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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 15 page overview of the problems which have unfolded in postwar Iraq. The author reviews the world commitment to overcoming these problems. The contention is presented that even in the face of continued radical resistance many nations, and the United States in particular, have proven that they not only have the fortitude but also the resources to do so. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
Page Count:
15 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPiraqAf.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
According to an August 8, 2003 pronouncement by President George W. Bush, major combat operations in Iraq have finally ended. Many in governmental offices are quite positive about
the outcome. Indeed, the administrations report entitled "100 Days Toward Security and Freedom" is quite optimistic that the undercurrent of turbulence which does continue to exist in Iraq will
soon be soothed. The projection of "one hundred days", however, would soon prove overly optimistic. Indeed, more Americans are reported to have died in Iraq (some 143 in
fact) since the fall of the Hussein regime than those who died during the actual fighting (Hunt, 2003; Kole, 2003). Since that one-hundred days have elapsed we have witnessed
riots in the previously apparently peaceful city of Basra (riots spawned evidently by the gas and electricity shortages which now characterize much of Iraq), the sabotage and bombing of one
of the critical oil pipelines pumping oil into Turkey as well as a water main in Baghdad, and perhaps most disturbing, the bombing and total destruction of the U.N. building
in Baghdad (Whitelaw, 2003). Soon afterward a subsequent explosion would rip apart the Canal Hotel, the same Canal Hotel which had housed the U.N. for some ten years (Whitelaw,
2003). The twenty-three casualties would include key U.N. officials such as Sergio Vieira de Mello (the top U.N. official in Iraq in fact and one of the most respected
diplomats in the world) (Whitelaw, 2003). Such atrocities continue to occur despite the continued presence of some 164,000 foreign troops in Iraq, troops comprised largely by U.S. soldiers (Kole,
2003). Indeed, some 140,000 of this number are U.S. troops (Hunt, 2003). Another 11,000 of the foreign troops are from Britain, "3,000 from Italy, 2,400 from Poland, 1,650
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