15 Years After Invasion, Many Americans Still Fail To Recognize Unending Scale of the Crime
Fifteen years after the illegal invasion of Iraq by the Bush administration—which both UN opposition and massive global protests failed to stop—new polling shows that many in the United States still refuse to recognize the war as a mistake even as Iraqis and people throughout the region continue to pay the price.
In the New York Times, Iraqi author and filmmaker Sinan Antoon, who moved from his home country to the U.S. after the 1991 Gulf War, described visiting Iraq in the months and years after President George W. Bush claimed the U.S. military would “liberate” Iraq from Saddam Hussein’s dictatorship and bring democracy to the Iraqis—only to find dysfunction and violence now ruling the country.
“Removing Saddam was just a byproduct of another objective: dismantling the Iraqi state and its institutions,” wrote Antoon. “That state was replaced with a dysfunctional and corrupt semi-state…Iraq later descended into a sectarian civil war that claimed the lives of hundreds of thousands of civilians and displaced hundreds of thousands more, irrevocably changing the country’s demography.”
The Russian news network RT posted a two-minute video to mark the anniversary, offering an abridged look at the destruction caused by the 2003 invasion and its effects —including the flourishing of ISIS and more violence perpetrated by the U.S.-led coalition in efforts to defeat the group, long after the U.S. declared combat operations over in 2010.
The British group Iraq Body Court estimates that at least 180,807 Iraqi civilians have been killed in the violence that’s plagued the nation since 2003. Separate estimates of all deaths directly and indirectly related to the U.S. invasion put the figure closer to 500,000, while others place the number at one million or more.
Researchers have estimated that at least 3.5 million and possibly more than five million have been displaced as a result of the war.
Nearly 5,000 U.S. coalition members have been killed in the violence that’s ensued since the invasion, according to iCasualties.org—including 11 who were killed while fighting ISIS in 2018.