Bagdad to obtain more. But the
inspections are giving results. [De Villepin then lists some of
these results, and describes them as âsignificant advancesâ. He
describes steps France has made to help these inspections give more
results.]
On the subject of terrorism, de Villepin casts doubt on âthe
supposed links between Al-Qaida and the regime of Baghdadâ. He
continues: âOn the other hand, ⊠would such an intervention today
not risk aggravating the fractures between societies, between
cultures, between people, the fractures on which terrorism
lives?â
France took the lead of the diplomatic solution front together with
Germany and Russia, in the likes of a classic
XIXth century European empires alliance, as
de Villepin advocated for an additional time for the
inspectors.
Colin Powell responded that Iraq cheated with the UN and the
inspections could not continue indefinitely.
The direct opposition between diplomatic solution and military
intervention involving France and the United States which was
impersonated by Chirac versus Bush then later Powell versus de
Villepin, became a milestone in the
Franco-American relations.
Anti-French propangada exploiting the
classic Francophobic clichés immediately ensued in the
United States and
the United Kingdom. A call for a boycott on French wine was
launched in the United States and the
New York Post covered on the 1944
"Sacrifice" of the
GIs France would
had forgotten. It was followed a week later, in February 20, by the
British newspaper
The
Sun publishing a special issue entitled "Chirac is a worm"
and including
ad hominem attacks
such as "Jacques Chirac has become the shame of Europe". Actually
both newspapers expressed the opinion of their owner, U.S.
billionaire
Rupert Murdoch, a
military intervention supporter and a George W. Bush partisan as
argued by
Roy Greenslade in
The Guardian published on
February 17.
Distraction from the war on terrorism and other priorities
Both supporters and opponents of the Iraq War widely viewed it
within the context of a post-
September 11 world, where the
U.S. has sought to make terrorism the defining international
security paradigm. Bush often describes the Iraq War as a âcentral
front in the
war on terrorâ. Some
critics of the war, particularly within the U.S. military
community, argued pointedly against the conflation of Iraq and the
war on terror, and criticized Bush for losing focus on the more
important objective of fighting al-Qaeda. As Marine Lieut. General
Greg Newbold, the Pentagon's former top
operations officer, wrote in a 2006 Time article, âI now regret
that I did not more openly challenge those who were determined to
invade a country whose actions were peripheral to the real
threatâal-Qaeda.â
Critics
within this vein have further argued that containment would have
been an effective strategy for the Hussein government, and that the
top U.S. priorities in the Middle East
should be encouraging a solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict,
working for the moderation of Iran
, and
solidifying gains made in Afghanistan and
central Asia. In an October 2002 speech, Retired Marine Gen.
Anthony Zinni, former head of
Central Command for U.S. forces in the
Middle East and State Department's envoy to the Palestinian-Israeli
conflict, called Iraq âmaybe six or seven,â in terms of U.S. Middle
East priorities, adding that âthe affordability line may be drawn
around five.â However, while commander of CENTCOM, Zinni held a
very different opinion concerning the threat posed by Iraq. In
testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee in February
2000, Zinni said: âIraq remains the most significant near-term
threat to U.S. interests in the Persian Gulf region. This is
primarily due to its large conventional military force, pursuit of
WMD, oppressive treatment of Iraqi citizens, refusal to comply with
United Nations Security Council Resolutions (UNSCR), persistent
threats to enforcement of the No Fly Zones (NFZ), and continued
efforts to violate UN Security Council sanctions through oil
smuggling.â However, it is important to note that Zinni
specifically referred to "the Persian Gulf region" in his Senate
testimony, which is a significantly smaller region of the world
than the "Middle East", which he referred to in 2007.
Potential to destabilize the region
In addition to arguing that Iraq was not the top strategic priority
in the war on terrorism or in the Middle East, critics of the war
also suggested that it could potentially destabilize the
surrounding region. Prominent among such critics was
Brent Scowcroft, who served as
National Security
Advisor to
George H. W. Bush.
In an August 15, 2002
Wall
Street Journal editorial entitled "Don't attack
Saddam," Scowcroft wrote that: âPossibly the
most dire consequences would be the effect in the regionâ where
there could be âan explosion of outrage against usâ that âcould
well destabilize Arab regimesâ and âcould even swell the ranks of
the terrorists.â
Related phrases
This campaign featured a variety of new terminology, much of it
initially coined by the U.S. government or military. The military
official name for the invasion was Operation Iraqi Liberation (
White House Press Release). However this was
quickly changed to "Operation Iraqi Freedom." Also notable was the
usage "
death squads" to refer to
fedayeen paramilitary forces. Members of
the Saddam Hussein government were called by disparaging
nicknames â e.g., "Chemical Ali" (
Ali Hassan al-Majid), "Baghdad Bob" or
"Comical Ali" (
Muhammed Saeed
al-Sahaf), and "Mrs. Anthrax" or "Chemical Sally" (
Huda Salih Mahdi Ammash). Saddam
Hussein was systematically referred to as "Saddam", which some
Westerners mistakenly believed to be disparaging. (Although there
is no consensus about how to refer to him in English, "Saddam" is
acceptable usage, and is how people in Iraq and the Middle East
generally refer to him.)
Terminology introduced or popularized during the war include:
- "Axis of evil", originally used by
Bush during a State of the Union
address on January 29, 2002 to describe the countries of Iraq, Iran
and North Korea.
- "Coalition of the
willing", a term that originated in the Clinton era (e.g., interview, Clinton, ABC, June 8, 1994), and used
by the Bush Administration to describe the countries contributing
troops in the invasion, of which the U.S. and UK were the primary
members.
- "Decapitating the regime", a
euphemism for either overthrowing the government or killing Saddam
Hussein.
- "Embedding", United States
practice of assigning civilian journalists to U.S. military units.
- "Mother of all bombs", a
bomb developed and produced to support Operation Iraqi Freedom. Its
name echoes Saddam's phrase "Mother of all battles" to describe the
first Gulf War.
- "Old Europe", Rumsfeld's term used to describe European
governments not supporting the war: "You're thinking of Europe as
Germany and France. I don't. I think that's old Europe."
- "Regime change", a euphemism for
overthrowing a government.
- "Shock and Awe", the strategy of
reducing an enemy's will to fight through displays of overwhelming
force.
Many slogans and terms coined came to be used by Bush's political
opponents, or those opposed to the war. For example, in April 2003
John Kerry, the
Democratic candidate in the
presidential
election, said at a campaign rally: "What we need now is not
just a regime change in Saddam Hussein and Iraq, but we need a
regime change in the United States." Other war critics use the name
"Operation Iraqi Liberation (OIL)" to subtly point out their
opinion as to the cause of the war, such as the song Operation
Iraqi Liberation (OIL) by
David Rovics,
a popular folk protest singer.
See also
Notes
- "Report: Hundreds of WMDs Found in Iraq",
FOXNews.com, June 22, 2006
- Fax and report, June 21, 2006
- "Poll: Talk First, Fight Later".
CBS.com, Jan. 24, 2003. Retrieved on April 23, 2007.
- Joint Declaration by Russia, Germany and France on
Iraq France Diplomatie February 10, 2003
- NZ praised for 'steering clear of Iraq war The
Dominion Post December 7, 2008
- Smith, Jeffrey R. âHussein's Prewar Ties To Al-Qaeda Discountedâ.
The Washington Post, Friday, April 6, 2007; Page A01. Retrieved on
April 23, 2007.
- "Chronology of the Bush Doctrine".
Frontline.org. Retrieved on
April 23, 2007.
- George W.
Bush, "President's Remarks at the United Nations General
Assembly: Remarks by the President in Address to the United
Nations General Assembly, New York, New York", official transcript,
press release, The White House, September 12, 2002,
accessed May 24, 2007.
- "France threatens rival UN Iraq draft".
BBC News,
October 26, 2002. Retrieved on April 23, 2007
- Hans Blix's briefing to the security council.
Retrieved January 30, 2008.
- Plan of Attack, Bob Woodward, Simon and Shuster, 2004.
- Behind lines, an unseen war, Faye Bowers, Christian Science
Monitor, April 2003.
- Largest anti-war rally, Guinness Book of World
Records, 2004
- "CIAâs final report: No WMD found in Iraq".
MSNBC.com, April 25, 2005. Retrieved on April 5, 2007,
Associated Press
- "Evidence on Iraq Challenged," Joby Warrick, The
Washington Post, Sept. 19, 2002
- Colin Powellâs speech to the UN, Feb 5,
2003
- Meet the Press, NBC, May 16, 2004
- Lichtblau, Eric. " 2002 Memo Doubted Uranium Sale Claim",
The New York Times, January 18,
2006. Retrieved on May 10, 2007.
- Senator Bill
Nelson (January 28, 2004) "New Information on Iraq's Possession of Weapons of Mass
Destruction", Congressional Record
- Lowe, C. (December 16, 2003) "Senator: White House Warned of UAV Attack,"
Defense Tech
- Hammond, J. (November 14, 2005) "The U.S. 'intelligence failure' and Iraq's UAVs"
The Yirmeyahu Review
- Senators Slam Shifting Iraq War Justification.
Islamonline. July 30, 2003.
- Roth, Ken. "War in Iraq: Not a Humanitarian Intervention"
Human Rights Watch. January 2004. Retrieved April 6,
2007.
- 107th Congress-2nd Session 455th Roll Call Vote of by
members of the House of Representatives
- 107th Congress-2nd Session 237th Roll Call Vote by
members of the Senate
- Saddam Hussein's Defiance of UNSCRs
- UN Security Council Resolution 1441
- Transcript of Powell's U.N.
Presentation.[CNN.com]
- Richard Norton-Taylor International court hears anti-war claims
in The
Guardian May 6, 2005.
- Chamberlin, Gethin. "Court 'can envisage' Blair prosecution". The
Sunday Telegraph, March 17, 2003. Retrieved on May 25, 2005.
- Australian Department of Defence (2004). The War in Iraq. ADF Operations in the Middle East in
2003. Page 11.
- for more information about Turkey's policy during the invasion
look, Ali Balci and Murat Yesiltas, 'Turkey's New Middle East
Policy: The Case of the Meeting of the Foreign Ministers of Iraq's
Neighboring Countries', Journal of South Asian and Middle Eastern
Studies, XXIX (4), Summer 2006, pp. 18â38
- Ford, Peter. A weak northern front could lengthen Iraq War.
Christian Science Monitor, April 3, 2003. Retrieved on May 7,
2003.
- Evan Wright,
Generation Kill, page 249. Berkley Publishing Group, 2004.
ISBN 0-399-15193-1
- David Zucchino, Thunder Run, page 189. Grove Press,
2004. ISBN 0-8021-4179-X
- Operation Hotel California: The Clandestine War inside Iraq,
Mike Tucker, Charles Faddis, 2008, The Lyons Press.
- Anton Antonowicz, âToppling Saddam's Statue Is The Final
Triumph For These Oppressed Peopleâ in The Mirror, April 10,
2003.
- Staff Sergeant Brian Plesich, team leader, Tactical
Psychological Operations Team 1153, 305th Psychological Operations
Company, interview by Lieutenant Colonel Dennis Cahill, May 31,
2003 in Col. Gregory Fontenot, Lt. Col. E.J. Degen, and Lt.
Col. David Tohn: âOn Point: The United States Army in Operation
Iraqi Freedomâ, Chapter 6 âRegime Collapseâ
- Dave Moniz, USA TODAY, June 2, 2003
- Reuters, "Getting amputees back on their
feet".Washington Post. Oct. 25, 2005.
- Parsons, Tim. "Updated Iraq Study Affirms Earlier Mortality
Estimates". The JHU Gazette, October 16, 2006. Retrieved
May 24, 2007.
- "More than 1,000,000 Iraqis murdered". September 2007.
Opinion Research Business. PDF report: [1]
- "Poll: Civilian Death Toll in Iraq May Top 1
Million". By Tina Susman. Sept. 14, 2007. Los Angeles
Times.
- "Greenspan Admits Iraq was About Oil, As Deaths Put
at 1.2 Million". By Peter Beaumont and Joanna Walters. Sept.
16, 2007. The
Observer .
- "The Media Ignore Credible Poll Revealing 1.2
Million Violent Deaths In Iraq". Sept. 18, 2007.
MediaLens.
- Update on Iraqi Casualty Data by Opinion Research
Business, January 2008
- U.N.: 100,000 Iraq refugees flee monthly.
Alexander G. Higgins, Boston Globe, November 3, 2006
- Iraq's middle class escapes, only to find poverty in
Jordan
- Iraqi officials: Truck bombings killed at least
500
- Ann McFeatters: Iraq refugees find no refuge in America.
Seattle Post-Intelligencer
May 25, 2007
- Evan Wright,
Generation Kill, page 228. Berkley Publishing Group, 2004.
ISBN 0-399-15193-1
- Our Disinformed Electorate. By Kathleen Hall
Jamieson and Brooks Jackson. FactCheck.org Published December 12,
2008.
- International comparison of TV news coverage of
Iraq.
- Vigo, Julian. "Discourses of Modernity & the New:
Performing Colonization from Morocco to Iraq" in Rethinking
Modernity. New Delhi: Pencraft International, 2005
- Pitt, William R. War On Iraq: What Team Bush Doesn't Want
You to Know. 2002, Context Books, New York. ISBN
1-893956-38-5.
- Jehl, Douglas. "Pentagon official distorted intelligence, report
says". International Herald Tribune, October 22, 2004.
Retrieved on April 18, 2007.
- Pincus, Walter and R. Jeffrey Smith. âOfficialâs Key Report on Iraq is Faulted. The
Washington Post, Friday, February 9, 2007; Page A01
- Tempest, Matthew. âCook resigns from cabinet over Iraqâ. The
Guardian, March 17, 2003. Retrieved on April 17, 2007.
- âNations take sides after Powell's speechâ.
CNN.com, February 6, 2003. Retrieved April 17, 2006.
- Discours Villepin Powell Ă Onu (National
Audiovisual Institute archives), French news national edition,
France 3 French public channel, February 14, 2003
- [2] , translated & excerpted by the editors
of this Wikipedia articleâN.B. not by a professional
translator.
- 20 heures le journal : émission du 20 février 2003
(National Audiovisual Institute archives), French news national
edition, France 2 French public channel, February 20, 2003
- Office of the Press Secretary. President Addresses Nation, Discusses Iraq, War on
Terror". White House Press Release, June 28, 2005. Retrieved on
April 17, 2007.
- Newbold, Greg. "Why Iraq Was a Mistake". Time
Magazine, April 9, 2006. Retrieved on April 16, 2007.
- Boehlert, Eric. "I'm not sure which planet they live on".
Salon, October 17, 20002. Retrieved April 17, 2007.
- Scowcroft, Brent. "Don't attack Saddam". The Wall Street
Journal, August 15, 2002. Retrieved April 17, 2007.
References
Further reading
- "The Three Trillion
Dollar War" by Nobel Prize laureate Joseph Stiglitz and Harvard
professor Linda Bilmes
- "Shadow Warriors" by Kenneth R. Timmerman. Three Rivers Press.
2008. ISBN 0307352099 (Paperback edition)
- Spring 2007 Dissent,
"Exporting Democracy: Lessons from Iraq," a symposium featuring
Paul Berman, Mitchell Cohen, Seyla Benhabib and others. Read
- Google Print*Masters of Chaos: The Secret
History of the Special Forces by Linda Robinson
- Heavy
Metal a Tank Company's Battle to Baghdad by Captain Jason
Conroy and Ron Martz
- Cobra II : The Inside Story of the
Invasion and Occupation of Iraq by Michael R. Gordon and Bernard E. Trainor
- Iraq and the Evolution of American Strategy by
Steven Metz. ISBN 1597971960
- The Iraq War by Williamson Murray and Robert H.
Scales, Jr.
- The Iraq War by John
Keegan
- Hans Köchler, The Iraq
Crisis and the United Nations. Power Politics vs. the
International Rule of Law. Studies in International Relations,
XXVIII. Vienna: I.P.O., 2004, ISBN 3-900704-22-8, Google Print
- Bibliography: The Second U.S. - Iraq War (2003- ) by Edwin Moise
External links
- H.J.Res. 114 U.S. Senate results to authorize the use of
United States Armed Forces against Iraq.
- Over half a million Iraqis dead, 4 years later, May 2007
after "us surge" monthly death rates not decreasing
- "Fact Sheets: The Lancet Survey: Mortality after the
2003 invasion of Iraq". (Authors: Professors Gilbert Burnham, M.D., and Riyadh Lafta, M.D., and Shannon Doocy, Ph.D., Les Roberts, Ph.D. Participating
institutions: The Johns Hopkins
University Bloomberg School of Public
Health, in Baltimore, Maryland
, and Al
Mustansiriya University, in Baghdad
.) Electronic
Iraq/electronicIraq.net. Accessed May 24, 2007.
("Electronic Iraq/electronicIraq.net [is] a joint project from
Voices in the Wilderness and The Electronic Intifada.")
- War
Report. More than 5,000 articles, documents and analyses of the
Iraq and Afghanistan wars, updated four times a weekâProject on
Defense Alternatives.
- CIAâs final report
- Occupation of Iraq Timeline at the History
Commons
- Morgues so full, bodies turned away
- The War
In Context News aggregator
- Amnesty International Report on Iraq
- Iraq: Amnesty International seeks clarification on
house demolitions by US troops in Iraq
- Iraq: full texts of speeches and key documents
archived by The Guardian.
Retrieved May 31, 2005.
- Iraq: Forcible return of refugees and
asylum-seekers is contrary to international law
- Iraq: Tribunal established without
consultation
- Memorandum on concerns related to legislation
introduced by the Coalition Provisional Authority
- National
Priorities Project Cost of the Iraqi War Estimate
- Reconstruction must ensure the human rights of
Iraqis
- Video Seminar on Iraq Coalition Politics: April
20, 2005, sponsored by the Program in Arms Control, Disarmament,
and International Security at the University of Illinois.
- War in Iraq: Day by Day Guide
- Iraq War NEWS DIGEST-Iraq and the U.S.A.
- Iraq Special Weapons News
- Attacks on journalists in Iraq â IFEX
- Archaeologists Review Loss of Valuables in Museum
Looting
- Iraqi Perspectives Report, Joint Center for
Operational Analysis at United
States Department of Defense
, March 2006
- "Frontline: The Dark Side" PBS documentary on
Vice President Dick Cheney's remaking of the Executive and
infighting leading up to the war in Iraq
- 1999 Desert Crossing War Game to Plan Invasion of Iraq and
to Unseat Saddam Hussein
Video