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Home > Occupation of Iraq, 2003-2004


 

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The Occupation of Iraq, 2003-2004, is generally said to have begun on May 1, 2003, after the U.S. invasion of Iraq, which overthrew the Ba'ath Party government led by Saddam Hussein and established the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA), an interim occupational government.

The invasion and occupation are said to have caused the deaths of between 14,454 and 16,604 Iraqi civilians, according to Iraq Body Count, and over 100,000, according to research conducted by John Hopkins University and published in the British medical magazine, " The Lancet. [1].

There have been 1,368 coalition deaths, according to CNN. [2]

The casualty figures are attributable to these organizations as of November 21, 2004.

1 Overview

The grounds for the invasion were based in part on claims by the United States and the United Kingdom that Iraq possessed stockpiles of chemical, biological or nuclear weapons, and in part on Saddam Hussein's human rights record. It is now widely believed that, by the year 2003, Iraq did not, in fact, possess weapons of mass destruction (WMD). The U.S. government now says the aim of the occupation is to bring democracy to Iraq. However, successive U.S. governments were for many years supporters of Saddam Hussein and the B'aath party. The Reagan administration supplied Iraq with arms during the Iran-Iraq war (while also supplying arms to Iran in what became known as the Iran-Contra affair). The U.S.-Iraqi relationship changed after Iraq's invasion of Kuwait in 1990, which led to the first Gulf War.

According to articles 41 and 42 of the United Nations Charter, no member state has the right to enforce any resolution militarily unless the UN Security Council specifically authorizes the use of military force. The U.S. and its allies were unable to obtain any such authorization from the Security Council before the invasion of Iraq; in the words of the UN Secretary General, the invasion was illegal. The General Assembly of the United Nations passed a resolution condemning the war. All Arabs states in the region declared the war illegal.

Troop support for the occupation came primarily from the U.S. and the U.K. but Spain, AustraliaAustralia is the sixth-largest country in the world (geographically), the only one to occupy an entire continent, and the largest in the region of Australasia. Australia includes the island of Tasmania, which is an Australian State. Its neighbouring count, ItalyThe Italian Republic or Italy ( Italian: Italia is a country in the south of Europe, consisting mainly of a boot-shaped peninsula together with two large islands in the Mediterranean Sea: Sicily and Sardinia. To the north, where it borders France, Switzer and PolandThe Republic of Poland a country in Central Europe, lies between Germany to the west, the Czech Republic and Slovakia to the south, Ukraine and Belarus to the east, and the Baltic Sea, Lithuania and Russia (in the form of the Kaliningrad Oblast exclave) t provided some troops, and there were varying levels of assistance from JapanIn 2004, the Japanese government ordered a deployment of troops to Iraq at the behest of the United States: A contingent of the Japan Self-Defence Forces was sent in order to assist the U. led occupation of Iraq. This controversial deployment marked a sig and several other allied countries. Tens of thousands of private security personnel supplemented the military forces.

The CPA was disbanded on June 28Some entries on this page have been duplicated on August 1. The correct dates for such events need to be determined. June 28 is the 179th day of the year (180th in leap years) in the Gregorian Calendar, with 186 days remaining. Events 1243 Innocent IV bec, 20042004 is a leap year starting on Thursday (the link is to a full 2004 calendar), and has also been designated the: International Year of Rice International Year to Commemorate the Struggle against Slavery and its Abolition Elections are to be held in 73 co and limited sovereignty was transferred to the U.S.-appointed Iraq Interim Governing CouncilThe interim Iraqi Governing Council was the provisional government of Iraq established by the US-led multinational coalition that ousted the Saddam Hussein regime. The council, which operated in 2003 and 2004, consisted of various Iraqi political, religio. The Council in turn dissolved itself and appointed Iyad AllawiIyad Allawi (born 1945) is the interim Prime Minister of Iraq. A prominent Iraqi-British neurologist and Iraqi exile political activist, the Shia Muslim became a member of the Iraq Interim Governing Council, which was created following the 2003 invasion o as Iraq's first post-Saddam head of government and prime minister, and Ghazi al-Yawer as president. Until scheduled elections are held in January of 2005, Allawi's interim Iraqi government will have no power to make new laws or change the laws passed during the CPA occupation period.

Despite the formal end of occupation, no U.S. troops have been withdrawn. Foreign soldiers and civilian contractors are still protected by legal immunity according to the United Nations provided their purpose is to oversee a fair election in the country.

This article discusses the continuing activities of the occupying forces in Iraq.



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