By Medea Benjamin and Nicolas J. S. Davies
March 18, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - While
the world is consumed with the terrifying
coronavirus pandemic, on March 19 the Trump
administration will be marking the 17th anniversary
of the U.S. invasion of Iraq by
ramping up the conflict there. After an
Iran-aligned militia allegedly struck a U.S. base
near Baghdad on March 11, the U.S. military carried
out retaliatory strikes against five of the
militia’s weapons factories and announced it is
sending two more aircraft carriers to the region, as
well as new Patriot missile systems and
hundreds more troops to operate them. This
contradicts the
January vote of the Iraqi Parliament that called
for U.S. troops to leave the country. It also goes
against the sentiment of most Americans, who
think the Iraq war was not worth fighting, and
against the campaign promise of Donald Trump to end
the endless wars.
Seventeen years ago, the U.S. armed forces
attacked and invaded Iraq with a force of over
460,000 troops from all its armed services,
supported by
46,000 UK troops, 2,000 from Australia and a few
hundred from Poland, Spain, Portugal and Denmark.
The “shock and awe” aerial bombardment unleashed
29,200 bombs and missiles on Iraq in the first
five weeks of the war.
The U.S. invasion was a
crime of aggression under
international law, and was actively opposed by
people and countries all over the world, including
30 million people who took to the streets in 60
countries on February 15, 2003, to express their
horror that this could really be happening at the
dawn of the 21st century. American historian Arthur
Schlesinger Jr., who was a speechwriter for
President John F. Kennedy, compared the U.S.
invasion of Iraq to Japan’s preemptive attack on
Pearl Harbor in 1941
and wrote, “Today, it is we Americans who live
in infamy.”
Seventeen years later, the consequences of the
invasion have lived up to the fears of all who
opposed it. Wars and hostilities rage across the
region, and divisions over war and peace in the U.S.
and Western countries challenge our
highly selective view of ourselves as advanced,
civilized societies. Here is a look at 12 of the
most serious consequences of the U.S. war in Iraq.