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The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD
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The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

Dec 16, 2015

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Alina Colan
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Page 1: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

The Iraq War

Propaganda, failed intelligence

and WMD

Page 2: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

The Iraq War

Key themes• Key administration

officials launch media blitz to showcase reasons for war.

• Media “buy in”.

• Large scale public support.

• Erroneous intelligence.

• “Rush” to war.

• WMD.

• Insurgency and “Al Qaida in Iraq”.

Page 3: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

Late 2002

• Bush Administration officials came out as a group and began to say that Iraq had links to Al Qaida and that they were planning “imminent” attacks on U.S. cities, planning to use WMD.

Page 4: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

WHY IRAQ?

• CIA, NSA, and other agencies had very limited and tenuous leads about terrorist links with Iraq.

• Key officials with their own agendas wanted to use 9/11 as a pretext to go after Saddam Hussein.

• The media did no “fact checking” of any administration claims.

• In an atmosphere of fear and tension, American public went along with it…

Page 5: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

Cast of Characters

• Condoleezza Rice

• National Security Advisor.

• Influential media spokesperson in justifying war with Iraq.

• First African American woman to become Sec. of State (later).

• Her calm demeanor and expertise carried great weight with the media.

Page 6: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

Cast of Characters

• Dick Cheney

• Powerful V.P.

• Used his connections and power to influence intelligence gathering and analysis.

• Main force behind the “link” between Al Qaida and Saddam Hussein.

• Later totally discredited.

• Suspected by many to be the real power behind the Presidency during Iraq War.

Page 7: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

Cast of Characters

• Don Rumsfeld

• Secretary of Defense

• “Hawkish” in his portrayal of Iraq as threat to U.S.

• Philosophy was to use minimum force necessary to achieve aims: “Rumsfeld Doctrine”

Page 8: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

Cast of Characters• First African American

Secretary of Defense.

• Reluctant salesman for the War in Iraq.

• Used as the mouthpiece for the administration.

• Later resigned from public office out of embarrassment.

Page 9: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

Cast of Characters

• Saddam Hussein

• Brutal dictator of Iraq.

• Long record of human rights violations and genocide.

• Claimed not to have WMD at the time of Iraq War.

Page 10: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

Administration’s Main Argument

• Bush and colleagues argued that they had irrefutable evidence that Saddam Hussein and Osama Bin Laden had made a military alliance bent on hitting the U.S. with a mass attack.

• They claimed that an attack was imminent, and that the only option was the military invasion of Iraq to seek out and destroy these weapons…

Page 11: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

What are Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

• Nuclear Weapons

Page 12: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

What are Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

Chemical Weapons

Burn the skin, cause irritation of the lungs and mucous membranes.

Page 13: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

What are Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

Biological Agents• Bacteria and viruses

released into the environment to kill people.

• Anthrax, plague, smallpox, influenza, botulinus (that’s botox folks…)

Page 14: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

FACTS

• In the early 1990’s Saddam Hussein DID have a stockpile of dangerous gas weapons and some biological agents.

• He used them on his own people following the Gulf War of 1991.

Page 15: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.
Page 16: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

Facts• By 2003, Saddam

Hussein’s WMD program had been shut down by United Nations weapons inspectors.

• However, Hussein complicated the issue by refusing to cooperate with the U.N., which made it look like he was hiding something.

• What were the consequences of Saddam’s “games”?

• Why would he taunt the U.S. like this?

Page 17: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

Mobilization

• Over the winter of 2002, the United States began to establish a large scale military invasion force in Kuwait.

• Still Hussein refused to cooperate…

Page 18: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

Early 2003

• March 17th. President Bush goes on television to give Saddam Hussein a 48 hour deadline: hand over the WMD or face destruction…

• No response came from Iraq… other than “We have no WMD…”

Page 19: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

Shock and Awe

Page 20: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

Shock and Awe

Page 21: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

Shock and Awe

Page 22: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

Invasion!!!

Page 23: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.
Page 24: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

Fierce Fighting

• The Iraqi Army put up more resistance than in 1991.

• There was heavy fighting in several major centers: Fallujah, Nasiriyah, Mosul, Kirkuk

• U.S. Forces entered Baghdad and went block by block, building by building to destroy Iraqi forces…

Page 25: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

Attrition…• Eventually the Iraqi army was

ground down into nothing.

• Many surrendered, the rest of the army just melted away…

• Once the Baghdad airport was secured, the main invasion was complete.

Page 26: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

Now What?

• Saddam Hussein vanished and went into hiding.

• The Iraqi army all but ceased to exist.

• The civilian population went on a rampage of looting and violence.

• What was the U.S. to do amid all the chaos?

Page 27: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.
Page 28: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

State of Nature

• The Iraqi police, and other security agencies dissolved leaving a power vacuum.

• U.S. soldiers were ordered to stay out of the way, allowing the Iraqis to pillage and loot across the country.

Page 29: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

Factions emerge• Factions that had all been

subdued by Saddam Hussein, were now free to renew old hostilities.

• Atrocities against Saddam loyalists became the norm, with violence, kidnappings and murder becoming an hourly occurrence.

• Meanwhile, the U.S. Army waited and wondered what was going to happen…

Page 30: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

Insurgency• After a few weeks anti-U.S.

sentiment began to grow.

• Foreign fighters, including Al Qaida, began to sneak across the open borders in the desert from Syria.

• Soon, they began to launch devastating attacks on U.S. forces garrisoned across Iraq.

• Within a few months, the U.S. Army was fighting for its life against a full blown insurgency.

Page 31: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

Civilian casualties

• Civilian casualties grew horrifically…

Page 32: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

U.S. Casualties• By 2005/6 the U.S. was losing

about 200 people per month to suicide attacks and bombings, as well as firefights with insurgents and others.

• The number of people injured was even higher.

• The Bush administration banned these pictures from being released.

Page 33: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

Meanwhile

• Where were the WMD?

• Army searched all over the country in every factory and bombed out warehouse…

• Nothing was ever found except old, discarded weapons from years ago.

Page 34: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

Politics of War

• The President became increasingly unpopular as a result of the carnage.

• There were many changes in strategy.

• Don Rumsfeld was fired.

• The Republican Party lost the 2006 Mid-Term Elections…

Page 35: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

Meanwhile

• We captured Saddam.

• He was hiding in a tiny bunker. He had been on the run for eight months.

Page 36: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

• He was later executed by the Iraqi people for his crimes against the people…

• The trial had been a farce, and the execution was a mob scene.

Page 37: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

Surge

• The President’s newest strategy was a surge of forces designed to smash resistance once and for all.

• After initial intense fighting, the surge worked… And the fighting subsided to almost nothing by 2008

Page 38: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

Bush’s waning power• By 2008, President Bush

approval ratings were as low as Nixon’s had been on his resignation.

• Bush, now broken and powerless, watched as a new political reality emerged: anti-war candidate, Barack Obama stepped into the limelight…

• Barack Obama’s positive campaign and Anti-War message sharply contrasted Bush’s tired and broken adminsitration.

Page 39: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

Iraq Today• Pres. Obama ordered the

withdrawal of most combat forces in the summer of 2010.

• However, most of these were redeployed into Afghanistan.

• A democratically elected government is in power in Iraq, but still needs limited support from the U.S.

• It is reasonable to assume that we will have troops on the ground there for years to come.

Page 40: The Iraq War Propaganda, failed intelligence and WMD.

Iraq War Statistics: Body Count

• U.S. Killed – 4,404• U.S. wounded – 31,827• Iraqi Security Forces – 9,010• Civilian deaths- 100,000-200,000 (no hard figures)

• Media -181• Enemy Combatants – 25,278