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Occupation of Iraq (2003–2011)

The Occupation of Iraq (2003–2011) was characterized by a large United States military deployment on Iraqi territory, beginning with the US-led invasion of the country in March 2003 which overthrew the Ba'ath Party government of Saddam Hussein and ending with the departure of US troops from the country in 2011. Troops for the occupation came primarily from the United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia, but 29 other nations also provided troops, and there were varying levels of assistance from Japan and other countries, as well as tens of thousands of private military company personnel.

US Army soldiers provide security on foot patrol in Ramadi, 16 August 2006

It was a period of violence and political turmoil, and saw strong foreign influence exerted on Iraqi politics. In April 2003, a military occupation was established and run by the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA), which later appointed and granted limited powers to the Iraq Interim Governing Council. In June 2004, the Iraqi Interim Government, a caretaker government, was established, ending the international armed conflict between the U.S.-led Coalition and Iraq. Following parliamentary elections in January 2005, this administration was replaced in May by the Iraqi Transitional Government. A year later, the Al Maliki I Government took office.

Efforts toward the reconstruction of Iraq after the damage of the invasion were slowed when coalition and allied Iraqi forces fought a stronger-than-expected militant Iraqi insurgency, leading to difficult living conditions for the population of Iraq throughout the period.

Military occupation edit

 
Marines from D Company, 3rd Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion guard detainees prior to loading them into their vehicle

A military occupation was established and run by the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA), which later appointed and granted limited powers to an Iraq Interim Governing Council. Troops for the invasion came primarily from the United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia, but 29 other nations also provided some troops, and there were varying levels of assistance from Japan and other allied countries. Tens of thousands of private security personnel provided protection of infrastructure, facilities and personnel.

Coalition and allied Iraqi forces fought a stronger-than-expected militant Iraqi insurgency, and so the reconstruction of Iraq was slow. In mid-2004, the direct rule of the CPA was ended and a new "sovereign and independent" Interim Government of Iraq assumed the full responsibility and authority of the state. The CPA and the Governing Council were disbanded on 28 June 2004, and a new transitional constitution came into effect.[1]

Sovereignty was transferred to a Governing Council Iraqi interim government led by Iyad Allawi as Iraq's first post-Saddam prime minister; this government was not allowed to make new laws without the approval of the CPA. The Iraqi Interim Government was replaced as a result of the elections which took place in January 2005. A period of negotiations by the elected Iraqi National Assembly followed, which culminated on 6 April 2005 with the selection of, among others, Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari and President Jalal Talabani. Prime Minister al-Jaafari led the majority party of the United Iraqi Alliance (UIA), a coalition of the al-Dawa and SCIRI (Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq) parties. Both parties are backed by Tehran, and were banned by Saddam Hussein.

Legal status of the coalition presence edit

An international armed conflict (IAC) between the United States and Iraq in the Iraq War began when the US-led Coalition invaded Iraq on March 19, 2003. IAC continued after the invasion when the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) was established on April 21 to temporarily administer the domestic affairs of Iraq. Therefore, hostilities during the invasion and occupation of Iraq fell under the laws of war applicable to IAC, including the 1949 Geneva Conventions, to which the US and Iraq are parties to, and the 1907 Hague Convention IV - The Laws and Customs of War on Land, which is commonly accepted as customary international humanitarian law binding on non-signatories engaged in an IAC.[2] According to Article 42 under Section III of the Hague Convention IV - The Laws and Customs of War on Land, "[t]erritory is considered occupied when it is actually placed under the authority of the hostile army."[3]

There may be situations where the former occupier will maintain a military presence in the country, with the agreement of the legitimate government under a security arrangement (e.g., US military presence in Japan and Germany). The legality of such agreement and the legitimacy of the national authorities signing it are subject to international recognition, whereby members of the international community re-establish diplomatic and political relations with the national government.

United Nations Security Council Resolution 1546 in 2004 looked forward to the end of the occupation and the assumption of full responsibility and authority by a fully sovereign and independent Interim Government of Iraq.[4] Afterwards, the UN and individual nations established diplomatic relations with the Interim Government, which began planning for elections and the writing of a new constitution. As a result, the Iraq War after June 28, 2004 became a non-international armed conflict (NIAC), since US-led Coalition troops were operating in the country with the consent of the new legitimate government of Iraq. Therefore, hostilities in post-occupation Iraq fell under the laws of war applicable to NIAC, including Common Article 3 of the 1949 Geneva Conventions.

In January 2005, John Negroponte, US ambassador to Iraq, indicated the US government would comply with a United Nations resolution declaring that coalition forces would have to leave if requested by the Iraqi government. "If that's the wish of the government of Iraq, we will comply with those wishes. But no, we haven't been approached on this issue – although obviously we stand prepared to engage the future government on any issue concerning our presence here."[5]

On 10 May 2007, 144 Iraqi Parliamentary lawmakers signed onto a legislative petition calling on the United States to set a timetable for withdrawal.[6] On 3 June 2007, the Iraqi Parliament voted 85 to 59 to require the Iraqi government to consult with Parliament before requesting additional extensions of the UN Security Council Mandate for Coalition operations in Iraq.[7] The UN mandate under United Nations Security Council Resolution 1790 expired on 31 December 2008.

Occupation (April 21, 2003–June 28, 2004) edit

An international armed conflict (IAC) between the US and Iraq in the Iraq War began when the US-led Coalition invaded Iraq on March 19, 2003. IAC continued after the invasion when the CPA was established on April 21 to temporarily administer the domestic affairs of Iraq. Therefore, hostilities during the invasion and occupation of Iraq fell under the laws of war applicable to IAC, including the 1949 Geneva Conventions, to which the US and Iraq are parties to, and the 1907 Hague Convention IV - The Laws and Customs of War on Land, which is commonly accepted as customary international humanitarian law binding on non-signatories engaged in an IAC.[2]

2003 edit

Fall of Saddam Hussein's government edit

 
Statue of Saddam Hussein being toppled in Baghdad's Firdos Square on 9 April 2003.

Schools, police, courts, government, and military were shut down, which meant that most Iraqis were unemployed.[8] Cities, especially Baghdad, suffered through reductions in electricity, clean water, and telephone service from pre-war levels, with shortages that continued through at least the next year.[9]

On 1 May 2003, President of the United States George W Bush declared the "end of major combat operations" in Iraq, while aboard the USS Abraham Lincoln with a large "Mission Accomplished" banner displayed behind him. The weeks following the removal of Ba'ath Party rule were portrayed by American media as generally a euphoric time among the Iraqi populace. New York Post correspondent Jonathan Foreman wrote from Baghdad in May 2003 that "the intensity of the population's pro-American enthusiasm is astonishing".[10]

There were widespread reports of looting, though much of the looting was directed at former government buildings and other remnants of the former government, and reports of losses of up to 170,000 items of Iraq's archaeological treasures worth billions of US dollars, mostly from the National Museum of Iraq,[11] were later revealed to be vastly exaggerated.[12][13]

Insurgency begins edit

 
Canal Hotel Bombing

In the summer of 2003, the US military focused on hunting down the remaining leaders of the ousted government, culminating in the killing of Saddam's sons Uday Hussein and Qusay Hussein on 22 July.[14] In all, over 200 top leaders of the former regime were killed or captured, as well as numerous lesser functionaries and military personnel.

After the initial invasion, most of the Iraqi military's former soldiers and officers offered little resistance to Coalition forces in the early days of the occupation. Many soldiers had simply gone home rather than openly fight the invading forces. This seeming acceptance of Coalition authority stemmed from the US military continuing to pay the salaries of Saddam's former soldiers, while promising senior Iraqi officers that they would have a major role to play "in building a new Iraq."

However, on 11 May 2003, the Bush Administration established the "Coalition Provisional Authority" (CPA) to take control of Iraq's domestic affairs away from the US military. Twelve days later, Paul Bremer, head of the CPA, issued an order dissolving the entire Iraqi military, as well as most civilian employees of the old government, and pledged to build a new military and government from scratch. One "untainted by any ties to Saddam's regime," according to the CPA. The Iraqi army's abrupt end, against the protests of many US field commanders, sparked immediate rioting among former Iraqi soldiers. In addition to broader civil unrest as unemployment skyrocketed to 70% and practically every government service, from the police to trash collectors, ended without warning.[15] Soon, large numbers of former Iraqi military personnel allied with the surviving Ba'ath loyalists and formed guerrilla units, igniting an eight-year insurgency against Coalition forces. Besides scattered attacks in Baghdad, these insurgents began to focus on taking and holding ground in and around Mosul, Tikrit, and Fallujah. In the fall of 2003, these largely secular units were joined by religiously motivated "Jihadists" insurgents, both foreign and domestic. With the growing influence of religious fanatics, the insurgency's mostly traditional tactics of sniping, small unit ambushes and planting roadside improvised explosive devices against foreign military personnel began transforming into frequent suicide bombings and death squads targeting civilians that were perceived as "loyal" to coalition forces.[15]

They favored attacking the unarmored Humvee vehicles, and in November they successfully attacked US rotary aircraft with SA-7 missiles bought on the global black market. On 19 August, the UN Headquarters in Baghdad was destroyed in the Canal Hotel Bombing, killing at least 22 people, among them Sérgio Vieira de Mello, Special Representative of the UN Secretary General.

Saddam captured and elections urged edit

 
 
Saddam Hussein shortly after capture by American forces, and after being shaved to confirm his identity

In December 2003, Saddam himself was captured. The provisional government began training a security force intended to defend critical infrastructure, and the US promised over $20 billion in reconstruction aid in the form of credits against Iraq's future oil revenues. At the same time, elements left out of the Iraqi Patriotic Alliance (IPA) began to agitate for elections. Most prominent among these was Ali al-Sistani, Grand Ayatollah in the Shia sect of Islam.

The United States and the Coalition Provisional Authority, run by Jay Garner and three deputies, including Tim Cross, opposed allowing democratic elections at this time, preferring instead to eventually hand over power to an unelected group of Iraqis.[16] More insurgents stepped up their activities. The two most turbulent centers were the area around Fallujah and the poor Shia sections of cities from Baghdad to Basra in the south.

January 1, 2004–June 28, 2004 edit

 
Cougar hit by mine explosion, all crew survived, vehicle drove back to base on 3 wheels
 
Cougar hit by 300–500 lb IED attack, all crew survived

Spring fighting edit

In the spring, the United States and the Coalition Provisional Authority decided to confront the rebels with a pair of assaults: one on Fallujah, the center of the "Mohammed's Army of Al-Ansar", and another on Najaf, home of an important mosque, which had become the focal point for the Mahdi Army and its activities. In Fallujah four private security contractors, working for Blackwater USA, were ambushed and killed, and their corpses desecrated. In retaliation a US offensive was begun, but it was soon halted because of the protests by the Iraqi Governing Council and negative media coverage.

A truce was negotiated that put a former Ba'athist general in complete charge of Fallujah. The 1st Armored Division along with the 2nd ACR were then shifted south, because Spanish, Salvadoran, Ukrainian, and Polish forces were having increasing difficulties retaining control over Al Kut, and Najaf. The 1st Armored Division and 2nd ACR relieved the Spaniards, Salvadoran, Poles, and put down the overt rebellion.

At the same time, British forces in Basra were faced with increasing restiveness, and became more selective in the areas they patrolled. In all, April, May and early June represented the bloodiest months of fighting since the end of hostilities. The Iraqi troops who were left in charge of Fallujah after the truce began to disperse and the city fell back under insurgent control.

In the April battle for Fallujah, US troops killed about 200 resistance fighters, while 40 Americans died and hundreds were wounded in a fierce battle. US forces then turned their attention to the al Mahdi Army in Najaf. A large convoy of US Army supply trucks manned by civilian contractors was ambushed and suffered significant damage and casualties.

Transfer of sovereignty edit

On June 28, 2004, under the auspices of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1546, the CPA transferred limited sovereignty to a caretaker government, whose first act was to begin the trial of Saddam Hussein. The transfer marked the end of an IAC between the U.S. and Iraq. The new Iraqi government began the process of moving towards elections, though the insurgency, and the lack of cohesion within the government itself, led to repeated delays.

Militia leader Muqtada al-Sadr used his grass-roots organization and Mahdi Militia of over a thousand armed men to take control of the streets of Baghdad. The CPA soon realized it had lost control and closed down his popular newspaper. This resulted in mass anti-American demonstrations. The CPA then attempted to arrest al-Sadr on murder charges. He defied the American military by taking refuge in the Holy City of Najaf.

Post-occupation (June 28, 2004–December 15, 2011) edit

Hostilities between the US and Iraq ended on June 28, 2004 when the CPA handed over Iraqi sovereignty to the Iraqi Interim government as mandated by UN Resolution 1546. Throughout the Iraq War, US-led Coalition troops were operating in the country with the consent of the new legitimate government of Iraq. Therefore, the war in Iraq after June 28, 2004 became a non-international armed conflict (NIAC), which fell under the laws of war applicable to NIAC, including Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions.

June 28, 2004–December 31, 2004 edit

Through July and August, a series of skirmishes in and around Najaf culminated with the Imman Ali Mosque itself under siege, only to have a peace deal brokered by al-Sistani in late August.[17] Al-Sadr then declared a national cease fire, and opened negotiations with the American and government forces. His militia was incorporated into the Iraqi security forces and al-Sadr is now a special envoy. This incident was the turning point in the failed American efforts to install Ahmed Chalabi as leader of the interim government. The CPA then put Iyad Allawi in power; ultimately he was only marginally more popular than Chalabi.

The Allawi government, with significant numbers of holdovers from the Coalition Provisional Authority, began to engage in attempts to secure control of the oil infrastructure, the source of Iraq's foreign currency, and control of the major cities of Iraq. The continuing insurgencies, poor state of the Iraqi Army, disorganized condition of police and security forces, as well as the lack of revenue hampered their efforts to assert control. In addition, both former Ba'athist elements and militant Shia groups engaged in sabotage, terrorism, open rebellion, and establishing their own security zones in all or part of a dozen cities. The Allawi government vowed to crush resistance, using US troops, but at the same time negotiated with Muqtada al-Sadr.

Offensives and counteroffensives edit

 
Marines from Mike Battery, 4th Battalion, 14th Marines an activated reserve artillery unit, operate the 155 mm M198 howitzer in November 2004 supporting Operation Phantom Fury.

Beginning 8 November, American and Iraqi forces invaded the militant stronghold of Fallujah in Operation Phantom Fury, killing and capturing many insurgents. Many rebels were thought to have fled the city before the invasion. US-backed figures put insurgency losses at over 2,000. It was the bloodiest single battle for the US in the war, with 92 Americans dead and several hundred wounded. A video showing the killing of at least one unarmed and wounded man by an American serviceman surfaced, throwing renewed doubt and outrage at the efficiency of the US occupation.[18] The Marine was later cleared of any wrongdoing because the Marines had been warned that the enemy would sometimes feign death and booby-trap bodies as a tactic to lure Marines to their deaths. November was the deadliest month of the occupation for coalition troops, surpassing April.

Another offensive was launched by insurgents during the month of November in Mosul. US forces backed by peshmerga fighters launched a counteroffensive which resulted in the Battle of Mosul (2004). The fighting in Mosul occurred concurrently with the fighting in Fallujah and attributed to the high number of American casualties taken that month.

In December, 14 American soldiers were killed and over a hundred injured when an explosion struck an open-tent mess hall in Mosul, where President Bush had spent Thanksgiving with troops the year before. The explosion is believed to have come from a suicide bomber.

After a review of the military strategy in the end of 2004, then commanding general of the MNF-I, General George Casey directed the Coalition forces to shift their focus from fighting insurgents to training Iraqis.[19] At the time, the Iraqi insurgency was mainly directed against the occupation and it was believed that if the Coalition would reduce its presence then the insurgency would diminish. Military planners hoped that national elections would change the perception of being under occupation, stabilize the situation and allow the Coalition to reduce its presence.

2005 edit

Iraqi elections and aftermath edit

 
Voters in the 2005 Iraqi legislative election

On 30 January, an election for a government to draft a permanent constitution took place. Although some violence and lack of widespread Sunni Arab participation marred the event, most of the eligible Kurd and Shia populace participated. On 4 February, Paul Wolfowitz announced that 15,000 US troops whose tours of duty had been extended in order to provide election security would be pulled out of Iraq by the next month.[20] February, March and April proved to be relatively peaceful months compared to the carnage of November and January, with insurgent attacks averaging 30 a day from the average 70.

Hopes for a quick end to an insurgency and a withdrawal of US troops were dashed at the advent of May, Iraq's bloodiest month since the invasion of US forces in March and April 2003. Suicide bombers, believed to be mainly disheartened Iraqi Sunni Arabs, Syrians and Saudis, tore through Iraq. Their targets were often Shia gatherings or civilian concentrations mainly of Shias. As a result, over 700 Iraqi civilians died in that month, as well as 79 US soldiers.

 
A large weapons cache in New Ubaydi is destroyed

During early and mid-May, the US also launched Operation Matador, an assault by around 1,000 Marines in the ungoverned region of western Iraq. Its goal was the closing of suspected insurgent supply routes of volunteers and material from Syria, and with the fight they received their assumption proved correct. Fighters armed with flak jackets (unseen in the insurgency by this time) and sporting sophisticated tactics met the Marines, eventually inflicting 30 US casualties by the operation's end, and suffering 125 casualties themselves.

The Marines succeeded, recapturing the whole region and even fighting insurgents all the way to the Syrian border, where they were forced to stop (Syrian residents living near the border heard the American bombs very clearly during the operation). The vast majority of these armed and trained insurgents quickly dispersed before the US could bring the full force of its firepower on them, as it did in Fallujah.

Announcements and renewed fighting edit

On 14 August 2005 the Washington Post quoted one anonymous US senior official expressing that "the United States no longer expects to see a model new democracy, a self-supporting oil industry or a society in which the majority of people are free from serious security or economic challenges... 'What we expected to achieve was never realistic given the timetable or what unfolded on the ground'".[21]

On 22 September 2005, Prince Saud al-Faisal, the Saudi foreign minister, said he had warned the Bush administration that Iraq was hurtling toward disintegration, and that the election planned for December was unlikely to make any difference.[22] US officials immediately made statements rejecting this view.[23]

Constitutional ratification and elections edit

 
Map of the Iraqi constitution ratification referendum

The National Assembly elected in January had drafted a new constitution to be ratified in a national referendum on 15 October 2005. For ratification, the constitution required a majority of national vote, and could be blocked by a two-thirds "no" vote in each of at least three of the 18 governorates. In the actual vote, 79% of the voters voted in favor, and there was a two-thirds "no" vote in only two governorates, both predominantly Sunni. The new Constitution of Iraq was ratified and took effect. Sunni turnout was substantially heavier than for the January elections, but insufficient to block ratification.

Elections for a new Iraqi National Assembly were held under the new constitution on 15 December 2005. This election used a proportional system, with approximately 25% of the seats required to be filled by women. After the election, a coalition government was formed under the leadership of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, with Jalal Talabani as president.

2006 edit

The beginning of that year was marked by government creation talks and continuous anti-coalition and attacks on mainly Shia civilians.

Al-Askari shrine bombing and Sunni-Shia fighting edit

See Al Askari Mosque bombing and Iraqi civil war (2006–2008)
 
Shrine of the 10th and 11th Twelver Shī'ah Imāms:
'Alī an-Naqī and Hasan al-'Askarī

On 22 February 2006. bombs exploded at the Al Askari Mosque causing substantial damage.

On 2 March the director of the Baghdad morgue fled Iraq explaining, "7,000 people have been killed by death squads in recent months."[24] The Boston Globe reported that around eight times the number of Iraqis killed by terrorist bombings during March 2006 were killed by sectarian death squads during the same period. A total of 1,313 were killed by sectarian militias while 173 were killed by suicide bombings.[25] The LA Times later reported that about 3,800 Iraqis were killed by sectarian violence in Baghdad alone during the first three months of 2006. During April 2006, morgue numbers show that 1,091 Baghdad residents were killed by sectarian executions.[26]

Insurgencies, frequent terrorist attacks and sectarian violence in Iraq lead to harsh criticism of US policy and fears of a failing state and civil war. The concerns were expressed by several US think tanks[27][28][29][30] as well as the US ambassador to Iraq, Zalmay Khalilzad.[31]

In early 2006, a handful of high-ranking retired generals began to demand Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld's resignation due in part to the aforementioned chaos that apparently resulted from his management of the war.

British hand Muthanna province to Iraqis edit

 
Al Muthanna Governorate Arabic: المثنى

On 12 July 2006, Iraq took full control of the Muthanna province, marking the first time since the invasion that a province had been handed from foreign troops to the Iraqi government. In a joint statement, the US ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad and the US commander in Iraq, General George Casey, hailed it as a milestone in Iraq's capability to govern and protect itself as a "sovereign nation" and said handovers in other provinces will take place as conditions are achieved. "With this first transition of security responsibility, Muthanna demonstrates the progress Iraq is making toward self- governance", the statement said, adding that "Multi-National Forces will stand ready to provide assistance if needed." At the ceremony marking the event, Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki stated, "It is a great national day that will be registered in the history of Iraq. This step forward will bring happiness to all Iraqis."[32][33]

Forward Operating Base Courage handed over to Nineveh province government edit

 
Nineveh Governorate

A former presidential compound of Saddam Hussein, dubbed Forward Operating Base Courage by Coalition forces, was handed over by Charlie Company 4-11FA to the Nineveh province government on 20 July 2006. The main palace had been home to the 101st Airborne Division Main Command Post, Task Force Olympia CP, 4-11FA of the 172nd SBCT, and the Task Force Freedom CP. The palace served as the last command post for the Multinational Force-Iraq–Northwest. US soldiers had spent the summer restoring the palace for the eventual handover.

Major General Thomas R. Turner II, commanding general, Task Force Band of Brothers stated at a ceremony marking the occasion "The turnover of Forward Operating Base Courage is one of the larger efforts towards empowering the Iraqi people and represents an important step in achieving Iraqi self-reliance ... The gains made during the past three years demonstrate that the provincial government, the Iraqi Army and the Iraqi Police are increasing their capabilities to take the lead for their nation's security." Duraid Kashmoula, the governor of the Nineveh Governorate, stated after being handed the key to the palace "Now this palace will be used to benefit the Iraqi government and its people."[34][35]

British troops leave Camp Abu Naji edit

 
Maysan Governorate Arabic: ميسان

On 24 August 2006, Maj Charlie Burbridge, a British military spokesman, said the last of 1,200 British troops left Camp Abu Naji, just outside Amarah in Iraq's southern Maysan province. Burbridge told Reuters that British troops leaving the base were preparing to head deep into the marshlands along the Iranian border, stating "We are repositioning our forces to focus on border areas and deal with reports of smuggling of weapons and improvised explosive devices from across the border."

The base had been a target for frequent mortar and rocket barrages since being set up in 2003, but Burbridge dismissed suggestions the British had been forced out of Amara while acknowledging the attacks had been one reason for the decision to withdraw, the second being that a static base did not fit with the new operation. "Abu Naji was a bulls-eye in the middle of a dartboard. The attacks were a nuisance and were a contributing factor in our planning", to quit the base, he said, adding "By no longer presenting a static target, we reduce the ability of the militias to strike us ... We understand the militias in Maysan province are using this as an example that we have been pushed out of Abu Naji, but that is not true. It was very rare for us to take casualties." Burbridge stated that Iraqi security forces would now be responsible for day-to-day security in Maysan but stressed that the British had not yet handed over complete control to them.

Muqtada al-Sadr called the departure the first expulsion of US-led coalition forces from an Iraqi urban center. A message from al-Sadr's office that played on car-mounted speakers throughout Amarah exclaimed "This is the first Iraqi city that has kicked out the occupier ... We have to celebrate this occasion!" A crowd of as many as 5,000 people, including hundreds armed with AK-47 assault rifles, ransacked Camp Abu Naji immediately after the last British soldier had departed despite the presence of a 450-member Iraqi army brigade meant to guard the base. The looting, which lasted from about 10 am to early evening, turned violent at about noon when individuals in the mob shot at the base.

The Iraqi troops asked the province's governor for permission to return fire, a decision the British military highlighted as evidence of the security force's training. "It demonstrated that they understand the importance of civilian primacy, that the government – and not the military – is in charge", Burbridge said in a phone interview with The Washington Post. Injuries were reported on both sides, but no one was killed. Burbridge attributed the looting to economic factors rather than malice, stating "The people of Amarah – many of whom are extremely poor – saw what they believed to be a bit of an Aladdin's cave inside." Some residents of Amarah, however, told the Post that antipathy toward the occupation was strong. "The looters stole everything – even the bricks ... They almost leveled the whole base to the ground", said 20-year-old student at Maysan University Ahmed Mohammed Abdul Latief.[36][37][38]

Situation in and around Baghdad edit

 
Soldiers conduct a counter improvised explosive device (CIED) mission in Baghdad, December 2007.
 
Munitions rigged for an IED discovered by Iraqi police in Baghdad in November 2005
 
M1A1 Abrams with an Abrams Integrated Management System and the Tank Urban Survivability Kit conducting a patrol in Baghdad, 2007.

On 28 August 2006, one US general said violence in Baghdad had fallen by nearly a half since July, although he acknowledged a spike in bombings in the past 48 hours. "Insurgents and terrorists are hitting back in an attempt to offset the success of the Iraqi government and its security forces", Maj Gen William Caldwell told reporters. After meeting Iraqi Defence Minister Abdul-Qader Mohammed Jassim al-Mifarji, British Secretary of State for Defence Des Browne said Iraq was moving forward, and that "each time I come, I see more progress".[39]

The American military command acknowledged in the week of 16 October 2006 that it was considering an overhaul of its latest security plan for Baghdad, where three months of intensive American-led sweeps had failed to curb violence by Sunni Arab-led insurgents and Shiite and Sunni militias.[40]

Numerous car and roadside bombs rocked the capital 9 November 2006 morning: In the Karrada district, a car bomb killed six and wounded 28 others. Another car bomb killed seven and wounded another 27 in the northern Qahira neighborhood. In South Baghdad, a mortar then a suicide car bomber killed seven and wounded 27 others near the Mishin bazaar. Near the college of Fine Arts in north-central Baghdad, a car bomb targeting an Iraqi patrol killed three and wounded six others. Two policemen were injured when they tried to dismantle a car bomb in the Zayouna district. A car bomb on Palestine Street in northeastern Baghdad meant for an Iraqi patrol killed one soldier but also wounded four civilians. Yet another car bomb in southern Baghdad wounded three people. And another car bomb near a passport services building in a northern neighborhood killed 2 people and wounded 7 others.

A roadside bomb in central Baghdad killed two and wounded 26 others. A police patrol was blasted by a roadside bomb near a petrol station; four were killed in the explosion. Another four people were wounded in the New Baghdad neighborhood by yet another roadside bomb. A bomb hidden in a sack exploded in Tayern square killing three and wounding 19. Another bomb in the Doura neighborhood killed one and wounded three. Mortars fell in Kadmiyah killing one woman and injuring eight people, and in Bayaladat where four were wounded.

Also in the capital, a group of laborers were kidnapped in the morning of 9 November 2006; five bodies were recovered later in the Doura neighborhood, but at least one other body was found in Baghdad that day. Gunmen also killed a police colonel and his driver in the east of the city. And just outside town, police arrested two people in a raid and discovered one corpse.[41]

On 10 November, Iraqi police recovered 18 bullet-riddled bodies in various neighborhoods around the capital which the police were unable to identify. The following day, two bombs planted in an outdoor market in central Baghdad exploded around noon, killing six and wounded 32 people. A car bomb and a roadside bomb were detonated five minutes apart in the market, which is in an area close to Baghdad's main commercial center. The US military said it has put up a $50,000 reward for anyone who helps find an American soldier kidnapped in Baghdad. The 42-year-old Army Reserve specialist, Ahmed al-Taie, was abducted on 23 October when he left the Green Zone, the heavily fortified section where the United States maintains its headquarters, to visit his Iraqi wife and family.

A suicide bomber killed 40 Iraqis and wounded 70 on 12 November 2006 morning outside the national police headquarters' recruitment center in western Baghdad, an emergency police official said. They were among dozens of men waiting to join the police force in the Qadessiya district when a suicide bomber detonated an explosives belt. In central Baghdad, a car bomb and roadside bomb killed four Iraqi civilians and wounded 10 near the Interior Ministry complex. And in the Karrada district of central Baghdad, one Iraqi was killed and five were wounded when a car bomb exploded near an outdoor market 12 November 2006 morning. Gunmen shot dead an Iraqi officer with the new Iraqi intelligence system as he was walking towards his parked car in the southwestern Baghdad neighborhood of Bayaa. Two civilians were killed and four more were wounded when a roadside bomb hit a car in the eastern Baghdad neighborhood of Zayuna.[42]

Violent incidents in other cities edit

9 November 2006.[41]

  • Suwayrah: Four bodies were recovered from the Tigris River. Three of them were in police uniforms.
  • Amarah: A roadside bomb killed one and wounded three others in Amarah. Gunmen also shot dead a suspected former member of the Fedayeen paramilitary.
  • Muqdadiyah: Gunmen stormed a primary school and killed three: a guard, a policeman and a student.
  • Tal Afar: A roadside bomb in Tal Afar killed four, including a policeman, and wounded eight other people. Two policemen were killed and four civilians were injured when a rocket landed in a residential neighborhood.
  • Mosul: Six people were shot dead, including one policeman.
  • Latifiya: Four bodies, bound and gagged, were discovered.
  • Baqubah: Eight people were killed in different incidents.

11 November 2006.[43]

  • Latifiya: Gunmen killed a truck driver and kidnapped 11 Iraqis after stopping four vehicles at a fake checkpoint south of the capital. At the fake checkpoint in Latifiya, about 25 miles (40 km) south of Baghdad, gunmen took the four vehicles—three minibuses and a truck—along with the kidnapped Iraqis. The Iraqis—11 men and three women—were driving from Diwaniya to Baghdad for shopping when they were stopped. The gunmen left the three women and kidnapped the 11 men, the official said.
  • Baqubah: North of the capital near Baquba, a suicide car bomb explosion killed two people at the main gate of a police station in Zaghanya town.

Al-Qaeda edit

 
UN headquarters in Baghdad after the Zarqawi's men bombed it, Canal Hotel bombing, 22 August 2003
 
Remains of Zarqawi's safe house, 8 June 2006

Although Saddam Hussein was accused of having links to Al-Qaeda members, only a few Al-Qaeda members were found hiding in Iraq before the invasion, and all were of lower standings.

On 3 September 2006, Iraq says it has arrested the country's second most senior figure in Al-Qaeda, "severely wounding" an organization the US military says is spreading sectarian violence that could bring civil war. The National Security Adviser Mowaffak al-Rubaie summoned reporters to a hastily arranged news conference to announce that al Qaeda leader Hamid Juma Faris al-Suaidi had been seized some days ago. Hitherto little heard of, and also known as Abu Humam or Abu Rana, Suaidi was captured hiding in a building with a group of followers. "Al-Qaeda in Iraq is severely wounded", Rubaie said. He said Suaidi had been involved in ordering the bombing of the Shi'ite shrine in Samarra in February 2006 that unleashed the wave of tit-for-tat killings now threatening civil war. Iraqi officials blame Al-Qaeda for the attack. The group denies it. Rubaie did not give Suaidi's nationality. He said he had been tracked to the same area north of Baghdad where US forces killed Al-Qaeda's leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in June 2006. "He was hiding in a building used by families. He wanted to use children and women as human shields", Rubaie said. Little is publicly known about Suaidi. Rubaie called him the deputy of Abu Ayyub al-Masri, a shadowy figure, probably Egyptian, who took over the Sunni Islamist group from Zarqawi.[44]

The US military says Al-Qaeda is a "prime instigator" of the violence between Iraq's Sunni minority and Shi'ite majority but that US and Iraqi operations have "severely disrupted" it.[44]

A handover ceremony on 2 September 2006 was postponed at the last minute, first to 3 September 2006, then indefinitely, after a dispute emerged between the government and Washington over the wording of a document outlining their armies' new working relationship. "There are some disputes", an Iraqi government source said. "We want thorough control and the freedom to make decisions independently." US spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Barry Johnson played down any arguments and expected a signing soon: "It is embarrassing but it was decided it was better not to sign the document." Practically, US troops remain the dominant force. Their tanks entered the southern, Shi'ite city of Diwaniya on 3 September 2006. The show of force came a week after Shi'ite militiamen killed 20 Iraqi troops in a battle that highlighted violent power struggles between rival Shi'ite factions in the oil-rich south.[44]

Abu Ghraib edit

On 2 September 2006, the Abu Ghraib prison was formally handed over to Iraq's government. The formal transfer was conducted between Lieutenant General Jack Gardner, Commander of Task Force 134, and representatives of the Iraqi Ministry of Justice and the Iraqi Army.[45]

Iraqi government takes control of the 8th Iraqi Army Division edit

 
Units of the New Iraqi Army with T-72 tanks in 2006.

On 7 September 2006, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki signed a document taking control of Iraq's small naval and air forces and the 8th Iraqi Army Division, based in the south. At a ceremony marking the occasion, Gen George Casey, the top US commander in Iraq stated "From today forward, the Iraqi military responsibilities will be increasingly conceived and led by Iraqis." Previously, the US-led Multi-National Force – Iraq, commanded by Casey, gave orders to the Iraqi armed forces through a joint American-Iraqi headquarters and chain of command. After the handover, the chain of command flows directly from the prime minister in his role as Iraqi commander in chief, through his Defense Ministry to the Iraqi Joint Forces Command. From there, the orders go to Iraqi units on the ground. The other nine Iraqi division remained under US command, with authority gradually being transferred. US military officials said there was no specific timetable for the transition.[46]

Anbar province reported as politically "lost" to US and Iraqi government edit

 
Al Anbar province in Iraq.
 
Marines in Al Anbar Province, 2006

On 11 September 2006, it transpired that Colonel Peter Devlin, chief of intelligence for the Marine Corps in Iraq, had filed a secret report, described by those who have seen it as saying that the US and the Iraqi government have been defeated politically in Anbar province. According to The Washington Post, an unnamed Defense Department source described Devlin as saying "there are no functioning Iraqi government institutions in Anbar, leaving a vacuum that has been filled by the insurgent group al-Qaeda in Iraq, which has become the province's most significant political force." The Post said that Devlin is a very experienced intelligence officer whose report was being taken seriously.[47]

The next day, Major General Richard Zilmer, commander of the Marines in Iraq, stated: "We are winning this war... I have never heard any discussion about the war being lost before this weekend."[48]

In the fall of 2006 several Iraqi tribes near Ramadi led by Sheikh Abdul Sattar Abu Risha revolted against various insurgent groups with Al Qaeda in Iraq. They formed the Anbar Awakening and helped turn the tide in favor of the US military.

Two more provinces were transferred to Provincial Iraqi Control in late 2006.

On 21 September 2006, Italian troops handed security control of the Dhi Qar province to Iraqi forces, making Dhi Qar the second of the country's 18 provinces to come under complete local control. A transfer ceremony was carried out in Nasiriyah.[49]

On 20 December 2006, US forces handed over control of the southern province of Najaf to Iraqi security forces.[50]

2007 edit

 
Sheikh Abdul Sattar who helped spark the Anbar Awakening Movement

In January 2007 US President George W. Bush announced a "Surge" in the number of US troops deployed to the country.[51] Also in early 2007, US and Iraqi tribal forces secured Ramadi, as well as other cities such as Hit, Haditha, Rutbah, and Al Qaim.

In May 2007, Iraq's Parliament called on the United States to set a timetable for withdrawal[52] and US coalition partners such as the UK and Denmark began withdrawing their forces from the country.[53][54] During the summer the US turned its attention to eastern Anbar and secured the cities of Fallujah and Al-Karmah.

Celebrating victory, President George W. Bush flew to Anbar in August 2007 to congratulate Sheik Sattar and other leading tribal figures.

2008 edit

Iraqi forces begin process of arming with advanced US weapon systems edit

 
Iraqi army battalion trains for urban operations

Iraq became one of the top current purchasers of US military equipment with their army trading its AK-47 assault rifles for the more accurate US M16 and M4 rifles, among other equipment.[55]

Iraq sought 36 F-16's, the most sophisticated weapons system Iraq has attempted to purchase. The Pentagon notified Congress that it had approved the sale of 24 American attack helicopters to Iraq, valued at as much as $2.4 billion. Including the helicopters, Iraq announced plans to purchase at least $10 billion in US tanks and armored vehicles, transport planes and other battlefield equipment and services. Over the summer, the Defense Department announced that the Iraqi government wanted to order more than 400 armored vehicles and other equipment worth up to $3 billion, and six C-130J transport planes, worth up to $1.5 billion.[56]

In 2008 Iraq accounted for more than $12.5 billion of the $34 billion US weapon sales to foreign countries (not including the potential F-16 fighter planes).[57]

2009 edit

Vice President of the United States Joe Biden made his second visit to Baghdad in as many months in September 2009, and met with Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki even as insurgents fired mortars and rockets at the Green Zone to protest his presence. Although said to be in "listening mode", Biden addressed issues of security, political reconciliation, and foreign investment in Iraq's oil-rich but weakened economy with various leaders in the capital and Iraq's Kurdish region.[58] "We will also move ahead on other aspects of our security agreement by removing all US combat brigades from Iraq by the end of August 2010 and all remaining US troops by the end of 2011," Biden said.[59]

2010 edit

Final departure of US combat troops edit

 
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki shakes hands with US President Barack Obama in Baghdad

On 18 August 2010 the final US combat troops were reported to have crossed the border into Kuwait, when a last convoy of the Army's 4th Stryker Brigade Combat Team departed Iraq. A spokesman for the US State Department, P. J. Crowley, was quoted by news media as saying the departure was "a historic moment," but noted that the US presence in Iraq would continue. The pullout of combat forces was nearly two weeks ahead of the announced deadline of 31 August.

In a released statement, US President Obama said of the withdrawn soldiers, "I hope you'll join me in thanking them, and all of our troops and military families, for their service." He noted that the event was a "milestone in the Iraq war."[60]

The closure of Operation Iraqi Freedom was announced on 31 August. "It is time to turn the page," Obama said in a national address. The operations in Iraq were renamed "New Dawn".

Participating nations edit

As of May 2011, the United States was the only country with military forces stationed in Iraq. Other nations also present but under the United Nations banner.[61]

As of September 2006, there were an estimated 145,000 US troops in Iraq.[62] There are also approximately 20,000 private security contractors of different nationalities under various employers.

Casualties edit

Iraqi councils and authorities edit

On 11 October 2002, President Bush's senior adviser on the Middle East, Zalmay Khalilzad, released US government plans to establish an American-led military administration in Iraq, as in post-war Germany and Japan, which could last for several years after the fall of Saddam.[63] In the run-up to the invasion, the US promised a speedy transition to a democratic government, as well as the creation of an Iraqi constitution, and the active role of Iraqis in the establishment of an interim authority and new government. US officials continue to emphasize that the invasion was not about long-term occupation, but about liberation.

 
Bremer signs over limited sovereignty to Iraq's interim government, 28 June 2004

In November 2003, Paul Bremer announced the plan to hand over limited sovereignty to the Iraqi governing council by 30 June 2004. A draft constitution was written and approved by the Iraqi Governing Council in March 2004. The United States has stated its plans to enter into what it calls a security agreement with the new Iraqi government and maintain military authority until a new Iraqi army is established. The Bush administration remained committed to this date despite the unstable security situation. The interim Iraqi government was named in May 2004, at which point the Iraqi Governing Council was dissolved, though there was heavy overlap between the two governing bodies.

The US-led Coalition Provisional Authority, for administrative purposes, divided Iraq into four security zones (see map): a North zone in the MosulKirkuk region, a Central zone in the Baghdad – Tikrit region, a Southern Central zone in the Karbala region and a South zone in the Basra region. The northern and central zones are garrisoned by US troops, while the Southern Central zone is a garrisoned by a Multi-National Division under Polish command and the South zone is garrisoned by a Multi-National Division under British command.[64]

In the early months of the occupation, looting and vandalism slowed the restoration of basic services such as water, electricity, and sanitation. By Spring 2004, these services were mostly restored to pre-war levels. Ongoing work is continuing to provide sufficient sanitation. Uneven power distribution remained a problem through 2004, with the Baghdad area continuing to have periodic blackouts.[65] On 28 July 2005, Iraq's Electricity Minister announced that Iraq's electricity supply had risen to above pre-war levels.[66]

Numerous allegations were made of human rights violations by the occupying forces in post-invasion Iraq. One of the most significant of these was the Abu Ghraib torture and prisoner abuse scandal, where 11 American soldiers from the 372nd Military Police Company were convicted in 2005 for a series of war crimes over the mistreatment of Iraqi prisoners. The Bush administration denied that the abuses were indicative of US military policy in Iraq.[67][68]

Former Ba'ath Party members and military officers who have no criminal past or human rights abuses have been allowed to return to government positions.[69]

Reconstruction edit

For the reconstruction, contracts were awarded to private companies. Initially companies from countries that had opposed the war were excluded from these contracts, but this decision was reversed due to protests.[70] Political activists and commentators allege that The Pentagon favoured companies like Halliburton, former employer of Vice President Dick Cheney, because they had connections to high-ranking members of the Bush administration.[71][72] This suspicion had already been a concern during the global protests against the war on Iraq. An audit found that Halliburton subsidiary Kellogg, Brown and Root (KBR) may have overcharged the US government $61 million, on contracts worth billions, for bringing oil products for the US army into Iraq via a Kuwaiti subcontractor, Altanmia Commercial Marketing Co.[73]

Some also argue that foreign contractors are doing work which could be done by unemployed Iraqis, which might be a factor fueling resentment of the occupation.[74][75][76] Further resentment could be inflamed with the news that almost US$9 billion dollars of Iraqi oil revenue is missing from a fund set up to reconstruct Iraq.[77]

On 14 August 2005, a Washington Post story[78] on the administration's effort to lower expectations, quoted Wayne White, former head of the State Department's Iraq intelligence team, as saying "The most thoroughly dashed expectation was the ability to build a robust self-sustaining economy. We're nowhere near that. State industries, electricity are all below what they were before we got there."

A report of the United States Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction found widespread "fraud, incompetence and confusion" in the American occupation's handling of billions of dollars of Iraqi government money and American funds given for reconstruction. Inspector-general Stuart Bowen, Jr. noted that only 49 of 136 planned water- and sanitation-related projects will be completed.[79]

In April 2007, the New York Times reported that US federal oversight inspectors found that "in a sampling of eight projects that the United States had declared successes, seven were no longer operating as designed because of plumbing and electrical failures, lack of proper maintenance, apparent looting, and expensive equipment that lay idle. The United States has sometimes admitted ... that some of its reconstruction projects have been abandoned, delayed, or poorly constructed. But this is the first time inspectors have found that projects officially declared as successes—in some cases, as little as six months before the latest inspections—were no longer working properly."[80]

In 2012, Iraq bought electricity from the United Arab Emirates, as Iraqis continued to endure electricity cuts of up to twenty hours a day during peak periods of demand,[81] while the country's university system was one of the worst in the Middle East.[82] June saw Prince Abdul Ilah Al Qasim comment that Iraqi oil production was at its highest in twenty years. Abdul Ilah by telephone from Baghdad said that the "oil production has exceeded 3.07 million barrels this month, compared with 2.92 million barrels for the month of May which was announced in the monthly report of OPEC".[83]

Civilian government edit

The establishment of a new civilian government of Iraq was complicated by religious and political divisions between the majority Shi'ite population and the formerly ruling Sunni Arabs. Moreover, many of the people in Saddam's ruling Ba'ath Party were perceived as tainted by the association by some parties. In northern Iraq, Kurds had already had effectively autonomous rule for 12 years under the protection of the no-fly zone.

On 16 May 2003, US officials abandoned the plan to cede authority to a democratically chosen interim civilian Iraqi government (similar to what had happened in Afghanistan following the 2001 US invasion) and presented a resolution to the UN to give the United States and the United Kingdom broad power and to lift economic sanctions on Iraq, allowing the occupying countries authority to use oil resources to pay for rebuilding the country. Passage of the resolution allowed them to appoint an interim government by themselves.

On 13 July 2003, an Iraqi Governing Council was appointed by Coalition Provisional Authority Administrator Paul Bremer.

United Nations resolutions edit

 
Kofi Annan, 7th Secretary-General of the United Nations

On 22 May 2003, the UN Security Council voted 14–0 to give the United States and Britain the power to govern Iraq and use its oil resources to rebuild the country. Resolution 1483 removed nearly 13 years of economic sanctions originally imposed after Iraq's 1990 invasion of Kuwait. The resolution allows UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan to appoint a special representative to work with US and British administrators on reconstruction, humanitarian aid, and the creation of a new government.

The resolution also created the Development Fund for Iraq, which collected funds from oil sales. The fund was initially run by the United States and Britain to rebuild the country, and is overseen by a new advisory body composed of the United Nations and international financial institutions. In June 2004, the New York Times reported that American authorities spent $2.5 billion from Iraqi oil revenue despite agreements that the oil revenues should be set aside for use after the restoration of Iraq's sovereignty.[84]

On 14 August 2003, the Security Council voted 14–0 to "welcome" the creation of the Iraqi Governing Council. Resolution 1500 stopped short of formally recognizing the governing council as Iraq's legitimate governing body but called it an "important step" towards creating a sovereign government.

Elections edit

 
Council of Representatives of Iraq meeting center.

For several months the United States maintained that it intended to convene a constitutional convention, composed of influential Iraqis. However, European demands for an early election and Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani's insistence eventually forced the United States to let the appointed Governing Council serve this function.

In the early months of the occupation, new officials were appointed to several local and regional positions (e.g., mayors, governors, local councils). The officials were chosen from a select group of individuals (including ex-Ba'ath party officials) in an attempt to speed the return to normality and to avoid the election of people opposed to the Coalition presence. Certain religious clerics and other officials were considered to be overly radical or dangerous. On occasion the appointed officials were found to behave less than admirably. On 30 June 2003, the appointed mayor of Najaf was arrested on charges of corruption.

By February 2004, democratic elections, under the supervision of the CPA, had already been held at the municipal and city level in some of the southern and northern provinces.[85]

On 15 November, the Iraqi Governing Council announced that a transitional government would take over in June from the US-led powers, and that an elected government would follow by the end of 2005 once a constitution had been drafted and ratified. The transitional government would be selected in June 2004 by a transitional council formed in May 2004.

The Governing Council revealed the timetable after the United States government, in reaction to terrorist and militant activity against occupying troops and aid organisations, abandoned its earlier plan that a sovereign government would take charge only after creating a constitution and elections held. Jalal Talabani, who was chairman of the council, said the transition would involve "the creation of a permanent constitution by an elected council, directly elected by the people, and also the election of a new government according to the articles of this new constitution before the end of 2005."

In March 2004, an interim constitution was created, called the Law of Administration for the State of Iraq for the Transitional Period. The document called for the creation of an elected National Assembly to take place no later than January 2005. The question of the election calendar became a matter of importance for Iraq and the US: while a quick election would legitimise the Iraqi government and shed a favourable light on the US-led occupation of the country, the prospect of violence delayed it. It was finally set for 30 January 2005. Though then-President Ghazi Al-Yaouar asked the United Nations to reconsider the electoral schedule several weeks before the election, the legislative election was held on time, creating the Iraqi National Assembly.

The elected assembly drafted a new constitution for Iraq, submitting it to the Iraqi people for review on 28 August. On 15 October, Iraqis voted to approve the new constitution. On 15 December, the first legislative election under the new constitution was held.

Sovereignty for Iraq edit

 
US National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice gives confirmation of Iraqi sovereignty to US President George W Bush, who then wrote, "Let Freedom Reign!," during the opening session of the NATO Summit in Istanbul, Turkey, on Monday, 28 June 2004.

In a 1 June 2004, press conference, President Bush said that he was working with various world leaders to create a UN Security Council resolution endorsing the transition from the US-dominated occupation to complete autonomy for Iraq. Under this resolution, Coalition forces would remain in Iraq until the new government could establish security and stabilization: "There is a deep desire by the Iraqis – don't get me wrong – to run their own affairs and to be in a position where they can handle their own security measures." On 8 June, Security Council resolution 1546 was adopted unanimously, calling for "the end of the occupation and the assumption of full responsibility and authority by a fully sovereign and independent Interim Government of Iraq by 30 June 2004."

On 28 June 2004, the occupation was nominally ended by the CPA, which transferred limited power to a new Iraqi government led by Prime Minister Iyad Allawi. The multinational military alliance continued to assist the Allawi government in governing the Iraqis. The purpose of the Occupation of Iraq was, according to US President George W. Bush, purely to bring about a transition from post-war anarchy to full Iraqi sovereignty.

A further milestone in sovereignty was achieved with the creation of a democratically elected administration on 6 April 2005 including Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari and President Jalal Talabani following the Iraqi elections of January 2005.

Under United Nations Security Council Resolution 1790, the mandate of the multinational force in Iraq was extended until 31 December 2008, after which there is no justification for foreign militaries to remain in the country. On 6 June 2008, the Independent reported that the United States was applying pressure to the government of Iraq to sign a "strategic alliance" (not a "treaty", which would require approval of the US senate), giving US forces broad freedom in continuing to operate in Iraq.[86]

Provincial Iraqi control edit

The objective of the Iraqi Government and Multi-National Forces in Iraq is to achieve the transition of responsibility for each of the 18 provinces in Iraq from the Coalition to the Iraqi civil authorities, both national and local. Most attention on the issue is understandably focused on progress towards security within the provinces, both in terms of the threat from insurgents and the capability of the Iraqi Security Forces, but other factors, such as the competence and capacity of local governance is also important.[citation needed]

Provinces are subject to regular assessment by the Iraqi government and the Coalition; when a province appears to be ready, a recommendation is made to the Iraqi Ministerial Committee for National Security, with the Prime Minister making the final decision.

Provinces under Iraqi Control edit

As of October 2008, thirteen provinces had successfully completed transition to provincial Iraqi control: Muthanna, Dhi Qar, Najaf, Maysan, Dahuk, Erbil, Sulaymaniyah, Karbala, Basra, Al-Qādisiyyah, Al Anbar, Babil and Wasit.

Muthanna was the first, on 13 July 2006, when Australian, Japanese and British forces from Multi-National Division-South East transferred responsibility to the Governor and local authorities. With a small and homogeneous Shia population, there had been very little militia violence and few attacks on Coalition forces in the preceding months, encouraging good progress in developing the capacity of the Iraqi armed forces and Ministry of Interior forces there. Equally, the Governor of Muthanna enjoyed a good local mandate, having been re-elected in local elections in January 2005.[87]

Dhi Qar, also within the area of responsibility of the British-led MND-SE and the responsibility of the Italian and Romanian brigade, was handed over on 21 September 2006. .[88] Australian troops in MND-SE remained available to provide security support to the Iraqis in both Muthanna and Dhi Qar, should they request it.

Najaf, which had been garrisoned by first Polish, then US forces, was handed over on 20 December 2006.[89]

In April 2007, Maysan Governorate became the fourth to transition to provincial Iraqi control. [90]

On 30 May 2007, the three provinces making up the Kurdistan Regional Government transitioned to provincial Iraqi control, bringing the total count to 7. [91]

In October 2007, Karbala became the eighth province to transfer to provincial Iraqi control. The transfer of Basra in December 2007 marked the half-way point in transferring all provincial security over to Iraqi security forces.[92]

In July 2008 the tenth province, Al-Qādisiyyah, also transferred to Iraqi control.[92]

 
Maj. Gen. John Kelly and Gov. Maamoon Sami Rasheed al-Alwani Governor of Al Anbar sign formal agreement turning security responsibilities of the Al Anbar province to the Government of Iraq. (1 September 2008)

On 1 September 2008, in the wake of the decreasing levels of violence, the US Army transferred control of the expansive Al-Anbar province over to Provincial Iraqi Control. A limited US presence will be maintained to ensure security. Al-Anbar is the 11th province to be transferred to Iraqi security.

In October 2008, Babil province became the twelfth province to return to Iraqi control,[93] whilst Wasit was transferred later in the month, making it the thirteenth province to be transferred.[94]

Transition after Security Agreement signed edit

As of 31 December 2008, 13 of Iraq's 18 provinces had successfully transitioned to Provincial Iraqi Control (PIC).[95] On 1 January 2009, the SA (see also US–Iraq Status of Forces Agreement) between the US and Iraq went into effect, transferring security responsibility to the GoI, even though not all of the provinces had completed the PIC transition process. At the request of the GoI, however, a new Joint Sub-Committee for Provincial Security was formed under the auspices of the SA to assess conditions in the remaining five Iraqi provinces that did not transition to PIC before 1 January 2009. This sub-committee met for the first time in January 2009.

Iraqi insurgency edit

After the 2003 invasion, an insurgency developed against Coalition forces during as part of the Iraq War. The first phase of the insurgency began shortly after the invasion and lasted until the establishment of a provisional Iraqi government, and from around 2004 until May 2007 primarily targeted American-led Coalition forces. In the early months following the "end of major combat operations", insurgents conducted sniper attacks, suicide bombings at road checkpoints, and ambushes, resulting in about 112 Coalition fatalities per month.[96]

In February 2006, a sectarian civil war broke out in Iraq, leading to insurgents to direct many of their attacks against the police and armed forces of the Iraqi government. The attacks continued during the transitional reconstruction of Iraq, as the Iraqi government attempted to establish its authority throughout the country.[97][98]

Though the civil war (and the accompanying sectarian violence) ended in mid-2008, the insurgency continued after the withdrawal of US forces from Iraq in 2001, and in 2012 a renewed wave of sectarian and anti-government insurgency swept Iraq, causing thousands of casualties. Increasing violence led to another outbreak of war in Iraq in 2013, lasting until 2017.[99]

Guerrilla war edit

In late June 2003 there was some public debate in the US as to whether the insurgency could be characterized as a guerrilla war. On 17 June, Army Gen. John P. Abizaid said that forces in Iraq were "conducting what I would describe as a classical guerrilla-type campaign against us. It's low-intensity conflict in our doctrinal terms, but it's war however you describe it." In a statement to Congress on 18 June, Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz said "There's a guerrilla war there but we can win it."

Sabotage edit

 
The Iraqi Al Basrah Oil Terminal, considered a terrorist target due to its importance

Sabotage of crude oil pipelines and refineries have been a key tactic of the Iraqi insurgency. The United States had intended to quickly rebuild Iraqi infrastructure for production back to pre-war levels, but widespread sabotage slowed down the pace of reconstruction. The administration has set an oil-production goal of 5,000,000 barrels per day (790,000 m3/d), but the president's numbers show that production decreased slightly in 2005 over 2004 from 2.2 million US gallons (8,300 m3) per day to 2.1 million US gallons (7,900 m3) per day. The administration claims that oil production, however, is up from 2003, when oil was produced at 1,580,000 barrels per day (251,000 m3/d).

Iraqi analysts have argued that the administration's measures are misleading because the war began in 2003, which pushed production numbers lower than they normally would have been.

"They are way off of their original projections" for where oil production would be now, said Rick Barton, an expert on Iraqi reconstruction at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington. "It's basically gone nowhere in the entire time we've been there. Of course, they haven't been able to protect the pipelines. You just can't be rebuilding a country during an active war."[citation needed][100]

Fallujah edit

The Fallujah offensive Operation Vigilant Resolve was launched on 5 April 2004 in response to 31 March murder and mutilation of four of Blackwater's employees. Roads leading into and out of the city were closed. When the US Soldiers and Marines tried to enter, fierce fighting erupted. Members of the Iraqi insurgency opened fire with heavy machine guns, rockets, and rocket-propelled grenades. The Soldiers and Marines answered by bringing in tanks and helicopters.

The ensuing firefight resulted in a large number of casualties. Dozens of Marines were killed and injured. Two hundred and seventy-one members of the non-coalition forces were killed and 793 injured, according to official counts for the period of 5 April through 22 April. Conflicting reports leave it unclear how many of the dead and injured were rebel fighters or women and children.[101][102][103] There were also reports of ambulances and aid convoys being used by the insurgents to smuggle weapons and fighters into the city.[104] Coalition officials said that the insurgents used mosques and schools as command posts and weapon-storage facilities. A suicide-bomb-vest factory was discovered by Marines.[105]

After several failed attempts at ceasefires, the US backed out of the city. A Marine commander stated "We don't want to turn Fallujah into Dresden". The US handed authority of the city over to a former Iraqi general who had served under Saddam Hussein, and whose fighters the US acknowledges may include former members of insurgency.

Afterwards, the city was referred to as "free rebel town"; banners in the city streets proclaimed victory over the United States, and some of its mosques praised the Iraqi insurgency. The general, Muhammed Latif, told Reuters, "I want the American soldier to return to his camp. What I want more is that he returns to the United States."[106]

US marines encircled Fallujah with an earth wall, trying to control access to the city, allowing only women and children to leave the city. On 19 June 2004, twenty two Iraqis, among them women and children, were killed in a US air strike on a residential neighborhood.[107] Allawi condemned the rebellion and called upon the city to surrender Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the leader of the Tawhid-e-Jihad group who is alleged to be hiding in Fallujah, or face aerial bombing by the United States.

Muqtada al-Sadr edit

On 4 April 2004, coalition forces closed Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr's newspaper al-Hawza, claiming it contained incitements to violence. One example provided was that on 26 February, an article claimed that a suicide bombing in Iskandariya that killed 53 people was a rocket fired by the Americans, and not a car bomb. In response, al-Sadr launched a day of protests. During these protests, members of the Iraqi insurgency (who may or may not have been tied to al-Sadr) ambushed a Coalition patrol guarding a trash collecting unit in Sadr-City resulting in the deaths of 8 soldiers. Several dozen of al-Sadr's followers were killed during these protests.

The coalition responded by arresting one of al-Sadr's closest aides, leading to al-Sadr calling on his followers to rise up. The next days fighting erupted in many cities in southern Iraq, including Karbala, Kut, Nasiriya and Basra. The CPA announced the existence of a three-month-old arrest warrant, issued by an Iraqi judge, on al-Sadr, claiming that he was responsible for the killing of Coalition-aligned cleric Abdul Majid al-Khoei. The warrant itself inspired further opposition, as Khoei's own followers blamed Ba'athists for the murder, the Coalition-appointed Iraqi Minister of Justice stated that he had no knowledge of the warrant, and the Iraqi Jurists Association declared the warrant "illegal". Al-Sadr, who had previously created his own parallel government and a militia called the al-Mahdi Army, instructed his followers to no longer follow along with the occupation, and suggested that they attack Coalition soldiers, and his followers took control of several southern cities, often with the support of local authorities and police.

During the first few days of the uprising al-Sadr stayed in Kufa, where he traditionally had a large following. On 7 April he moved to Najaf, into a building close to the shrine of the Imam Ali, the holiest shrine in the Shia faith. After fierce fighting during the first days of the uprising, his followers took control over many cities in southern Iraq. In Kut the Ukrainian occupational contingent was forced out of the city by a rain of mortar fire. The Italians were contained inside their base in Nassiriya, and in Basra the governor's palace was occupied. In Karbala, Polish and Bulgarian forces were able to hold their own after a battle lasting the whole night. The Alliance reacted by dispensing a reactionary force on 8 April to Kut, forcing al-Sadr followers to melt away into the city's population. The same happened in most of the other cities and control was nominally ceded. Only Najaf and Kufa, which the Americans did not enter, remained effectively under the control of al-Sadr followers. The Coalition sent 2,500 US Marines to Najaf to try to 'arrest or kill' al-Sadr.

Initially hopeful that al-Sistani would force al-Sadr to capitulate, the coalition was disappointed when, while he called for all sides to show restraint, he focused instead on condemning coalition activities in Fallujah. In mid-May 2004, a US lead force began pushing into Najaf. In the process, they invaded several mosques to seize weaponry, and there were reports of damage to some of Shia Islam's holiest shrines. US forces, using their superior firepower and air support, inflicted a steady stream of al-Mahdi army casualties; al-Sadr and hospital officials disputed the numbers, and both claimed that many of them were civilians. The al-Mahdi were only able to inflict few American casualties, but on 17 May, it was reported that the Al-Madhi army drove Italian troops from their base in Nasiriyah.[108] Ten Italians were wounded, along with 20 al-Mahdi army fighters wounded and two killed, in the assault. The base was peacefully retaken the next day in a negotiated settlement with local clan leaders.

While the Alliance continually insisted that he had little support, and there were limited clashes with the smaller SCIRI, he was seldom condemned by his more senior clerics. Islamic courts expanded their influence in areas he controlled. The Imam Ali mosque ended its call for prayers with a request for divine protection for him, and his followers were clearly large in number.[109] Many believed that al-Sistani did not speak out against al-Sadr for fear of turning Shiite against Shiite. A poll found that, in mid-May 2004, 32% of Iraqis strongly supported al-Sadr, and another 36% somewhat supported him.[110]

In August 2004, al-Sadr attempted a second rebellion, and his al-Mahdi army again incited violence, especially in the Sadr city slum area of Baghdad, and in Najaf. US forces responded by pushing into the areas of Najaf controlled by al-Mahdi, sending the militia reeling. Supported by helicopter gunships, the US military managed to kill several hundred al-Mahdi fighters, and further close in on the Iman Ali mosque, where al-Sadr had made his base. Brutal fighting raged between US troops and al-Madhi militiamen in a cemetery outside the mosque. To avoid damaging the sacred mosque in a direct raid, a political solution was sought, and a deal was struck between al-Sistani and al-Sadr ended his rebellion. In September 2004, a program encouraged al-Madhi members in Sadr city to exchange their guns into authorities for a financial compensation, and the slum was almost fully pacified.

By August 2005, al-Sadr had adopted a more conciliatory tone, along with a much lower profile, saying "I call upon all the believers to save the blood of the Muslims and to return to their homes" after an outbreak of violence between some of his followers and those of Abdul Aziz al-Hakim.[111]

Hostages edit

 
Jack Hensley, an American engineer, prior to his death

After the fall of the Ba'ath-regime, people with varying agendas have taken foreign and Iraqi hostages, including citizens of both countries that supported and opposed the invasion. This includes citizens of Australia, Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, China, the Czech Republic, France, India, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Germany, Japan, Jordan, Nepal, Pakistan, Poland, Romania, Russia, South Korea, Thailand, Turkey, Ukraine, the United Kingdom, and the United States of America.

The hostage-taking appears to be uncoordinated, with different groups making various demands. Some hostages are released whilst others are killed, sometimes by beheading. Several kidnappings have been claimed by the Tawhid and Jihad (The Unity of God and Holy War) Islamist group, which changed its name to "Al-Qaeda in Iraq" in October 2004. The group was run by the Jordanian-born Palestinian Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. The hostages who have been beheaded by Zarqawi's group, and possibly by Zarqawi himself, include Americans Nick Berg, Eugene Armstrong and Jack Hensley, South Korean Kim Sun-il, Shosei Koda from Japan, and Kenneth Bigley from the UK. Italian Fabrizio Quattrocchi was shot in the head, possibly by another group, as was British aid worker Margaret Hassan. According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, at least 25 journalists have been kidnapped by armed groups in Iraq since April 2004, when insurgents began targeting foreigners for abduction.

While some hostagetaking seems to be politically motivated, a large number of hostages are taken by criminals as a means of obtaining cash. Iraqis presumed to have high incomes have especially been targeted.

On the evening of 4 March 2005, the car leading Giuliana Sgrena, freshly liberated, along with two agents of the Sismi, the Italian Military Intelligence service, was fired upon by US troops. Nicola Calipari, who had negotiated the liberation of the other eight Italian hostages, was killed, while Sgrena and the other agent were wounded; see Rescue of Giuliana Sgrena.

Fall-out edit

As a result of the uprisings US General John Abizaid in April 2004 requested an additional 10,000 troops be sent to Iraq after admitting that a number of Iraqi security personnel had abandoned their posts or joined the Iraqi insurgency.[112] On 16 April 2004, US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld announced that he had approved General Abizaid's request and had extended the tour of roughly 20,000 soldiers, who were scheduled to be rotated out of Iraq, by three months. A fresh mass grave was found near Ramadi, containing the bodies of over 350 Iraqis.[113] It is unclear whether this mass grave contained dead civilians and/or militants.

Iraq Study Group Report edit

 
Lee H. Hamilton (left) and James Baker (right) present the Iraq Study Group Report to George W. Bush on 6 December 2006.

At a news conference with the British Prime Minister Tony Blair in Washington on 6 December 2006, President George W. Bush commented the Iraq Study Group's bipartisan report assessing the current situation of the US-led Iraq War and making policy recommendations. President Bush admitted for the first time that a "new approach" is needed in Iraq, that the situation in Iraq is "bad there" and that the task ahead was "daunting".[114] President Bush said he would not accept every recommendation by the ISG panel but promised that he would take the report seriously.[115]

Iraq Coalition members departures edit

All foreign troops have withdrawn from Iraq.

American withdrawal edit

On 18 August 2010 the 4th Stryker Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division, the last US combat brigade withdrew from Iraq, ending the US combat mission in Iraq. 52,600 US military personnel remained in Iraq to take on an advisory role.[116]

On 19 August 2010, US President Barack Obama announced that all US combat operations would end on 31 August. 50,000 troops would stay in an advise-and-assist role. The full withdrawal was in December 2011. Between 15 and 18 December, the last troops left.

US military patrolling edit

During the "post-war" Iraq occupation, occupying forces have turned their attention to enforcing order through patrolling. These patrols faced insurgents who conduct ambushes using assault rifles, rocket propelled grenades, and carefully placed and timed explosives. The patrols require armored vehicles capable of stopping at least small arms fire of 7.62 mm machine gun rounds along with mandatory external weapons platforms and tracking equipment. Experience is also key in detecting any potentially threatening, out of place car, box or person while following the rules of engagement that dictate a passive-but-ready posture. Patrolling soldiers spend nearly eight hours a day in sector and accrue nearly 30 patrols per month.

US permanent facilities edit

In October 2004, Iraq's interim government transferred to US ownership 104 acres (0.42 km2) of land beside the Tigris River in Baghdad for construction of a new US embassy. The new facility will be the largest of its kind in the world, the size of Vatican City, with the population of a small town, its own defense force, self-contained power and water. A few details of the embassy complex are available from a US Senate Foreign Relations Committee report, though many of the details remain secret. Its construction is budgeted at $592 million.[117]

Besides the embassy complex, four "super bases" are being built for permanent deployment. One would be adjacent to Baghdad, two would be close to the southern and northern oil fields and the fourth would be in the west towards Syria.[118]

The US is in the process of building 14 bases known as enduring bases. Four are unknown as to name and location. The other ten are: Green Zone in Baghdad, Camp Anaconda at Balad Airbase, Camp Taji in Taji, Camp Falcon-Al-Sarq in Baghdad, Post Freedom in Mosul, Camp Victory-Al Nasr at Baghdad Airfield, Camp Marez at Mosul Airfield, Camp Renegade in Kirkuk, Camp Speicher in Tikrit and Camp Fallujuh.[119][120]

Cultural dimensions edit

As cultural scientist Roland Benedikter poses in his book on Sustainable Democratization of Iraq[121] and in a series of essays,[122] one main cause of the ongoing problems of pacification seems to consist in the fact that the socio-cultural dimensions of sustainability, including questions of ethnicity, religion and minority issues, have not been included appropriately in the overall democratization strategies so far.

See also edit

  • Archaeological looting in Iraq: Since the fall of Saddam Hussein's regime, looters have descended upon many archaeological sites, and have begun destroying them and looting artifacts to an alarming degree.
  • Criticism of the Iraq War: A list of common criticisms of the 2003 invasion and subsequent military occupation of Iraq.
  • Hillbilly armor: a US military slang term coined during the occupation to refer to the improvised vehicle armor being used by some US troops.
  • Human rights in post-invasion Iraq: Various parties expressed concern about the state of human rights in Iraq after the 2003 occupation of Iraq.
  • Iraq and weapons of mass destruction: The Iraqi government's use, possession, and alleged intention of acquiring more types of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) during the reign of Saddam Hussein.
  • United Nations Security Council and the Iraq War: Actions associated with the Gulf War in 1991 and UN Security Council Resolution 1441 in late 2002–2003 with at least 14 other resolutions and 30 statements between those two events.
  • Iraq War order of battle: Current list of US and allied military formations and units involved in Iraq.
  • Ibn Sina Hospital
  • Iraq disarmament crisis: Issue of Iraq's disarmament reached a crisis in 2002–2003, after demands of the complete end to Iraqi production and use of weapons of mass destruction and that Iraq comply with UN Resolutions requiring UN inspectors unfettered access to areas those inspectors thought might have weapons production facilities.
  • Iraq Survey Group: A fact-finding mission sent by the coalition after the 2003 Invasion of Iraq to find weapons of mass destruction (WMD) programs developed by Iraq under the regime of former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein.
  • Japanese Iraq Reconstruction and Support Group: Japanese government's deployment of troops to Iraq.
  • Dover test: Informal test and a journalistic phrase to describe whether the general population is supporting a military action by the public reaction to returning war casualties.
  • Timeline of the Iraq War: Timeline of events during Multinational force's occupation of Iraq, following 2003 invasion of Iraq, and relevant quotations about nature of occupation from officials
  • Iraq War order of battle 2009: Overview of coalition forces in Iraq.
  • War on Terror (in US foreign policy circles, the global war on terrorism or GWOT) is a campaign by the United States and some of its allies to rid the world of terrorist groups and to end state sponsorship of terrorism.
  • 256th Infantry Brigade Combat Team (United States)

Post World War II occupations:

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Further reading edit

  • . Archived from the original on 28 June 2005. Retrieved 29 June 2005.
  • "Non-US Forces in Iraq". GlobalSecurity.org. 15 March 2005.
  • Iraq Body Count (2005). "A Dossier of Civilian Casualties in Iraq 2003–2005" (PDF). Retrieved 30 December 2008. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Gillan, AudreyMaggie (19 January 2005). "Shocking images revealed at Britain's 'Abu Ghraib trial'". The Guardian. London.
  • "In Pictures: Alleged prisoner abuse near Basra". The Guardian. London. 19 January 2005. Retrieved 22 May 2010.
  • "Seven soldiers charged with Iraqi's murder". The Guardian. London. 3 February 2005. Retrieved 22 May 2010.
  • "Iraq timeline: 1 February 2004 to 31 December 2004". The Guardian. London. January 2005. Retrieved 22 May 2010.
  • Carroll, Rory (4 February 2005). "Meet the men who Britain and the US hope will take over the battle against Iraqi insurgents – if they live long enough". The Guardian. London.
  • Cordesman, Anthony (2004). "US Policy in Iraq: A "Realist" Approach to its Challenges and Opportunities". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • The Road Ahead: Lessons in Nation Building from Japan, Germany, and Afghanistan for Postwar Iraq by Ray Salvatore Jennings May 2003 Peceworks No. 49 United States Institute of Peace
  • Lyal S. Sunga, "Dilemmas facing INGOs in coalition-occupied Iraq", in Ethics in Action: The Ethical Challenges of International Human Rights Nongovernmental Organizations, edited by Daniel A. Bell, Cambridge University Press 2007.
Legal status
  • Lyal S. Sunga, "Can International Humanitarian Law Play an Effective Role in Occupied Iraq?", 3 Indian Society of International Law Yearbook of International Humanitarian and Refugee Law (2003) 1–21.
Management of the Iraq Reconstruction Program
  • "UN Criticizes Iraq Occupation Oil Sales". New York Times, Cash Flow, 14 December 2004.

External links edit

  • Information on the US efforts to rebuild Iraq, with focus on the PRT program
  • Back from Iraq: The Veterans' Stories Project
  • Warning: Graphic Execution video
  • (video 2 January 8/07)- Warning: Mature content.
  • About.com's An American Palace in Iraq and Four Permanent US Bases 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  • www.iraqanalysis.org – Information source listings and analysis on post-invasion Iraq
  • Iraq Body Count – Independent database listing civilians killed in the Iraq war and occupation
  • . Archived from the original on 8 February 2008. Retrieved 7 November 2007.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  • FrogStyleBiscuit's Iraq News and Analysis
  • Iraq News Archive The White House
  • Senator Byrd, Robert 7 April 2004, Common Dreams News Center
  • Is Iraq Another 'Vietnam'? Monthly Review, volume 56, issue 2, June 2004
  • Mission and Justice
  • Jason Vest, "Willful Ignorance", Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, July/August 2005. Discusses US approach to counterinsurgency in Iraq.
  • Sheehan-Miles, Charles Iraq in Transition: An Examination of Iraqi resistance, terrorism, insurgency and organized crime 2005
  • , and Life, 7 January 1946
  • Oral History Interview with General William H. Draper Jr. Chief, Economics Division, Control Council for Germany, 1945–46
  • Oral History Interview with General Lucius D. Clay Deputy military governor, Germany (US) 1946; commander in chief, US Forces in Europe and military governor, US Zone, Germany, 1947–49
  • MarchofWar.com – Up-to-date Iraq war clock, war quotes and slogans, plus poll
  • Daoud al-Qaissi, Saddam's singer executed
  • Did the United States Create Democracy in Germany? James L. Payne The Independent Review, Volume 11 Number 2, Fall 2006, Analysis of the axiom that democracy can be imposed
  • Bibliography: Iraq Wars: Post 2003 by Edwin Moise
  • Imperial Life in the Emerald City: Inside Iraq's Green Zone by Rajiv Chandrasekaran
  • Fiasco: The American Military Adventure in Iraq, 2003–2005 by Thomas E. Ricks

occupation, iraq, 2003, 2011, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, points, please, consider, expanding, lead, provide, accessible, overview, important, aspects, article, june, 2021, characterized, large, united, states, military, deploym. This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article June 2021 The Occupation of Iraq 2003 2011 was characterized by a large United States military deployment on Iraqi territory beginning with the US led invasion of the country in March 2003 which overthrew the Ba ath Party government of Saddam Hussein and ending with the departure of US troops from the country in 2011 Troops for the occupation came primarily from the United States the United Kingdom and Australia but 29 other nations also provided troops and there were varying levels of assistance from Japan and other countries as well as tens of thousands of private military company personnel US Army soldiers provide security on foot patrol in Ramadi 16 August 2006It was a period of violence and political turmoil and saw strong foreign influence exerted on Iraqi politics In April 2003 a military occupation was established and run by the Coalition Provisional Authority CPA which later appointed and granted limited powers to the Iraq Interim Governing Council In June 2004 the Iraqi Interim Government a caretaker government was established ending the international armed conflict between the U S led Coalition and Iraq Following parliamentary elections in January 2005 this administration was replaced in May by the Iraqi Transitional Government A year later the Al Maliki I Government took office Efforts toward the reconstruction of Iraq after the damage of the invasion were slowed when coalition and allied Iraqi forces fought a stronger than expected militant Iraqi insurgency leading to difficult living conditions for the population of Iraq throughout the period Contents 1 Military occupation 2 Legal status of the coalition presence 3 Occupation April 21 2003 June 28 2004 3 1 2003 3 1 1 Fall of Saddam Hussein s government 3 1 2 Insurgency begins 3 1 3 Saddam captured and elections urged 3 2 January 1 2004 June 28 2004 3 2 1 Spring fighting 3 2 2 Transfer of sovereignty 4 Post occupation June 28 2004 December 15 2011 4 1 June 28 2004 December 31 2004 4 1 1 Offensives and counteroffensives 4 2 2005 4 2 1 Iraqi elections and aftermath 4 2 2 Announcements and renewed fighting 4 2 3 Constitutional ratification and elections 4 3 2006 4 3 1 Al Askari shrine bombing and Sunni Shia fighting 4 4 British hand Muthanna province to Iraqis 4 5 Forward Operating Base Courage handed over to Nineveh province government 4 6 British troops leave Camp Abu Naji 4 7 Situation in and around Baghdad 4 8 Violent incidents in other cities 4 9 Al Qaeda 4 10 Abu Ghraib 4 11 Iraqi government takes control of the 8th Iraqi Army Division 4 12 Anbar province reported as politically lost to US and Iraqi government 4 13 2007 4 14 2008 4 14 1 Iraqi forces begin process of arming with advanced US weapon systems 4 15 2009 4 16 2010 4 16 1 Final departure of US combat troops 5 Participating nations 6 Casualties 7 Iraqi councils and authorities 7 1 Reconstruction 8 Civilian government 8 1 United Nations resolutions 8 2 Elections 8 3 Sovereignty for Iraq 8 4 Provincial Iraqi control 8 4 1 Provinces under Iraqi Control 8 4 2 Transition after Security Agreement signed 9 Iraqi insurgency 9 1 Guerrilla war 9 2 Sabotage 9 3 Fallujah 9 4 Muqtada al Sadr 9 5 Hostages 9 6 Fall out 9 7 Iraq Study Group Report 10 Iraq Coalition members departures 11 American withdrawal 12 US military patrolling 13 US permanent facilities 14 Cultural dimensions 15 See also 16 References 17 Further reading 18 External linksMilitary occupation edit nbsp Marines from D Company 3rd Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion guard detainees prior to loading them into their vehicleA military occupation was established and run by the Coalition Provisional Authority CPA which later appointed and granted limited powers to an Iraq Interim Governing Council Troops for the invasion came primarily from the United States the United Kingdom and Australia but 29 other nations also provided some troops and there were varying levels of assistance from Japan and other allied countries Tens of thousands of private security personnel provided protection of infrastructure facilities and personnel Coalition and allied Iraqi forces fought a stronger than expected militant Iraqi insurgency and so the reconstruction of Iraq was slow In mid 2004 the direct rule of the CPA was ended and a new sovereign and independent Interim Government of Iraq assumed the full responsibility and authority of the state The CPA and the Governing Council were disbanded on 28 June 2004 and a new transitional constitution came into effect 1 Sovereignty was transferred to a Governing Council Iraqi interim government led by Iyad Allawi as Iraq s first post Saddam prime minister this government was not allowed to make new laws without the approval of the CPA The Iraqi Interim Government was replaced as a result of the elections which took place in January 2005 A period of negotiations by the elected Iraqi National Assembly followed which culminated on 6 April 2005 with the selection of among others Prime Minister Ibrahim al Jaafari and President Jalal Talabani Prime Minister al Jaafari led the majority party of the United Iraqi Alliance UIA a coalition of the al Dawa and SCIRI Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq parties Both parties are backed by Tehran and were banned by Saddam Hussein Legal status of the coalition presence editAn international armed conflict IAC between the United States and Iraq in the Iraq War began when the US led Coalition invaded Iraq on March 19 2003 IAC continued after the invasion when the Coalition Provisional Authority CPA was established on April 21 to temporarily administer the domestic affairs of Iraq Therefore hostilities during the invasion and occupation of Iraq fell under the laws of war applicable to IAC including the 1949 Geneva Conventions to which the US and Iraq are parties to and the 1907 Hague Convention IV The Laws and Customs of War on Land which is commonly accepted as customary international humanitarian law binding on non signatories engaged in an IAC 2 According to Article 42 under Section III of the Hague Convention IV The Laws and Customs of War on Land t erritory is considered occupied when it is actually placed under the authority of the hostile army 3 There may be situations where the former occupier will maintain a military presence in the country with the agreement of the legitimate government under a security arrangement e g US military presence in Japan and Germany The legality of such agreement and the legitimacy of the national authorities signing it are subject to international recognition whereby members of the international community re establish diplomatic and political relations with the national government United Nations Security Council Resolution 1546 in 2004 looked forward to the end of the occupation and the assumption of full responsibility and authority by a fully sovereign and independent Interim Government of Iraq 4 Afterwards the UN and individual nations established diplomatic relations with the Interim Government which began planning for elections and the writing of a new constitution As a result the Iraq War after June 28 2004 became a non international armed conflict NIAC since US led Coalition troops were operating in the country with the consent of the new legitimate government of Iraq Therefore hostilities in post occupation Iraq fell under the laws of war applicable to NIAC including Common Article 3 of the 1949 Geneva Conventions In January 2005 John Negroponte US ambassador to Iraq indicated the US government would comply with a United Nations resolution declaring that coalition forces would have to leave if requested by the Iraqi government If that s the wish of the government of Iraq we will comply with those wishes But no we haven t been approached on this issue although obviously we stand prepared to engage the future government on any issue concerning our presence here 5 On 10 May 2007 144 Iraqi Parliamentary lawmakers signed onto a legislative petition calling on the United States to set a timetable for withdrawal 6 On 3 June 2007 the Iraqi Parliament voted 85 to 59 to require the Iraqi government to consult with Parliament before requesting additional extensions of the UN Security Council Mandate for Coalition operations in Iraq 7 The UN mandate under United Nations Security Council Resolution 1790 expired on 31 December 2008 Occupation April 21 2003 June 28 2004 editAn international armed conflict IAC between the US and Iraq in the Iraq War began when the US led Coalition invaded Iraq on March 19 2003 IAC continued after the invasion when the CPA was established on April 21 to temporarily administer the domestic affairs of Iraq Therefore hostilities during the invasion and occupation of Iraq fell under the laws of war applicable to IAC including the 1949 Geneva Conventions to which the US and Iraq are parties to and the 1907 Hague Convention IV The Laws and Customs of War on Land which is commonly accepted as customary international humanitarian law binding on non signatories engaged in an IAC 2 2003 edit Main article 2003 in Iraq Fall of Saddam Hussein s government edit nbsp Statue of Saddam Hussein being toppled in Baghdad s Firdos Square on 9 April 2003 Schools police courts government and military were shut down which meant that most Iraqis were unemployed 8 Cities especially Baghdad suffered through reductions in electricity clean water and telephone service from pre war levels with shortages that continued through at least the next year 9 On 1 May 2003 President of the United States George W Bush declared the end of major combat operations in Iraq while aboard the USS Abraham Lincoln with a large Mission Accomplished banner displayed behind him The weeks following the removal of Ba ath Party rule were portrayed by American media as generally a euphoric time among the Iraqi populace New York Post correspondent Jonathan Foreman wrote from Baghdad in May 2003 that the intensity of the population s pro American enthusiasm is astonishing 10 There were widespread reports of looting though much of the looting was directed at former government buildings and other remnants of the former government and reports of losses of up to 170 000 items of Iraq s archaeological treasures worth billions of US dollars mostly from the National Museum of Iraq 11 were later revealed to be vastly exaggerated 12 13 Insurgency begins edit Main article Iraqi insurgency 2003 2011 nbsp Canal Hotel BombingIn the summer of 2003 the US military focused on hunting down the remaining leaders of the ousted government culminating in the killing of Saddam s sons Uday Hussein and Qusay Hussein on 22 July 14 In all over 200 top leaders of the former regime were killed or captured as well as numerous lesser functionaries and military personnel After the initial invasion most of the Iraqi military s former soldiers and officers offered little resistance to Coalition forces in the early days of the occupation Many soldiers had simply gone home rather than openly fight the invading forces This seeming acceptance of Coalition authority stemmed from the US military continuing to pay the salaries of Saddam s former soldiers while promising senior Iraqi officers that they would have a major role to play in building a new Iraq However on 11 May 2003 the Bush Administration established the Coalition Provisional Authority CPA to take control of Iraq s domestic affairs away from the US military Twelve days later Paul Bremer head of the CPA issued an order dissolving the entire Iraqi military as well as most civilian employees of the old government and pledged to build a new military and government from scratch One untainted by any ties to Saddam s regime according to the CPA The Iraqi army s abrupt end against the protests of many US field commanders sparked immediate rioting among former Iraqi soldiers In addition to broader civil unrest as unemployment skyrocketed to 70 and practically every government service from the police to trash collectors ended without warning 15 Soon large numbers of former Iraqi military personnel allied with the surviving Ba ath loyalists and formed guerrilla units igniting an eight year insurgency against Coalition forces Besides scattered attacks in Baghdad these insurgents began to focus on taking and holding ground in and around Mosul Tikrit and Fallujah In the fall of 2003 these largely secular units were joined by religiously motivated Jihadists insurgents both foreign and domestic With the growing influence of religious fanatics the insurgency s mostly traditional tactics of sniping small unit ambushes and planting roadside improvised explosive devices against foreign military personnel began transforming into frequent suicide bombings and death squads targeting civilians that were perceived as loyal to coalition forces 15 They favored attacking the unarmored Humvee vehicles and in November they successfully attacked US rotary aircraft with SA 7 missiles bought on the global black market On 19 August the UN Headquarters in Baghdad was destroyed in the Canal Hotel Bombing killing at least 22 people among them Sergio Vieira de Mello Special Representative of the UN Secretary General Saddam captured and elections urged edit nbsp nbsp Saddam Hussein shortly after capture by American forces and after being shaved to confirm his identity In December 2003 Saddam himself was captured The provisional government began training a security force intended to defend critical infrastructure and the US promised over 20 billion in reconstruction aid in the form of credits against Iraq s future oil revenues At the same time elements left out of the Iraqi Patriotic Alliance IPA began to agitate for elections Most prominent among these was Ali al Sistani Grand Ayatollah in the Shia sect of Islam The United States and the Coalition Provisional Authority run by Jay Garner and three deputies including Tim Cross opposed allowing democratic elections at this time preferring instead to eventually hand over power to an unelected group of Iraqis 16 More insurgents stepped up their activities The two most turbulent centers were the area around Fallujah and the poor Shia sections of cities from Baghdad to Basra in the south January 1 2004 June 28 2004 edit Main article 2004 in Iraq nbsp Cougar hit by mine explosion all crew survived vehicle drove back to base on 3 wheels nbsp Cougar hit by 300 500 lb IED attack all crew survivedSpring fighting edit Main article Iraq spring fighting of 2004 In the spring the United States and the Coalition Provisional Authority decided to confront the rebels with a pair of assaults one on Fallujah the center of the Mohammed s Army of Al Ansar and another on Najaf home of an important mosque which had become the focal point for the Mahdi Army and its activities In Fallujah four private security contractors working for Blackwater USA were ambushed and killed and their corpses desecrated In retaliation a US offensive was begun but it was soon halted because of the protests by the Iraqi Governing Council and negative media coverage A truce was negotiated that put a former Ba athist general in complete charge of Fallujah The 1st Armored Division along with the 2nd ACR were then shifted south because Spanish Salvadoran Ukrainian and Polish forces were having increasing difficulties retaining control over Al Kut and Najaf The 1st Armored Division and 2nd ACR relieved the Spaniards Salvadoran Poles and put down the overt rebellion At the same time British forces in Basra were faced with increasing restiveness and became more selective in the areas they patrolled In all April May and early June represented the bloodiest months of fighting since the end of hostilities The Iraqi troops who were left in charge of Fallujah after the truce began to disperse and the city fell back under insurgent control In the April battle for Fallujah US troops killed about 200 resistance fighters while 40 Americans died and hundreds were wounded in a fierce battle US forces then turned their attention to the al Mahdi Army in Najaf A large convoy of US Army supply trucks manned by civilian contractors was ambushed and suffered significant damage and casualties Transfer of sovereignty edit On June 28 2004 under the auspices of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1546 the CPA transferred limited sovereignty to a caretaker government whose first act was to begin the trial of Saddam Hussein The transfer marked the end of an IAC between the U S and Iraq The new Iraqi government began the process of moving towards elections though the insurgency and the lack of cohesion within the government itself led to repeated delays Militia leader Muqtada al Sadr used his grass roots organization and Mahdi Militia of over a thousand armed men to take control of the streets of Baghdad The CPA soon realized it had lost control and closed down his popular newspaper This resulted in mass anti American demonstrations The CPA then attempted to arrest al Sadr on murder charges He defied the American military by taking refuge in the Holy City of Najaf Post occupation June 28 2004 December 15 2011 editMain articles Iraqi insurgency 2003 2011 and 2004 in Iraq Hostilities between the US and Iraq ended on June 28 2004 when the CPA handed over Iraqi sovereignty to the Iraqi Interim government as mandated by UN Resolution 1546 Throughout the Iraq War US led Coalition troops were operating in the country with the consent of the new legitimate government of Iraq Therefore the war in Iraq after June 28 2004 became a non international armed conflict NIAC which fell under the laws of war applicable to NIAC including Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions June 28 2004 December 31 2004 edit Through July and August a series of skirmishes in and around Najaf culminated with the Imman Ali Mosque itself under siege only to have a peace deal brokered by al Sistani in late August 17 Al Sadr then declared a national cease fire and opened negotiations with the American and government forces His militia was incorporated into the Iraqi security forces and al Sadr is now a special envoy This incident was the turning point in the failed American efforts to install Ahmed Chalabi as leader of the interim government The CPA then put Iyad Allawi in power ultimately he was only marginally more popular than Chalabi The Allawi government with significant numbers of holdovers from the Coalition Provisional Authority began to engage in attempts to secure control of the oil infrastructure the source of Iraq s foreign currency and control of the major cities of Iraq The continuing insurgencies poor state of the Iraqi Army disorganized condition of police and security forces as well as the lack of revenue hampered their efforts to assert control In addition both former Ba athist elements and militant Shia groups engaged in sabotage terrorism open rebellion and establishing their own security zones in all or part of a dozen cities The Allawi government vowed to crush resistance using US troops but at the same time negotiated with Muqtada al Sadr Offensives and counteroffensives edit nbsp Marines from Mike Battery 4th Battalion 14th Marines an activated reserve artillery unit operate the 155 mm M198 howitzer in November 2004 supporting Operation Phantom Fury Beginning 8 November American and Iraqi forces invaded the militant stronghold of Fallujah in Operation Phantom Fury killing and capturing many insurgents Many rebels were thought to have fled the city before the invasion US backed figures put insurgency losses at over 2 000 It was the bloodiest single battle for the US in the war with 92 Americans dead and several hundred wounded A video showing the killing of at least one unarmed and wounded man by an American serviceman surfaced throwing renewed doubt and outrage at the efficiency of the US occupation 18 The Marine was later cleared of any wrongdoing because the Marines had been warned that the enemy would sometimes feign death and booby trap bodies as a tactic to lure Marines to their deaths November was the deadliest month of the occupation for coalition troops surpassing April Another offensive was launched by insurgents during the month of November in Mosul US forces backed by peshmerga fighters launched a counteroffensive which resulted in the Battle of Mosul 2004 The fighting in Mosul occurred concurrently with the fighting in Fallujah and attributed to the high number of American casualties taken that month In December 14 American soldiers were killed and over a hundred injured when an explosion struck an open tent mess hall in Mosul where President Bush had spent Thanksgiving with troops the year before The explosion is believed to have come from a suicide bomber After a review of the military strategy in the end of 2004 then commanding general of the MNF I General George Casey directed the Coalition forces to shift their focus from fighting insurgents to training Iraqis 19 At the time the Iraqi insurgency was mainly directed against the occupation and it was believed that if the Coalition would reduce its presence then the insurgency would diminish Military planners hoped that national elections would change the perception of being under occupation stabilize the situation and allow the Coalition to reduce its presence 2005 edit Main article 2005 in Iraq Iraqi elections and aftermath edit nbsp Voters in the 2005 Iraqi legislative electionMain article January 2005 Iraqi legislative election On 30 January an election for a government to draft a permanent constitution took place Although some violence and lack of widespread Sunni Arab participation marred the event most of the eligible Kurd and Shia populace participated On 4 February Paul Wolfowitz announced that 15 000 US troops whose tours of duty had been extended in order to provide election security would be pulled out of Iraq by the next month 20 February March and April proved to be relatively peaceful months compared to the carnage of November and January with insurgent attacks averaging 30 a day from the average 70 Hopes for a quick end to an insurgency and a withdrawal of US troops were dashed at the advent of May Iraq s bloodiest month since the invasion of US forces in March and April 2003 Suicide bombers believed to be mainly disheartened Iraqi Sunni Arabs Syrians and Saudis tore through Iraq Their targets were often Shia gatherings or civilian concentrations mainly of Shias As a result over 700 Iraqi civilians died in that month as well as 79 US soldiers nbsp A large weapons cache in New Ubaydi is destroyedDuring early and mid May the US also launched Operation Matador an assault by around 1 000 Marines in the ungoverned region of western Iraq Its goal was the closing of suspected insurgent supply routes of volunteers and material from Syria and with the fight they received their assumption proved correct Fighters armed with flak jackets unseen in the insurgency by this time and sporting sophisticated tactics met the Marines eventually inflicting 30 US casualties by the operation s end and suffering 125 casualties themselves The Marines succeeded recapturing the whole region and even fighting insurgents all the way to the Syrian border where they were forced to stop Syrian residents living near the border heard the American bombs very clearly during the operation The vast majority of these armed and trained insurgents quickly dispersed before the US could bring the full force of its firepower on them as it did in Fallujah Announcements and renewed fighting edit On 14 August 2005 the Washington Post quoted one anonymous US senior official expressing that the United States no longer expects to see a model new democracy a self supporting oil industry or a society in which the majority of people are free from serious security or economic challenges What we expected to achieve was never realistic given the timetable or what unfolded on the ground 21 On 22 September 2005 Prince Saud al Faisal the Saudi foreign minister said he had warned the Bush administration that Iraq was hurtling toward disintegration and that the election planned for December was unlikely to make any difference 22 US officials immediately made statements rejecting this view 23 Constitutional ratification and elections edit Main articles Iraqi constitution ratification vote 2005 and Iraqi legislative election December 2005 nbsp Map of the Iraqi constitution ratification referendumThe National Assembly elected in January had drafted a new constitution to be ratified in a national referendum on 15 October 2005 For ratification the constitution required a majority of national vote and could be blocked by a two thirds no vote in each of at least three of the 18 governorates In the actual vote 79 of the voters voted in favor and there was a two thirds no vote in only two governorates both predominantly Sunni The new Constitution of Iraq was ratified and took effect Sunni turnout was substantially heavier than for the January elections but insufficient to block ratification Elections for a new Iraqi National Assembly were held under the new constitution on 15 December 2005 This election used a proportional system with approximately 25 of the seats required to be filled by women After the election a coalition government was formed under the leadership of Prime Minister Nouri al Maliki with Jalal Talabani as president 2006 edit Main article 2006 in Iraq The beginning of that year was marked by government creation talks and continuous anti coalition and attacks on mainly Shia civilians Al Askari shrine bombing and Sunni Shia fighting edit See Al Askari Mosque bombing and Iraqi civil war 2006 2008 nbsp Shrine of the 10th and 11th Twelver Shi ah Imams Ali an Naqi and Hasan al AskariOn 22 February 2006 bombs exploded at the Al Askari Mosque causing substantial damage On 2 March the director of the Baghdad morgue fled Iraq explaining 7 000 people have been killed by death squads in recent months 24 The Boston Globe reported that around eight times the number of Iraqis killed by terrorist bombings during March 2006 were killed by sectarian death squads during the same period A total of 1 313 were killed by sectarian militias while 173 were killed by suicide bombings 25 The LA Times later reported that about 3 800 Iraqis were killed by sectarian violence in Baghdad alone during the first three months of 2006 During April 2006 morgue numbers show that 1 091 Baghdad residents were killed by sectarian executions 26 Insurgencies frequent terrorist attacks and sectarian violence in Iraq lead to harsh criticism of US policy and fears of a failing state and civil war The concerns were expressed by several US think tanks 27 28 29 30 as well as the US ambassador to Iraq Zalmay Khalilzad 31 In early 2006 a handful of high ranking retired generals began to demand Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld s resignation due in part to the aforementioned chaos that apparently resulted from his management of the war British hand Muthanna province to Iraqis edit nbsp Al Muthanna Governorate Arabic المثنىOn 12 July 2006 Iraq took full control of the Muthanna province marking the first time since the invasion that a province had been handed from foreign troops to the Iraqi government In a joint statement the US ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad and the US commander in Iraq General George Casey hailed it as a milestone in Iraq s capability to govern and protect itself as a sovereign nation and said handovers in other provinces will take place as conditions are achieved With this first transition of security responsibility Muthanna demonstrates the progress Iraq is making toward self governance the statement said adding that Multi National Forces will stand ready to provide assistance if needed At the ceremony marking the event Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al Maliki stated It is a great national day that will be registered in the history of Iraq This step forward will bring happiness to all Iraqis 32 33 Forward Operating Base Courage handed over to Nineveh province government edit nbsp Nineveh GovernorateA former presidential compound of Saddam Hussein dubbed Forward Operating Base Courage by Coalition forces was handed over by Charlie Company 4 11FA to the Nineveh province government on 20 July 2006 The main palace had been home to the 101st Airborne Division Main Command Post Task Force Olympia CP 4 11FA of the 172nd SBCT and the Task Force Freedom CP The palace served as the last command post for the Multinational Force Iraq Northwest US soldiers had spent the summer restoring the palace for the eventual handover Major General Thomas R Turner II commanding general Task Force Band of Brothers stated at a ceremony marking the occasion The turnover of Forward Operating Base Courage is one of the larger efforts towards empowering the Iraqi people and represents an important step in achieving Iraqi self reliance The gains made during the past three years demonstrate that the provincial government the Iraqi Army and the Iraqi Police are increasing their capabilities to take the lead for their nation s security Duraid Kashmoula the governor of the Nineveh Governorate stated after being handed the key to the palace Now this palace will be used to benefit the Iraqi government and its people 34 35 British troops leave Camp Abu Naji edit nbsp Maysan Governorate Arabic ميسانOn 24 August 2006 Maj Charlie Burbridge a British military spokesman said the last of 1 200 British troops left Camp Abu Naji just outside Amarah in Iraq s southern Maysan province Burbridge told Reuters that British troops leaving the base were preparing to head deep into the marshlands along the Iranian border stating We are repositioning our forces to focus on border areas and deal with reports of smuggling of weapons and improvised explosive devices from across the border The base had been a target for frequent mortar and rocket barrages since being set up in 2003 but Burbridge dismissed suggestions the British had been forced out of Amara while acknowledging the attacks had been one reason for the decision to withdraw the second being that a static base did not fit with the new operation Abu Naji was a bulls eye in the middle of a dartboard The attacks were a nuisance and were a contributing factor in our planning to quit the base he said adding By no longer presenting a static target we reduce the ability of the militias to strike us We understand the militias in Maysan province are using this as an example that we have been pushed out of Abu Naji but that is not true It was very rare for us to take casualties Burbridge stated that Iraqi security forces would now be responsible for day to day security in Maysan but stressed that the British had not yet handed over complete control to them Muqtada al Sadr called the departure the first expulsion of US led coalition forces from an Iraqi urban center A message from al Sadr s office that played on car mounted speakers throughout Amarah exclaimed This is the first Iraqi city that has kicked out the occupier We have to celebrate this occasion A crowd of as many as 5 000 people including hundreds armed with AK 47 assault rifles ransacked Camp Abu Naji immediately after the last British soldier had departed despite the presence of a 450 member Iraqi army brigade meant to guard the base The looting which lasted from about 10 am to early evening turned violent at about noon when individuals in the mob shot at the base The Iraqi troops asked the province s governor for permission to return fire a decision the British military highlighted as evidence of the security force s training It demonstrated that they understand the importance of civilian primacy that the government and not the military is in charge Burbridge said in a phone interview with The Washington Post Injuries were reported on both sides but no one was killed Burbridge attributed the looting to economic factors rather than malice stating The people of Amarah many of whom are extremely poor saw what they believed to be a bit of an Aladdin s cave inside Some residents of Amarah however told the Post that antipathy toward the occupation was strong The looters stole everything even the bricks They almost leveled the whole base to the ground said 20 year old student at Maysan University Ahmed Mohammed Abdul Latief 36 37 38 Situation in and around Baghdad edit nbsp Soldiers conduct a counter improvised explosive device CIED mission in Baghdad December 2007 nbsp Munitions rigged for an IED discovered by Iraqi police in Baghdad in November 2005 nbsp M1A1 Abrams with an Abrams Integrated Management System and the Tank Urban Survivability Kit conducting a patrol in Baghdad 2007 On 28 August 2006 one US general said violence in Baghdad had fallen by nearly a half since July although he acknowledged a spike in bombings in the past 48 hours Insurgents and terrorists are hitting back in an attempt to offset the success of the Iraqi government and its security forces Maj Gen William Caldwell told reporters After meeting Iraqi Defence Minister Abdul Qader Mohammed Jassim al Mifarji British Secretary of State for Defence Des Browne said Iraq was moving forward and that each time I come I see more progress 39 The American military command acknowledged in the week of 16 October 2006 that it was considering an overhaul of its latest security plan for Baghdad where three months of intensive American led sweeps had failed to curb violence by Sunni Arab led insurgents and Shiite and Sunni militias 40 Numerous car and roadside bombs rocked the capital 9 November 2006 morning In the Karrada district a car bomb killed six and wounded 28 others Another car bomb killed seven and wounded another 27 in the northern Qahira neighborhood In South Baghdad a mortar then a suicide car bomber killed seven and wounded 27 others near the Mishin bazaar Near the college of Fine Arts in north central Baghdad a car bomb targeting an Iraqi patrol killed three and wounded six others Two policemen were injured when they tried to dismantle a car bomb in the Zayouna district A car bomb on Palestine Street in northeastern Baghdad meant for an Iraqi patrol killed one soldier but also wounded four civilians Yet another car bomb in southern Baghdad wounded three people And another car bomb near a passport services building in a northern neighborhood killed 2 people and wounded 7 others A roadside bomb in central Baghdad killed two and wounded 26 others A police patrol was blasted by a roadside bomb near a petrol station four were killed in the explosion Another four people were wounded in the New Baghdad neighborhood by yet another roadside bomb A bomb hidden in a sack exploded in Tayern square killing three and wounding 19 Another bomb in the Doura neighborhood killed one and wounded three Mortars fell in Kadmiyah killing one woman and injuring eight people and in Bayaladat where four were wounded Also in the capital a group of laborers were kidnapped in the morning of 9 November 2006 five bodies were recovered later in the Doura neighborhood but at least one other body was found in Baghdad that day Gunmen also killed a police colonel and his driver in the east of the city And just outside town police arrested two people in a raid and discovered one corpse 41 On 10 November Iraqi police recovered 18 bullet riddled bodies in various neighborhoods around the capital which the police were unable to identify The following day two bombs planted in an outdoor market in central Baghdad exploded around noon killing six and wounded 32 people A car bomb and a roadside bomb were detonated five minutes apart in the market which is in an area close to Baghdad s main commercial center The US military said it has put up a 50 000 reward for anyone who helps find an American soldier kidnapped in Baghdad The 42 year old Army Reserve specialist Ahmed al Taie was abducted on 23 October when he left the Green Zone the heavily fortified section where the United States maintains its headquarters to visit his Iraqi wife and family A suicide bomber killed 40 Iraqis and wounded 70 on 12 November 2006 morning outside the national police headquarters recruitment center in western Baghdad an emergency police official said They were among dozens of men waiting to join the police force in the Qadessiya district when a suicide bomber detonated an explosives belt In central Baghdad a car bomb and roadside bomb killed four Iraqi civilians and wounded 10 near the Interior Ministry complex And in the Karrada district of central Baghdad one Iraqi was killed and five were wounded when a car bomb exploded near an outdoor market 12 November 2006 morning Gunmen shot dead an Iraqi officer with the new Iraqi intelligence system as he was walking towards his parked car in the southwestern Baghdad neighborhood of Bayaa Two civilians were killed and four more were wounded when a roadside bomb hit a car in the eastern Baghdad neighborhood of Zayuna 42 Violent incidents in other cities edit 9 November 2006 41 Suwayrah Four bodies were recovered from the Tigris River Three of them were in police uniforms Amarah A roadside bomb killed one and wounded three others in Amarah Gunmen also shot dead a suspected former member of the Fedayeen paramilitary Muqdadiyah Gunmen stormed a primary school and killed three a guard a policeman and a student Tal Afar A roadside bomb in Tal Afar killed four including a policeman and wounded eight other people Two policemen were killed and four civilians were injured when a rocket landed in a residential neighborhood Mosul Six people were shot dead including one policeman Latifiya Four bodies bound and gagged were discovered Baqubah Eight people were killed in different incidents 11 November 2006 43 Latifiya Gunmen killed a truck driver and kidnapped 11 Iraqis after stopping four vehicles at a fake checkpoint south of the capital At the fake checkpoint in Latifiya about 25 miles 40 km south of Baghdad gunmen took the four vehicles three minibuses and a truck along with the kidnapped Iraqis The Iraqis 11 men and three women were driving from Diwaniya to Baghdad for shopping when they were stopped The gunmen left the three women and kidnapped the 11 men the official said Baqubah North of the capital near Baquba a suicide car bomb explosion killed two people at the main gate of a police station in Zaghanya town Al Qaeda edit nbsp UN headquarters in Baghdad after the Zarqawi s men bombed it Canal Hotel bombing 22 August 2003 nbsp Remains of Zarqawi s safe house 8 June 2006Although Saddam Hussein was accused of having links to Al Qaeda members only a few Al Qaeda members were found hiding in Iraq before the invasion and all were of lower standings On 3 September 2006 Iraq says it has arrested the country s second most senior figure in Al Qaeda severely wounding an organization the US military says is spreading sectarian violence that could bring civil war The National Security Adviser Mowaffak al Rubaie summoned reporters to a hastily arranged news conference to announce that al Qaeda leader Hamid Juma Faris al Suaidi had been seized some days ago Hitherto little heard of and also known as Abu Humam or Abu Rana Suaidi was captured hiding in a building with a group of followers Al Qaeda in Iraq is severely wounded Rubaie said He said Suaidi had been involved in ordering the bombing of the Shi ite shrine in Samarra in February 2006 that unleashed the wave of tit for tat killings now threatening civil war Iraqi officials blame Al Qaeda for the attack The group denies it Rubaie did not give Suaidi s nationality He said he had been tracked to the same area north of Baghdad where US forces killed Al Qaeda s leader Abu Musab al Zarqawi in June 2006 He was hiding in a building used by families He wanted to use children and women as human shields Rubaie said Little is publicly known about Suaidi Rubaie called him the deputy of Abu Ayyub al Masri a shadowy figure probably Egyptian who took over the Sunni Islamist group from Zarqawi 44 The US military says Al Qaeda is a prime instigator of the violence between Iraq s Sunni minority and Shi ite majority but that US and Iraqi operations have severely disrupted it 44 See also Al Qaeda in Iraq A handover ceremony on 2 September 2006 was postponed at the last minute first to 3 September 2006 then indefinitely after a dispute emerged between the government and Washington over the wording of a document outlining their armies new working relationship There are some disputes an Iraqi government source said We want thorough control and the freedom to make decisions independently US spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Barry Johnson played down any arguments and expected a signing soon It is embarrassing but it was decided it was better not to sign the document Practically US troops remain the dominant force Their tanks entered the southern Shi ite city of Diwaniya on 3 September 2006 The show of force came a week after Shi ite militiamen killed 20 Iraqi troops in a battle that highlighted violent power struggles between rival Shi ite factions in the oil rich south 44 Abu Ghraib edit On 2 September 2006 the Abu Ghraib prison was formally handed over to Iraq s government The formal transfer was conducted between Lieutenant General Jack Gardner Commander of Task Force 134 and representatives of the Iraqi Ministry of Justice and the Iraqi Army 45 Iraqi government takes control of the 8th Iraqi Army Division edit nbsp Units of the New Iraqi Army with T 72 tanks in 2006 On 7 September 2006 Prime Minister Nouri al Maliki signed a document taking control of Iraq s small naval and air forces and the 8th Iraqi Army Division based in the south At a ceremony marking the occasion Gen George Casey the top US commander in Iraq stated From today forward the Iraqi military responsibilities will be increasingly conceived and led by Iraqis Previously the US led Multi National Force Iraq commanded by Casey gave orders to the Iraqi armed forces through a joint American Iraqi headquarters and chain of command After the handover the chain of command flows directly from the prime minister in his role as Iraqi commander in chief through his Defense Ministry to the Iraqi Joint Forces Command From there the orders go to Iraqi units on the ground The other nine Iraqi division remained under US command with authority gradually being transferred US military officials said there was no specific timetable for the transition 46 Anbar province reported as politically lost to US and Iraqi government edit Main article Al Anbar campaign nbsp Al Anbar province in Iraq nbsp Marines in Al Anbar Province 2006On 11 September 2006 it transpired that Colonel Peter Devlin chief of intelligence for the Marine Corps in Iraq had filed a secret report described by those who have seen it as saying that the US and the Iraqi government have been defeated politically in Anbar province According to The Washington Post an unnamed Defense Department source described Devlin as saying there are no functioning Iraqi government institutions in Anbar leaving a vacuum that has been filled by the insurgent group al Qaeda in Iraq which has become the province s most significant political force The Post said that Devlin is a very experienced intelligence officer whose report was being taken seriously 47 The next day Major General Richard Zilmer commander of the Marines in Iraq stated We are winning this war I have never heard any discussion about the war being lost before this weekend 48 In the fall of 2006 several Iraqi tribes near Ramadi led by Sheikh Abdul Sattar Abu Risha revolted against various insurgent groups with Al Qaeda in Iraq They formed the Anbar Awakening and helped turn the tide in favor of the US military Two more provinces were transferred to Provincial Iraqi Control in late 2006 On 21 September 2006 Italian troops handed security control of the Dhi Qar province to Iraqi forces making Dhi Qar the second of the country s 18 provinces to come under complete local control A transfer ceremony was carried out in Nasiriyah 49 On 20 December 2006 US forces handed over control of the southern province of Najaf to Iraqi security forces 50 2007 edit Main articles 2007 in Iraq and Iraq War nbsp Sheikh Abdul Sattar who helped spark the Anbar Awakening MovementIn January 2007 US President George W Bush announced a Surge in the number of US troops deployed to the country 51 Also in early 2007 US and Iraqi tribal forces secured Ramadi as well as other cities such as Hit Haditha Rutbah and Al Qaim In May 2007 Iraq s Parliament called on the United States to set a timetable for withdrawal 52 and US coalition partners such as the UK and Denmark began withdrawing their forces from the country 53 54 During the summer the US turned its attention to eastern Anbar and secured the cities of Fallujah and Al Karmah Celebrating victory President George W Bush flew to Anbar in August 2007 to congratulate Sheik Sattar and other leading tribal figures 2008 edit Main article 2008 in Iraq Iraqi forces begin process of arming with advanced US weapon systems edit nbsp Iraqi army battalion trains for urban operationsIraq became one of the top current purchasers of US military equipment with their army trading its AK 47 assault rifles for the more accurate US M16 and M4 rifles among other equipment 55 Iraq sought 36 F 16 s the most sophisticated weapons system Iraq has attempted to purchase The Pentagon notified Congress that it had approved the sale of 24 American attack helicopters to Iraq valued at as much as 2 4 billion Including the helicopters Iraq announced plans to purchase at least 10 billion in US tanks and armored vehicles transport planes and other battlefield equipment and services Over the summer the Defense Department announced that the Iraqi government wanted to order more than 400 armored vehicles and other equipment worth up to 3 billion and six C 130J transport planes worth up to 1 5 billion 56 In 2008 Iraq accounted for more than 12 5 billion of the 34 billion US weapon sales to foreign countries not including the potential F 16 fighter planes 57 2009 edit Main article 2009 in Iraq Vice President of the United States Joe Biden made his second visit to Baghdad in as many months in September 2009 and met with Prime Minister Nouri al Maliki even as insurgents fired mortars and rockets at the Green Zone to protest his presence Although said to be in listening mode Biden addressed issues of security political reconciliation and foreign investment in Iraq s oil rich but weakened economy with various leaders in the capital and Iraq s Kurdish region 58 We will also move ahead on other aspects of our security agreement by removing all US combat brigades from Iraq by the end of August 2010 and all remaining US troops by the end of 2011 Biden said 59 2010 edit Final departure of US combat troops edit nbsp Prime Minister Nouri al Maliki shakes hands with US President Barack Obama in BaghdadOn 18 August 2010 the final US combat troops were reported to have crossed the border into Kuwait when a last convoy of the Army s 4th Stryker Brigade Combat Team departed Iraq A spokesman for the US State Department P J Crowley was quoted by news media as saying the departure was a historic moment but noted that the US presence in Iraq would continue The pullout of combat forces was nearly two weeks ahead of the announced deadline of 31 August In a released statement US President Obama said of the withdrawn soldiers I hope you ll join me in thanking them and all of our troops and military families for their service He noted that the event was a milestone in the Iraq war 60 The closure of Operation Iraqi Freedom was announced on 31 August It is time to turn the page Obama said in a national address The operations in Iraq were renamed New Dawn Participating nations editFurther information Multi National Force Iraq As of May 2011 the United States was the only country with military forces stationed in Iraq Other nations also present but under the United Nations banner 61 As of September 2006 there were an estimated 145 000 US troops in Iraq 62 There are also approximately 20 000 private security contractors of different nationalities under various employers Casualties editMain article Casualties of the Iraq WarIraqi councils and authorities editOn 11 October 2002 President Bush s senior adviser on the Middle East Zalmay Khalilzad released US government plans to establish an American led military administration in Iraq as in post war Germany and Japan which could last for several years after the fall of Saddam 63 In the run up to the invasion the US promised a speedy transition to a democratic government as well as the creation of an Iraqi constitution and the active role of Iraqis in the establishment of an interim authority and new government US officials continue to emphasize that the invasion was not about long term occupation but about liberation nbsp Bremer signs over limited sovereignty to Iraq s interim government 28 June 2004In November 2003 Paul Bremer announced the plan to hand over limited sovereignty to the Iraqi governing council by 30 June 2004 A draft constitution was written and approved by the Iraqi Governing Council in March 2004 The United States has stated its plans to enter into what it calls a security agreement with the new Iraqi government and maintain military authority until a new Iraqi army is established The Bush administration remained committed to this date despite the unstable security situation The interim Iraqi government was named in May 2004 at which point the Iraqi Governing Council was dissolved though there was heavy overlap between the two governing bodies The US led Coalition Provisional Authority for administrative purposes divided Iraq into four security zones see map a North zone in the Mosul Kirkuk region a Central zone in the Baghdad Tikrit region a Southern Central zone in the Karbala region and a South zone in the Basra region The northern and central zones are garrisoned by US troops while the Southern Central zone is a garrisoned by a Multi National Division under Polish command and the South zone is garrisoned by a Multi National Division under British command 64 In the early months of the occupation looting and vandalism slowed the restoration of basic services such as water electricity and sanitation By Spring 2004 these services were mostly restored to pre war levels Ongoing work is continuing to provide sufficient sanitation Uneven power distribution remained a problem through 2004 with the Baghdad area continuing to have periodic blackouts 65 On 28 July 2005 Iraq s Electricity Minister announced that Iraq s electricity supply had risen to above pre war levels 66 Numerous allegations were made of human rights violations by the occupying forces in post invasion Iraq One of the most significant of these was the Abu Ghraib torture and prisoner abuse scandal where 11 American soldiers from the 372nd Military Police Company were convicted in 2005 for a series of war crimes over the mistreatment of Iraqi prisoners The Bush administration denied that the abuses were indicative of US military policy in Iraq 67 68 Former Ba ath Party members and military officers who have no criminal past or human rights abuses have been allowed to return to government positions 69 Reconstruction edit Main article Reconstruction of Iraq For the reconstruction contracts were awarded to private companies Initially companies from countries that had opposed the war were excluded from these contracts but this decision was reversed due to protests 70 Political activists and commentators allege that The Pentagon favoured companies like Halliburton former employer of Vice President Dick Cheney because they had connections to high ranking members of the Bush administration 71 72 This suspicion had already been a concern during the global protests against the war on Iraq An audit found that Halliburton subsidiary Kellogg Brown and Root KBR may have overcharged the US government 61 million on contracts worth billions for bringing oil products for the US army into Iraq via a Kuwaiti subcontractor Altanmia Commercial Marketing Co 73 Some also argue that foreign contractors are doing work which could be done by unemployed Iraqis which might be a factor fueling resentment of the occupation 74 75 76 Further resentment could be inflamed with the news that almost US 9 billion dollars of Iraqi oil revenue is missing from a fund set up to reconstruct Iraq 77 On 14 August 2005 a Washington Post story 78 on the administration s effort to lower expectations quoted Wayne White former head of the State Department s Iraq intelligence team as saying The most thoroughly dashed expectation was the ability to build a robust self sustaining economy We re nowhere near that State industries electricity are all below what they were before we got there A report of the United States Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction found widespread fraud incompetence and confusion in the American occupation s handling of billions of dollars of Iraqi government money and American funds given for reconstruction Inspector general Stuart Bowen Jr noted that only 49 of 136 planned water and sanitation related projects will be completed 79 In April 2007 the New York Times reported that US federal oversight inspectors found that in a sampling of eight projects that the United States had declared successes seven were no longer operating as designed because of plumbing and electrical failures lack of proper maintenance apparent looting and expensive equipment that lay idle The United States has sometimes admitted that some of its reconstruction projects have been abandoned delayed or poorly constructed But this is the first time inspectors have found that projects officially declared as successes in some cases as little as six months before the latest inspections were no longer working properly 80 In 2012 Iraq bought electricity from the United Arab Emirates as Iraqis continued to endure electricity cuts of up to twenty hours a day during peak periods of demand 81 while the country s university system was one of the worst in the Middle East 82 June saw Prince Abdul Ilah Al Qasim comment that Iraqi oil production was at its highest in twenty years Abdul Ilah by telephone from Baghdad said that the oil production has exceeded 3 07 million barrels this month compared with 2 92 million barrels for the month of May which was announced in the monthly report of OPEC 83 Civilian government editFurther information Politics of Iraq The establishment of a new civilian government of Iraq was complicated by religious and political divisions between the majority Shi ite population and the formerly ruling Sunni Arabs Moreover many of the people in Saddam s ruling Ba ath Party were perceived as tainted by the association by some parties In northern Iraq Kurds had already had effectively autonomous rule for 12 years under the protection of the no fly zone On 16 May 2003 US officials abandoned the plan to cede authority to a democratically chosen interim civilian Iraqi government similar to what had happened in Afghanistan following the 2001 US invasion and presented a resolution to the UN to give the United States and the United Kingdom broad power and to lift economic sanctions on Iraq allowing the occupying countries authority to use oil resources to pay for rebuilding the country Passage of the resolution allowed them to appoint an interim government by themselves On 13 July 2003 an Iraqi Governing Council was appointed by Coalition Provisional Authority Administrator Paul Bremer United Nations resolutions edit nbsp Kofi Annan 7th Secretary General of the United NationsOn 22 May 2003 the UN Security Council voted 14 0 to give the United States and Britain the power to govern Iraq and use its oil resources to rebuild the country Resolution 1483 removed nearly 13 years of economic sanctions originally imposed after Iraq s 1990 invasion of Kuwait The resolution allows UN Secretary General Kofi Annan to appoint a special representative to work with US and British administrators on reconstruction humanitarian aid and the creation of a new government The resolution also created the Development Fund for Iraq which collected funds from oil sales The fund was initially run by the United States and Britain to rebuild the country and is overseen by a new advisory body composed of the United Nations and international financial institutions In June 2004 the New York Times reported that American authorities spent 2 5 billion from Iraqi oil revenue despite agreements that the oil revenues should be set aside for use after the restoration of Iraq s sovereignty 84 On 14 August 2003 the Security Council voted 14 0 to welcome the creation of the Iraqi Governing Council Resolution 1500 stopped short of formally recognizing the governing council as Iraq s legitimate governing body but called it an important step towards creating a sovereign government Elections edit nbsp Council of Representatives of Iraq meeting center For several months the United States maintained that it intended to convene a constitutional convention composed of influential Iraqis However European demands for an early election and Ayatollah Ali al Sistani s insistence eventually forced the United States to let the appointed Governing Council serve this function In the early months of the occupation new officials were appointed to several local and regional positions e g mayors governors local councils The officials were chosen from a select group of individuals including ex Ba ath party officials in an attempt to speed the return to normality and to avoid the election of people opposed to the Coalition presence Certain religious clerics and other officials were considered to be overly radical or dangerous On occasion the appointed officials were found to behave less than admirably On 30 June 2003 the appointed mayor of Najaf was arrested on charges of corruption By February 2004 democratic elections under the supervision of the CPA had already been held at the municipal and city level in some of the southern and northern provinces 85 On 15 November the Iraqi Governing Council announced that a transitional government would take over in June from the US led powers and that an elected government would follow by the end of 2005 once a constitution had been drafted and ratified The transitional government would be selected in June 2004 by a transitional council formed in May 2004 The Governing Council revealed the timetable after the United States government in reaction to terrorist and militant activity against occupying troops and aid organisations abandoned its earlier plan that a sovereign government would take charge only after creating a constitution and elections held Jalal Talabani who was chairman of the council said the transition would involve the creation of a permanent constitution by an elected council directly elected by the people and also the election of a new government according to the articles of this new constitution before the end of 2005 In March 2004 an interim constitution was created called the Law of Administration for the State of Iraq for the Transitional Period The document called for the creation of an elected National Assembly to take place no later than January 2005 The question of the election calendar became a matter of importance for Iraq and the US while a quick election would legitimise the Iraqi government and shed a favourable light on the US led occupation of the country the prospect of violence delayed it It was finally set for 30 January 2005 Though then President Ghazi Al Yaouar asked the United Nations to reconsider the electoral schedule several weeks before the election the legislative election was held on time creating the Iraqi National Assembly The elected assembly drafted a new constitution for Iraq submitting it to the Iraqi people for review on 28 August On 15 October Iraqis voted to approve the new constitution On 15 December the first legislative election under the new constitution was held Sovereignty for Iraq edit nbsp US National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice gives confirmation of Iraqi sovereignty to US President George W Bush who then wrote Let Freedom Reign during the opening session of the NATO Summit in Istanbul Turkey on Monday 28 June 2004 Further information on Politics of Iraq Iraqi sovereignty In a 1 June 2004 press conference President Bush said that he was working with various world leaders to create a UN Security Council resolution endorsing the transition from the US dominated occupation to complete autonomy for Iraq Under this resolution Coalition forces would remain in Iraq until the new government could establish security and stabilization There is a deep desire by the Iraqis don t get me wrong to run their own affairs and to be in a position where they can handle their own security measures On 8 June Security Council resolution 1546 was adopted unanimously calling for the end of the occupation and the assumption of full responsibility and authority by a fully sovereign and independent Interim Government of Iraq by 30 June 2004 On 28 June 2004 the occupation was nominally ended by the CPA which transferred limited power to a new Iraqi government led by Prime Minister Iyad Allawi The multinational military alliance continued to assist the Allawi government in governing the Iraqis The purpose of the Occupation of Iraq was according to US President George W Bush purely to bring about a transition from post war anarchy to full Iraqi sovereignty A further milestone in sovereignty was achieved with the creation of a democratically elected administration on 6 April 2005 including Prime Minister Ibrahim al Jaafari and President Jalal Talabani following the Iraqi elections of January 2005 Under United Nations Security Council Resolution 1790 the mandate of the multinational force in Iraq was extended until 31 December 2008 after which there is no justification for foreign militaries to remain in the country On 6 June 2008 the Independent reported that the United States was applying pressure to the government of Iraq to sign a strategic alliance not a treaty which would require approval of the US senate giving US forces broad freedom in continuing to operate in Iraq 86 Provincial Iraqi control edit The objective of the Iraqi Government and Multi National Forces in Iraq is to achieve the transition of responsibility for each of the 18 provinces in Iraq from the Coalition to the Iraqi civil authorities both national and local Most attention on the issue is understandably focused on progress towards security within the provinces both in terms of the threat from insurgents and the capability of the Iraqi Security Forces but other factors such as the competence and capacity of local governance is also important citation needed Provinces are subject to regular assessment by the Iraqi government and the Coalition when a province appears to be ready a recommendation is made to the Iraqi Ministerial Committee for National Security with the Prime Minister making the final decision Provinces under Iraqi Control edit As of October 2008 thirteen provinces had successfully completed transition to provincial Iraqi control Muthanna Dhi Qar Najaf Maysan Dahuk Erbil Sulaymaniyah Karbala Basra Al Qadisiyyah Al Anbar Babil and Wasit Muthanna was the first on 13 July 2006 when Australian Japanese and British forces from Multi National Division South East transferred responsibility to the Governor and local authorities With a small and homogeneous Shia population there had been very little militia violence and few attacks on Coalition forces in the preceding months encouraging good progress in developing the capacity of the Iraqi armed forces and Ministry of Interior forces there Equally the Governor of Muthanna enjoyed a good local mandate having been re elected in local elections in January 2005 87 Dhi Qar also within the area of responsibility of the British led MND SE and the responsibility of the Italian and Romanian brigade was handed over on 21 September 2006 88 Australian troops in MND SE remained available to provide security support to the Iraqis in both Muthanna and Dhi Qar should they request it Najaf which had been garrisoned by first Polish then US forces was handed over on 20 December 2006 89 In April 2007 Maysan Governorate became the fourth to transition to provincial Iraqi control 90 On 30 May 2007 the three provinces making up the Kurdistan Regional Government transitioned to provincial Iraqi control bringing the total count to 7 91 In October 2007 Karbala became the eighth province to transfer to provincial Iraqi control The transfer of Basra in December 2007 marked the half way point in transferring all provincial security over to Iraqi security forces 92 In July 2008 the tenth province Al Qadisiyyah also transferred to Iraqi control 92 nbsp Maj Gen John Kelly and Gov Maamoon Sami Rasheed al Alwani Governor of Al Anbar sign formal agreement turning security responsibilities of the Al Anbar province to the Government of Iraq 1 September 2008 On 1 September 2008 in the wake of the decreasing levels of violence the US Army transferred control of the expansive Al Anbar province over to Provincial Iraqi Control A limited US presence will be maintained to ensure security Al Anbar is the 11th province to be transferred to Iraqi security In October 2008 Babil province became the twelfth province to return to Iraqi control 93 whilst Wasit was transferred later in the month making it the thirteenth province to be transferred 94 Transition after Security Agreement signed edit As of 31 December 2008 13 of Iraq s 18 provinces had successfully transitioned to Provincial Iraqi Control PIC 95 On 1 January 2009 the SA see also US Iraq Status of Forces Agreement between the US and Iraq went into effect transferring security responsibility to the GoI even though not all of the provinces had completed the PIC transition process At the request of the GoI however a new Joint Sub Committee for Provincial Security was formed under the auspices of the SA to assess conditions in the remaining five Iraqi provinces that did not transition to PIC before 1 January 2009 This sub committee met for the first time in January 2009 Iraqi insurgency editFurther information Iraqi insurgency 2003 2011 After the 2003 invasion an insurgency developed against Coalition forces during as part of the Iraq War The first phase of the insurgency began shortly after the invasion and lasted until the establishment of a provisional Iraqi government and from around 2004 until May 2007 primarily targeted American led Coalition forces In the early months following the end of major combat operations insurgents conducted sniper attacks suicide bombings at road checkpoints and ambushes resulting in about 112 Coalition fatalities per month 96 In February 2006 a sectarian civil war broke out in Iraq leading to insurgents to direct many of their attacks against the police and armed forces of the Iraqi government The attacks continued during the transitional reconstruction of Iraq as the Iraqi government attempted to establish its authority throughout the country 97 98 Though the civil war and the accompanying sectarian violence ended in mid 2008 the insurgency continued after the withdrawal of US forces from Iraq in 2001 and in 2012 a renewed wave of sectarian and anti government insurgency swept Iraq causing thousands of casualties Increasing violence led to another outbreak of war in Iraq in 2013 lasting until 2017 99 Guerrilla war edit In late June 2003 there was some public debate in the US as to whether the insurgency could be characterized as a guerrilla war On 17 June Army Gen John P Abizaid said that forces in Iraq were conducting what I would describe as a classical guerrilla type campaign against us It s low intensity conflict in our doctrinal terms but it s war however you describe it In a statement to Congress on 18 June Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz said There s a guerrilla war there but we can win it Sabotage edit Further information Iraqi insurgency 2003 2011 nbsp The Iraqi Al Basrah Oil Terminal considered a terrorist target due to its importanceSabotage of crude oil pipelines and refineries have been a key tactic of the Iraqi insurgency The United States had intended to quickly rebuild Iraqi infrastructure for production back to pre war levels but widespread sabotage slowed down the pace of reconstruction The administration has set an oil production goal of 5 000 000 barrels per day 790 000 m3 d but the president s numbers show that production decreased slightly in 2005 over 2004 from 2 2 million US gallons 8 300 m3 per day to 2 1 million US gallons 7 900 m3 per day The administration claims that oil production however is up from 2003 when oil was produced at 1 580 000 barrels per day 251 000 m3 d Iraqi analysts have argued that the administration s measures are misleading because the war began in 2003 which pushed production numbers lower than they normally would have been They are way off of their original projections for where oil production would be now said Rick Barton an expert on Iraqi reconstruction at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington It s basically gone nowhere in the entire time we ve been there Of course they haven t been able to protect the pipelines You just can t be rebuilding a country during an active war citation needed 100 Fallujah edit Further information Fallujah The Fallujah offensive Operation Vigilant Resolve was launched on 5 April 2004 in response to 31 March murder and mutilation of four of Blackwater s employees Roads leading into and out of the city were closed When the US Soldiers and Marines tried to enter fierce fighting erupted Members of the Iraqi insurgency opened fire with heavy machine guns rockets and rocket propelled grenades The Soldiers and Marines answered by bringing in tanks and helicopters The ensuing firefight resulted in a large number of casualties Dozens of Marines were killed and injured Two hundred and seventy one members of the non coalition forces were killed and 793 injured according to official counts for the period of 5 April through 22 April Conflicting reports leave it unclear how many of the dead and injured were rebel fighters or women and children 101 102 103 There were also reports of ambulances and aid convoys being used by the insurgents to smuggle weapons and fighters into the city 104 Coalition officials said that the insurgents used mosques and schools as command posts and weapon storage facilities A suicide bomb vest factory was discovered by Marines 105 After several failed attempts at ceasefires the US backed out of the city A Marine commander stated We don t want to turn Fallujah into Dresden The US handed authority of the city over to a former Iraqi general who had served under Saddam Hussein and whose fighters the US acknowledges may include former members of insurgency Afterwards the city was referred to as free rebel town banners in the city streets proclaimed victory over the United States and some of its mosques praised the Iraqi insurgency The general Muhammed Latif told Reuters I want the American soldier to return to his camp What I want more is that he returns to the United States 106 US marines encircled Fallujah with an earth wall trying to control access to the city allowing only women and children to leave the city On 19 June 2004 twenty two Iraqis among them women and children were killed in a US air strike on a residential neighborhood 107 Allawi condemned the rebellion and called upon the city to surrender Abu Musab al Zarqawi the leader of the Tawhid e Jihad group who is alleged to be hiding in Fallujah or face aerial bombing by the United States Muqtada al Sadr edit On 4 April 2004 coalition forces closed Shiite cleric Muqtada al Sadr s newspaper al Hawza claiming it contained incitements to violence One example provided was that on 26 February an article claimed that a suicide bombing in Iskandariya that killed 53 people was a rocket fired by the Americans and not a car bomb In response al Sadr launched a day of protests During these protests members of the Iraqi insurgency who may or may not have been tied to al Sadr ambushed a Coalition patrol guarding a trash collecting unit in Sadr City resulting in the deaths of 8 soldiers Several dozen of al Sadr s followers were killed during these protests The coalition responded by arresting one of al Sadr s closest aides leading to al Sadr calling on his followers to rise up The next days fighting erupted in many cities in southern Iraq including Karbala Kut Nasiriya and Basra The CPA announced the existence of a three month old arrest warrant issued by an Iraqi judge on al Sadr claiming that he was responsible for the killing of Coalition aligned cleric Abdul Majid al Khoei The warrant itself inspired further opposition as Khoei s own followers blamed Ba athists for the murder the Coalition appointed Iraqi Minister of Justice stated that he had no knowledge of the warrant and the Iraqi Jurists Association declared the warrant illegal Al Sadr who had previously created his own parallel government and a militia called the al Mahdi Army instructed his followers to no longer follow along with the occupation and suggested that they attack Coalition soldiers and his followers took control of several southern cities often with the support of local authorities and police During the first few days of the uprising al Sadr stayed in Kufa where he traditionally had a large following On 7 April he moved to Najaf into a building close to the shrine of the Imam Ali the holiest shrine in the Shia faith After fierce fighting during the first days of the uprising his followers took control over many cities in southern Iraq In Kut the Ukrainian occupational contingent was forced out of the city by a rain of mortar fire The Italians were contained inside their base in Nassiriya and in Basra the governor s palace was occupied In Karbala Polish and Bulgarian forces were able to hold their own after a battle lasting the whole night The Alliance reacted by dispensing a reactionary force on 8 April to Kut forcing al Sadr followers to melt away into the city s population The same happened in most of the other cities and control was nominally ceded Only Najaf and Kufa which the Americans did not enter remained effectively under the control of al Sadr followers The Coalition sent 2 500 US Marines to Najaf to try to arrest or kill al Sadr Initially hopeful that al Sistani would force al Sadr to capitulate the coalition was disappointed when while he called for all sides to show restraint he focused instead on condemning coalition activities in Fallujah In mid May 2004 a US lead force began pushing into Najaf In the process they invaded several mosques to seize weaponry and there were reports of damage to some of Shia Islam s holiest shrines US forces using their superior firepower and air support inflicted a steady stream of al Mahdi army casualties al Sadr and hospital officials disputed the numbers and both claimed that many of them were civilians The al Mahdi were only able to inflict few American casualties but on 17 May it was reported that the Al Madhi army drove Italian troops from their base in Nasiriyah 108 Ten Italians were wounded along with 20 al Mahdi army fighters wounded and two killed in the assault The base was peacefully retaken the next day in a negotiated settlement with local clan leaders While the Alliance continually insisted that he had little support and there were limited clashes with the smaller SCIRI he was seldom condemned by his more senior clerics Islamic courts expanded their influence in areas he controlled The Imam Ali mosque ended its call for prayers with a request for divine protection for him and his followers were clearly large in number 109 Many believed that al Sistani did not speak out against al Sadr for fear of turning Shiite against Shiite A poll found that in mid May 2004 32 of Iraqis strongly supported al Sadr and another 36 somewhat supported him 110 In August 2004 al Sadr attempted a second rebellion and his al Mahdi army again incited violence especially in the Sadr city slum area of Baghdad and in Najaf US forces responded by pushing into the areas of Najaf controlled by al Mahdi sending the militia reeling Supported by helicopter gunships the US military managed to kill several hundred al Mahdi fighters and further close in on the Iman Ali mosque where al Sadr had made his base Brutal fighting raged between US troops and al Madhi militiamen in a cemetery outside the mosque To avoid damaging the sacred mosque in a direct raid a political solution was sought and a deal was struck between al Sistani and al Sadr ended his rebellion In September 2004 a program encouraged al Madhi members in Sadr city to exchange their guns into authorities for a financial compensation and the slum was almost fully pacified By August 2005 al Sadr had adopted a more conciliatory tone along with a much lower profile saying I call upon all the believers to save the blood of the Muslims and to return to their homes after an outbreak of violence between some of his followers and those of Abdul Aziz al Hakim 111 Hostages edit nbsp Jack Hensley an American engineer prior to his deathAfter the fall of the Ba ath regime people with varying agendas have taken foreign and Iraqi hostages including citizens of both countries that supported and opposed the invasion This includes citizens of Australia Brazil Bulgaria Canada China the Czech Republic France India Ireland Israel Italy Germany Japan Jordan Nepal Pakistan Poland Romania Russia South Korea Thailand Turkey Ukraine the United Kingdom and the United States of America The hostage taking appears to be uncoordinated with different groups making various demands Some hostages are released whilst others are killed sometimes by beheading Several kidnappings have been claimed by the Tawhid and Jihad The Unity of God and Holy War Islamist group which changed its name to Al Qaeda in Iraq in October 2004 The group was run by the Jordanian born Palestinian Abu Musab al Zarqawi The hostages who have been beheaded by Zarqawi s group and possibly by Zarqawi himself include Americans Nick Berg Eugene Armstrong and Jack Hensley South Korean Kim Sun il Shosei Koda from Japan and Kenneth Bigley from the UK Italian Fabrizio Quattrocchi was shot in the head possibly by another group as was British aid worker Margaret Hassan According to the Committee to Protect Journalists at least 25 journalists have been kidnapped by armed groups in Iraq since April 2004 when insurgents began targeting foreigners for abduction While some hostagetaking seems to be politically motivated a large number of hostages are taken by criminals as a means of obtaining cash Iraqis presumed to have high incomes have especially been targeted On the evening of 4 March 2005 the car leading Giuliana Sgrena freshly liberated along with two agents of the Sismi the Italian Military Intelligence service was fired upon by US troops Nicola Calipari who had negotiated the liberation of the other eight Italian hostages was killed while Sgrena and the other agent were wounded see Rescue of Giuliana Sgrena Fall out edit As a result of the uprisings US General John Abizaid in April 2004 requested an additional 10 000 troops be sent to Iraq after admitting that a number of Iraqi security personnel had abandoned their posts or joined the Iraqi insurgency 112 On 16 April 2004 US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld announced that he had approved General Abizaid s request and had extended the tour of roughly 20 000 soldiers who were scheduled to be rotated out of Iraq by three months A fresh mass grave was found near Ramadi containing the bodies of over 350 Iraqis 113 It is unclear whether this mass grave contained dead civilians and or militants Iraq Study Group Report edit nbsp Lee H Hamilton left and James Baker right present the Iraq Study Group Report to George W Bush on 6 December 2006 At a news conference with the British Prime Minister Tony Blair in Washington on 6 December 2006 President George W Bush commented the Iraq Study Group s bipartisan report assessing the current situation of the US led Iraq War and making policy recommendations President Bush admitted for the first time that a new approach is needed in Iraq that the situation in Iraq is bad there and that the task ahead was daunting 114 President Bush said he would not accept every recommendation by the ISG panel but promised that he would take the report seriously 115 Iraq Coalition members departures editFurther information Multinational force in Iraq All foreign troops have withdrawn from Iraq American withdrawal editOn 18 August 2010 the 4th Stryker Brigade 2nd Infantry Division the last US combat brigade withdrew from Iraq ending the US combat mission in Iraq 52 600 US military personnel remained in Iraq to take on an advisory role 116 On 19 August 2010 US President Barack Obama announced that all US combat operations would end on 31 August 50 000 troops would stay in an advise and assist role The full withdrawal was in December 2011 Between 15 and 18 December the last troops left US military patrolling editDuring the post war Iraq occupation occupying forces have turned their attention to enforcing order through patrolling These patrols faced insurgents who conduct ambushes using assault rifles rocket propelled grenades and carefully placed and timed explosives The patrols require armored vehicles capable of stopping at least small arms fire of 7 62 mm machine gun rounds along with mandatory external weapons platforms and tracking equipment Experience is also key in detecting any potentially threatening out of place car box or person while following the rules of engagement that dictate a passive but ready posture Patrolling soldiers spend nearly eight hours a day in sector and accrue nearly 30 patrols per month US permanent facilities editIn October 2004 Iraq s interim government transferred to US ownership 104 acres 0 42 km2 of land beside the Tigris River in Baghdad for construction of a new US embassy The new facility will be the largest of its kind in the world the size of Vatican City with the population of a small town its own defense force self contained power and water A few details of the embassy complex are available from a US Senate Foreign Relations Committee report though many of the details remain secret Its construction is budgeted at 592 million 117 Besides the embassy complex four super bases are being built for permanent deployment One would be adjacent to Baghdad two would be close to the southern and northern oil fields and the fourth would be in the west towards Syria 118 The US is in the process of building 14 bases known as enduring bases Four are unknown as to name and location The other ten are Green Zone in Baghdad Camp Anaconda at Balad Airbase Camp Taji in Taji Camp Falcon Al Sarq in Baghdad Post Freedom in Mosul Camp Victory Al Nasr at Baghdad Airfield Camp Marez at Mosul Airfield Camp Renegade in Kirkuk Camp Speicher in Tikrit and Camp Fallujuh 119 120 Cultural dimensions editAs cultural scientist Roland Benedikter poses in his book on Sustainable Democratization of Iraq 121 and in a series of essays 122 one main cause of the ongoing problems of pacification seems to consist in the fact that the socio cultural dimensions of sustainability including questions of ethnicity religion and minority issues have not been included appropriately in the overall democratization strategies so far See also edit nbsp Iraq portalArchaeological looting in Iraq Since the fall of Saddam Hussein s regime looters have descended upon many archaeological sites and have begun destroying them and looting artifacts to an alarming degree Criticism of the Iraq War A list of common criticisms of the 2003 invasion and subsequent military occupation of Iraq Hillbilly armor a US military slang term coined during the occupation to refer to the improvised vehicle armor being used by some US troops Human rights in post invasion Iraq Various parties expressed concern about the state of human rights in Iraq after the 2003 occupation of Iraq Iraq and weapons of mass destruction The Iraqi government s use possession and alleged intention of acquiring more types of weapons of mass destruction WMD during the reign of Saddam Hussein United Nations Security Council and the Iraq War Actions associated with the Gulf War in 1991 and UN Security Council Resolution 1441 in late 2002 2003 with at least 14 other resolutions and 30 statements between those two events Iraq War order of battle Current list of US and allied military formations and units involved in Iraq Ibn Sina Hospital Iraq disarmament crisis Issue of Iraq s disarmament reached a crisis in 2002 2003 after demands of the complete end to Iraqi production and use of weapons of mass destruction and that Iraq comply with UN Resolutions requiring UN inspectors unfettered access to areas those inspectors thought might have weapons production facilities Iraq Survey Group A fact finding mission sent by the coalition after the 2003 Invasion of Iraq to find weapons of mass destruction WMD programs developed by Iraq under the regime of former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein Japanese Iraq Reconstruction and Support Group Japanese government s deployment of troops to Iraq Dover test Informal test and a journalistic phrase to describe whether the general population is supporting a military action by the public reaction to returning war casualties Timeline of the Iraq War Timeline of events during Multinational force s occupation of Iraq following 2003 invasion of Iraq and relevant quotations about nature of occupation from officials Iraq War order of battle 2009 Overview of coalition forces in Iraq War on Terror in US foreign policy circles the global war on terrorism or GWOT is a campaign by the United States and some of its allies to rid the world of terrorist groups and to end state sponsorship of terrorism 256th Infantry Brigade Combat Team United States Post World War II occupations Occupied Japan The post World War II US occupation of Japan 1945 1952 United States Army Military Government in Korea US military administered southern Korea from 1945 to 1948 Morgenthau Plan The post World War II US occupation of part of Germany 1945 1955 Germany was not fully sovereign until 1991 History of Germany since 1945 GARIOA Government And Relief in Occupied Areas of Europe Marshall PlanReferences edit Law of Administration for the State of Iraq for the Transitional Period 8 March 2004 Archived from the original on 9 March 2004 a b Knut Dormann Laurent Colassis International Humanitarian Law in the Iraq Conflict PDF International Committee of the Red Cross p 3 9 Laws of War Laws and Customs of War on Land Archived 25 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine Hague IV 18 October 1907 The Avalon Project Yale Law School Iraq Resolution Endorses Plan for Transition Elections Archived 19 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine UN Security Council Resolution 1546 8 June MacAskill Ewen Richard Norton Taylor and Rory McCarthy US and UK look for early way out of Iraq The Guardian 22 January 2005 Iraq Bill Demands US Troop Withdraw Archived 14 May 2013 at the 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from Knight Ridder News Coverage of Washington and the World Reynolds Paul 7 December 2006 Bush ponders next Iraq move BBC News Archived from the original on 15 July 2016 Retrieved 6 January 2010 Cracks appear between Bush and Blair over need for talks with Iran and Syria Archived from the original on 20 July 2012 Goodbye Iraq Last US Combat Brigade Heads Home Yahoo News 19 August 2010 Archived from the original on 21 August 2010 Retrieved 19 August 2010 Fadel Leila Star telegram Fort Worth 20 May 2006 US embassy is biggest secret in Baghdad Houston Chronicle From Cold War to Long War Archived from the original on 31 August 2006 If the US is ultimately leaving Iraq why is the military building permanent bases Archived from the original on 19 April 2007 Iraq Facilities www globalsecurity org Roland Benedikter Nachhaltige Demokratisierung des Irak Sustainable Democratization of Iraq Socio cultural perspectives Passagen Verlag Vienna 2005 634pp Roland Benedikter Overcoming ethnic division 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Rory 4 February 2005 Meet the men who Britain and the US hope will take over the battle against Iraqi insurgents if they live long enough The Guardian London Cordesman Anthony 2004 US Policy in Iraq A Realist Approach to its Challenges and Opportunities a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help The Road Ahead Lessons in Nation Building from Japan Germany and Afghanistan for Postwar Iraq by Ray Salvatore Jennings May 2003 Peceworks No 49 United States Institute of Peace Lyal S Sunga Dilemmas facing INGOs in coalition occupied Iraq in Ethics in Action The Ethical Challenges of International Human Rights Nongovernmental Organizations edited by Daniel A Bell Cambridge University Press 2007 Legal statusLyal S Sunga Can International Humanitarian Law Play an Effective Role in Occupied Iraq 3 Indian Society of International Law Yearbook of International Humanitarian and Refugee Law 2003 1 21 Management of the Iraq Reconstruction Program UN Criticizes Iraq Occupation Oil Sales New York Times Cash Flow 14 December 2004 External links editInformation on the US efforts to rebuild Iraq with focus on the PRT program Back from Iraq The Veterans Stories Project Searchable timeline of Iraq occupation The end of Saddam Hussein Warning Graphic Execution video The end of Saddam Hussein video 2 January 8 07 Warning Mature content About com s An American Palace in Iraq and Four Permanent US Bases Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine www iraqanalysis org Information source listings and analysis on post invasion Iraq Iraq Body Count Independent database listing civilians killed in the Iraq war and occupation Latest analysis on Iraq Archived from the original on 8 February 2008 Retrieved 7 November 2007 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link FSB Iraq FrogStyleBiscuit s Iraq News and Analysis Iraq News Archive The White House Senator Byrd Robert A Call for an Exit Door from Iraq 7 April 2004 Common Dreams News Center Is Iraq Another Vietnam Monthly Review volume 56 issue 2 June 2004 US Iraq News Mission and Justice Jason Vest Willful Ignorance Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists July August 2005 Discusses US approach to counterinsurgency in Iraq Sheehan Miles Charles Iraq in Transition An Examination of Iraqi resistance terrorism insurgency and organized crime 2005 Americans are Losing the Victory in Europe and Grim Europe Faces Winter of Misery Life 7 January 1946 Oral History Interview with General William H Draper Jr Chief Economics Division Control Council for Germany 1945 46 Oral History Interview with General Lucius D Clay Deputy military governor Germany US 1946 commander in chief US Forces in Europe and military governor US Zone Germany 1947 49 MarchofWar com Up to date Iraq war clock war quotes and slogans plus poll Interview with an American Contractor in Iraq A Policy for Germany Daoud al Qaissi Saddam s singer executed The World Monuments Fund s Iraq Cultural Heritage Conservation Initiative Did the United States Create Democracy in Germany James L Payne The Independent Review Volume 11 Number 2 Fall 2006 Analysis of the axiom that democracy can be imposed Bibliography Iraq Wars Post 2003 by Edwin Moise Imperial Life in the Emerald City Inside Iraq s Green Zone by Rajiv Chandrasekaran Fiasco The American Military Adventure in Iraq 2003 2005 by Thomas E Ricks Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Occupation of Iraq 2003 2011 amp oldid 1206911968, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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