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美國侵略伊拉克戰爭20週年為什麼? Exactly 20 years ago, USA launched a ground invasion of Iraq,
2023/03/22 13:25
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20030320-20230320./20年前美國和聯軍在「伊拉克」發動攻擊,當時的美國總統小布希,為了報復911恐攻事件,宣稱伊拉克有大規模殺傷性武器(化學武器),並要推翻海珊獨裁政權,開啟長達8年的伊拉克戰爭,這一戰讓伊拉克四分五裂,國內武裝民兵四起,內亂不斷,老百姓成為難民逃亡海外,政府空轉;美國才承認,,「沒有大規模毀滅性武器」? 

.Ten Lessons America Learned from the 2003 Iraq War - DER SPIEGEL

20 years on, was removing Saddam Hussein worth the war in Iraq?

Twenty years after the US-led invasion of Iraq, the effects of war and occupation still reverberate through the region.

.Exactly 20 years ago, on March 20, 2003, the United States launched a ground invasion of Iraq, promising to end the rule of President Saddam Hussein and destroy alleged weapons of mass destruction (WMD) in the oil-rich country.

Air operations had begun the night before, as US President George W Bush announced in a televised address: “At this hour, American and coalition forces are in the early stages of military operations to disarm Iraq, to free its people and to defend the world from grave danger.”

However, US forces, mainly backed by troops from the United Kingdom, never found weapons of mass destruction.

And although Saddam was captured, tried, and hanged, the country remains deeply scarred by conflict, marred by economic devastation and political upheaval, and under the sway of Iranian and American influences.

With more than 200,000 Iraqi civilians and 4,500 US soldiers killed, and chaos and instability gripping the whole region as a result of the invasion, questions over why this war was waged in the first place remain potent.

The case for war

US politicians and ideologues began to lay the foundations for the occupation of Iraq years before it happened.

After Saddam launched an invasion of his oil-rich neighbour, Kuwait, in 1990, US President George HW Bush, the younger Bush’s father, declared his intention to impose “liberal democracy” in Iraq, opening a floodgate for US neoconservative politicians who pushed for Saddam to be deposed..

.The decision to go to war was driven by security concerns engendered by the 9/11 attacks in 2001 and mixed with ideological motives to liberalise and democratise Iraq and the region.

The US-led invasion was also closely tied to Iraqi exiles in the West, who pushed for Saddam’s removal. However, in the post-war era, exiles based in Iran were able to take advantage and dominate post-war Iraqi politics.

.Capturing Baghdad

American, British and other coalition forces invaded Iraq from Kuwait on March 20, 2003, quickly crushing the regular Iraqi military, and chasing Saddam out of poweThree weeks later, on April 9, US troops seized Baghdad. Together with Iraqi civilians, they toppled a statue of Saddam in Baghdad’s Firdos Square – a historic moment that became symbolic of US victory as it made headlines global.

On May 1, Bush declared “mission accomplished” on board the USS Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier, and ended major combat operations in Iraq. Lawlessness, which had quickly spread across the country highlighting the failure of US troops to bring order, was dismissed by US government officials as not serious.

\No weapons of mass destruction.Before the end of 2003, US troops captured Saddam, who was hiding in a hole near his childhood home in Tikrit. He was later tried by an Iraqi court and executed for his role in mass killings and crimes against humanity.The date chosen for his execution, December 30, 2006, which also happened to be the first day of the Muslim festival of Eid al-Adha, has been controversial ever since..

Shortly after Saddam’s capture, the Bush administration conceded that its pre-war arguments about the presence of stockpiles of chemical, biological and nuclear weapons in Iraq were unfounded.

A presidential commission concluded in 2005 that US intelligence on Iraqi WMD was completely flawed, and “not one bit” of evidence was there. The testimony and accounts of defectors and members of the Iraqi Nation.

.Transitional phase

In May 2003, the head of the Coalition Provisional Authority, Paul Bremer, disbanded the Iraqi army and intelligence services and barred the long-ruling Baath Party from participating in the government formation process. The decision alienated hundreds of thousands of trained men and created a security and governance vacuum in the country that devastated it for years.

The transition from US to Iraqi rule in the mid-2000s saw the killing of tens of thousands of Iraqis, the launch of an al-Qaeda-led armed uprising, the outbreak of a sectarian civil war, and eventually, the rise of ISIL (ISIS).

.Elections, sectarian violenceIn the aftermath of the fall of Saddam, who was accused of sectarian oppression against Iraq’s Shia and Kurdish groups, the Provisional Authority was preoccupied with creating an ethno-sectarian balance in the country.

It used the muhasasa, or sectarian quota system, to select Iraq’s first post-2003 governing body – the Iraq Governing Council (IGC) – and provide proportional government representation among the country’s Shia, Sunni, and Kurdish groups.

While the system gave political and economic power to parties that came to dominate Iraqi politics post-2003, one of the major ills of the muhasasa system was how it deepened sectarian divisions, which continue to reverberate through Iraq and the region until today.

Despite outbursts of violence, Iraqis voted for their first, full-term government in 2005, giving the Shia majority control of parliament. Under the governing system adopted after the introduction of a new constitution in 2005, the prime minister was a member of the Shia Muslim majority, the speaker a Sunni, and the largely ceremonial role of president was held by a Kurd.The first prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki, who dominated Iraqi politics for years, had close ties to Tehran and links to armed militias. His government was in power during an era of sectarian and authoritarian policies.

The failure of successive governments to strike an accord with Iraq’s Sunni population and the presence of corrupt and ineffective state institutions were key factors in the rise of sectarian violence across the country. Sunni rebellions intensified in Anbar and Fallujah as violence by followers of Shia religious leader Muqtada al-Sadr surged in the south.

Some suggest that a heavy-handed security response in Sunni areas radicalised many in the community, some of whom then supported ISIL. Others say that some Sunni could never accept that they no longer dominated Iraq as they did under Saddam.

ISIL strengthened its grip as the withdrawal of US troops in 2011 left a security void in the region. It eventually declared a so-called “caliphate” over large swaths of the country in 2014, before being largely defeated by 2017 after a gruelling military campaign, once again involving the US.

Uncertainty prevails

In October 2019, the largest protest movement in post-2003 Iraq unseated the government and forced parliament to adopt a new electoral law. Security forces and paramilitary groups killed more than 600 protesters during the uprising and have continued to target activists since then.

The unprecedented protests, which lasted for months until the introduction of coronavirus restrictions in October 2020, came in response to the repression of dissent by successive governments and the control of paramilitaries linked to political parties that have discouraged reform and increased risks of civil strife.

However, in today’s Iraq, the government is formed by a coalition that obtained less than 15 percent of the electorate vote. To many Iraqis who joined the protests, it represents an alliance of self-serving political groups and armed factions that have restricted civil liberties.

Uncertainty prevails

In October 2019, the largest protest movement in post-2003 Iraq unseated the government and forced parliament to adopt a new electoral law. Security forces and paramilitary groups killed more than 600 protesters during the uprising and have continued to target activists since then.

The unprecedented protests, which lasted for months until the introduction of coronavirus restrictions in October 2020, came in response to the repression of dissent by successive governments and the control of paramilitaries linked to political parties that have discouraged reform and increased risks of civil strife.

However, in today’s Iraq, the government is formed by a coalition that obtained less than 15 percent of the electorate vote. To many Iraqis who joined the protests, it represents an alliance of self-serving political groups and armed factions that have restricted civil liberties.

.Bush
President Bush declared the end of major combat in Iraq as he spoke on board the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln off the California coast on May 1, 2003.
How the U.S. Invasion of Iraq Is Still Ruining the World 20 Years Later.
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美國至今尚在伊拉克駐守重兵,名義上是守護石化工業,實際上就是霸佔搶奪伊拉克的石油資源,想當年伊拉克總統海珊不願意加入OPEC.以美元計價的石油,改為以歐元計價擺脫美國的控制,因此惹禍美國,出兵伊拉克霸道迪行動找到藉口.

.A brief history of U.S. military involvement in Iraq - The Washington Post
換句話說美國,承認自己是帝國主義霸權的國家,經常性的出兵海外專門攻打弱小民族及國家,扶植魁儡政權,由美國幕後操縱,如今敵伊拉克仿照美國實施,所謂美國式的民主制度,施行選舉搞政黨輪流執政的政治遊戲,伊拉克國內四分五裂,大小不同的政黨團體,輪流進出國會,玩弄政治遊戲騙取選票,其次美國許多的電影公司拍攝美伊戰爭故事為題材,都將伊拉克描述成為恐怖份子,實施打擊暗殺的事件.
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美國2度攻打伊拉克,破壞2河流域的古文明及文物,將伊拉克博物館內將近6000年的歷史文物洗劫一空,搶奪運回美國進行"保護"與"研究",伊拉克就是古代巴比倫帝國,其首都巴格達就是歷代歷朝的千年古蹟,空中花園城堡如今早已被美國摧毀怠盡.傳聞中巴比倫國王尼不甲尼薩大將軍自上帝所賜神瑜的泥板,上神奇的文字,僅有先知但以理可以瞭解並解釋,聖經舊約有詳細的記載,但是此塊國寶級的歷史文物卻被美國借用從未歸還,美國有意破壞人類文化及文明強迫伊拉克人民改變宗教信仰伊斯蘭教,否則視為恐怖份子與極端宗教信徒.
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美國陰謀詭計只能施行於那些弱小民族及國家,如今烏克蘭的戰爭幕後策劃人,就是美國,無論如何美國簽方百計的介入俄烏戰爭,阻擾由中國主導的和平計劃,並且詩行反間計破壞和平,強制烏克蘭繼續作戰,保家衛國,為所謂的美式民主自由而戰,但是死 亡的是烏克蘭的阿兵哥,至於烏克蘭的老百姓,當然是難民逃亡海外,流浪於歐洲諸國,將近800餘萬人,這樣一來就是說明,當年美國攻打伊拉克至今找不到真正出兵的證據,未戰爭而打仗殺人,如今的烏克蘭如出一轍,也就是說又是試驗品被犧牲掉.
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