Operation Iraqi Freedom Case Study

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Operation Iraqi Freedom was an incredibly dangerous undertaking not only for U.S. coalition forces, but also for the journalists embedded within coalition units. The Operation and subsequent war in Iraq were officially framed as swift responses to Iraq’s alleged possession of weapons of mass destruction, although later investigations within the country were largely unsuccessful. In a January 2003 poll, 64% of Americans polled by CBS approved of military action in Iraq, however 62% believed that military action would increase terrorist threats to the United States and 63% expressed a desire for diplomatic action in place of military efforts to resolve the hypothetical threat of chemical, biological and nuclear weapons that at the time Iraq was believed to possess.

Regardless of whether or not Iraq under the governance of Saddam Hussein and his Ba’ahist regime was in active possession or had ever had possessed weapons of mass destruction the end result was the same, Saddam Hussein’s government was toppled, over one hundred thousand Iraqi civilians and combatant’s died and over four
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During the interview Jumana described the horrific torture she had undergone during her two year imprisonment, during which she had allegedly been subjected to electroshock torture and rape by Ba’athist policeman and guards. She also stated that her husband had also been imprisoned in Al Kelab Al Sayba, but had been executed. Jumana Hanna’s story was published by the Washington Post and was placed on the front page and presented to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee by Deputy Defense Secretary Paul D. Wolfowitz. In follow up reports written in Esquire and the Washington Post in January of 2005 it was determined that none of her allegations could be verified and her husband was not executed in Al Kelab Al Sayba, but was still alive in