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Aftermath Of The Invasion Of Iraq In 2003

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Aftermath of the Invasion
Finally, it is important to note that the invasion of Iraq has produced several challenging problems for Iraq, the region, the international community, and for neoconservatives themselves. In fact, the failure to find weapons of mass destruction, the lack of planning for the period after the military operations ended, as well as the violent opposition to the new regime were the primary results of the neoconservative misconceptions about Iraq (Plesch, 2005, p. 45). Additionally, in their War on Terror and the invasion of Iraq, the United States and its coalition did not achieve their objective of weakening terrorist groups. Also, in the immediate period after the invasion in 2003 and throughout 2004, the Iraqi view …show more content…

1). Also, with the power vacuum that was left in Iraq after the fall of Saddam Hussein’s regime and Iraqi institutions, Al-Qaeda’s power to recruit and morale increased, thus, Al-Qaeda’s operational capability flourished (Transnational terrorism after the Iraq war, 2003, p. 2). Therefore, in the immediate period after the invasion, Al-Qaeda was able to establish its roots in Iraq and grow its influence amongst the Sunni Muslims in Iraq (Transnational terrorism after the Iraq war, 2003, p. …show more content…

Rather than creating a new Liberal democracy in the Middle East, the neoconservative invasion of Iraq resulted in a destroyed infrastructure, a corrupt democracy, and a power vacuum that allowed terrorist organizations to establish a presence in the country. Also, despite being illegal under international law and not having the authorization from the Security Council, the United States took the unilateral decision to invade and occupy Iraq in 2003 and to pursue its hegemony, exceptionalism, and global military dominance. More importantly, neoconservatives misunderstood Iraq as well as underestimated the short and long-term implications of the invasion. Iraq did not attack any other country prior to the invasion in 2003 and did not pose an urgent threat to international order like the world was made to believe. After all, Iraq was found to have no weapons of mass destruction and no connections to terrorist organizations such as

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