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IRAQ WARS
The three weeks that ousted Saddam Hussein
By Antoinette CHALABY-MOUALLA
Paris (AFP) April 6, 2018

Iraq since the US-led invasion of 2003
US-led forces invaded Saddam Hussein's Iraq 15 years ago after claims it was harbouring weapons of mass destruction.

While his regime fell in just three weeks on April 9, 2003, the country was plunged into a grave crisis that included the emergence of the Islamic State group.

Here is a timeline of major events since the invasion.

- 2003: fall of Saddam -

The US-led invasion is launched with dawn air strikes on March 20 and announced to the world soon afterwards by US president George W. Bush in a televised address.

As international forces race across the desert of southern Iraq towards the capital, Saddam flees.

By April 9 US forces have taken control of Baghdad, where a large statue of Saddam is symbolically toppled.

Bush announces the end of major combat operations on May 1 aboard the USS Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier returning from the Gulf, a banner that reads "Mission Accomplished" behind him.

By October Washington admits, however, that it has found no weapons of mass destruction.

Saddam is captured in December after nine months on the run. He is dragged bearded and dishevelled out of a small underground hideout and hanged three years later.

- 2004-2011: transfer of power -

The US-led administration officially hands political power back to Iraq in June 2004 and in January the following year, it votes in its first multi-party election in half a century, a poll boycotted by Sunni Muslims.

A 2005 constitution enshrines autonomy for the autonomous Iraqi Kurdistan region in the north.

The broadcast in April 2004 of images of torture and other abuse of Iraqi prisoners at the Abu Ghraib US military prison shocks the world.

In February 2006 Al-Qaeda-linked jihadists blow up one of the country's main Shiite shrines, in Samarra, sparking a wave of sectarian killings which leaves tens of thousands dead and lasts until 2008.

International forces start scaling down with the last US troops departing on December 18, 2011, ending a nine-year occupation and leaving behind a country mired in political crisis.

More than 100,000 civilians were killed between 2003 and 2011, according to Iraq Body Count database. The United States lost nearly 4,500 troops.

- 2014: Islamic State emerges -

The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) launches a lightning offensive, benefitting from the support of Saddam loyalists and the weakness of the new Iraqi security forces.

In January 2014 ISIL and its allies capture the city of Fallujah and parts of Ramadi. In June they seize second city Mosul and Sunni Arab areas bordering the Kurdistan region. Tens of thousands of Christians and Yazidis flee.

The group declares a caliphate across the territory it has seized in Iraq and Syria, and rebrands itself the Islamic State (IS).

By the end of 2014, it holds one-third of oil-rich Iraq.

- The fightback -

Following an appeal for help from the Iraqi government, US warplanes strike IS positions in northern Iraq in August 2014 and then form an international anti-IS coalition.

In March 2015 Iraq announces the "liberation" of Tikrit, Saddam's hometown, after nearly 10 months under IS rule. Ramadi and Fallujah are freed in 2016.

After a nine-month battle backed by US air power, Mosul is retaken in ruins in July 2017.

In December Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi declares the "end of the war" against the IS group.

- 2017: Kurdistan, a new crisis -

A referendum on independence is held in Iraqi Kurdistan in September 2017 in defiance of a furious Baghdad, even more put out when 93 percent of voters back independence.

The non-binding vote is ruled unconstitutional by Iraq's top court and in mid-October Baghdad sends in troops to seize disputed oil-rich regions that Iraqi Kurdistan had controlled.

It took just three weeks for the nearly 24-year regime of Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein to be toppled in 2003 after the first US air strikes on March 20.

Washington and London justified their military intervention with claims that the country possessed weapons of mass destruction but no such stockpile was ever discovered.

Here is a recap of the sweeping offensive that led Baghdad to fall on April 9, 2003.

- Explosions, a fireball -

Early on March 20, towards 5:35 am, the first US-British bombardments slam into outskirts of Baghdad. It is less than two hours after Saddam spurns a deadline from US president George W. Bush to go into exile or face war.

Huge clouds of smoke billow into the dawn sky as explosions resonate. Iraqi anti-aircraft guns respond. AFP journalists on the scene report seeing an enormous fireball.

Bush goes on television to announce the start of the military operation, saying that "decisive force" will be used to disarm Iraq and overthrow its leader.

Saddam also appears on television, wearing military uniform and a black beret and vowing "Iraq will emerge victorious".

By evening tens of thousands of US and British troops enter Iraq, crossing the border from Kuwait, and begin a journey northwards through the desert to the capital.

Many world leaders condemn the invasion as illegitimate and hundreds of thousands of people mass worldwide in spontaneous anti-war demonstrations.

- 'Shock and awe' -

On March 21 Washington unleashes what it calls a campaign of "shock and awe", raining bombs on Baghdad. The Pentagon announces a "massive bombardment campaign against Iraq".

The next day there are more fierce strikes on the outskirts of Baghdad as well as on the southern town of Basra and the cities of Kirkuk and Mosul in the north.

On March 25 about 4,000 advancing US Marines pass through the southern city of Nasiriyah, a crucial gateway on the road to Baghdad, coming under heavy Iraqi gunfire.

The British military says the key port of Umm Qasr is under "total control".

In the following days there are more heavy bomb strikes on Baghdad, targeting Saddam's palace compound, residential neighbourhoods and the army's elite Republican Guard.

- Baghdad airport seized -

On March 31 US troops report their first serious battle with the Republican Guard, which has taken position 100 kilometres (70 miles) south of the capital near the Shiite holy city of Karbala. There are fierce clashes near Najaf, also south of the capital.

On April 2 the Americans take an important bridge on the Euphrates River, bringing them within striking distance of Baghdad. "The final push to Baghdad is now on," a senior US Marines officer says.

On April 4 US troops seize the city's Saddam International Airport and rename it Baghdad International Airport.

Iraqi television shows Saddam as in control, flanked by bodyguards in a residential square, smiling broadly, accepting kisses on his hand and holding a baby.

But on April 7 US troops capture three of his palaces in the city while British troops take control of almost all of Basra.

- Collapse -

On the afternoon of April 9 US tanks and troops meet little resistance as they swarm over the sprawling capital.

US Marines use a military vehicle to help a crowd topple a giant statue of Saddam, symbolising the end of his feared reign, and jubilant onlookers rush to trample on it, chanting "Traitor!", "Torturer!", "Dictator!".

Over the following two days US-backed Kurdish peshmerga fighters seize Kirkuk and Mosul before stepping aside for the Americans.

Saddam's birthplace Tikrit falls on April 14. He is captured near the city in December and hanged in late 2006.

The United States and Britain lost 139 and 33 soldiers respectively during the intervention, according to their defence ministries. The Iraq Body Count group says that more than 7,300 Iraqi civilians were killed.

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Iraq: The first technology war of the 21st century


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A Baghdad court on Monday sentenced six Turkish women to death and a seventh to life in prison for membership of the Islamic State jihadist group, a judicial source said. The source told AFP that the women, all accompanied by small children in the court, had surrendered to Kurdish peshmerga fighters after having fled Tal Afar, one of the last IS bastions to fall to Iraqi security forces last year. The women told the court they had entered the country to join their husbands fighting for IS in the ... read more

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