Yuma Sun

20 years after U.S. invasion, young Iraqis see signs of hope

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BAGHDAD — On the banks of the Tigris River one recent evening, young Iraqi men and women in jeans and sneakers danced with joyous abandon to a local rap star as a vermillion sun set behind them. It’s a world away from the terror that followed the U.S. invasion 20 years ago.

Iraq ‘s capital today is throbbing with life and a sense of renewal, its residents enjoying a rare, peaceful interlude in a painful modern history. The wooden stalls of the city’s open-air book market are piled skyward with dusty paperbacks and crammed with shoppers of all ages and incomes. In a suburb once a hotbed of al-qaida, affluent young men cruise their muscle cars, while a recreation­al cycling club hosts weekly biking trips to former war zones. A few glitzy buildings sparkle where bombs once fell.

President George W. Bush called the U.s.-led invasion on March 20, 2003, a mission to free the Iraqi people and root out weapons of mass destructio­n. Saddam Hussein’s government was toppled in 26 days. Two years later, the CIA’S chief weapons inspector reported no stockpiles of nuclear, chemical or biological weapons were ever found.

The war deposed a dictator whose imprisonme­nt, torture and execution of dissenters kept 20 million people in fear for a quarter of a century. But it also broke what had been a unified state at the heart of the Arab world, opening a power vacuum and leaving oilrich Iraq a wounded nation in the Middle East, ripe for a power struggle among Iran, Arab Gulf states, the United States, terrorist groups and Iraq’s own rival sects and parties.

For Iraqis, the enduring trauma of the violence that followed is undeniable — an estimated 300,000 Iraqis were killed between 2003 and 2019, according to the Watson Institute for Internatio­nal and Public Affairs at Brown University, as were more than 8,000 U.S. military, contractor­s and civilians. The period was marred by unemployme­nt, dislocatio­n, sectarian violence and terrorism, and years without reliable electricit­y or other public services.

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