Gulf War 2 - translation to English
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Gulf War 2 - translation to English

2003–2011 WAR AFTER AN AMERICAN-LED INVASION
Third Gulf War; Second Iraq War; Operation Iraqi Freedom; Gulf War II; War on Iraq; Iraqi War; Iraq War (2003); Operation: Iraqi Freedom; 2nd Gulf War; War in iraq; Gulf war 2; Iraq invasion; The Iraq War; Iraqi Freedom; War of Iraq; Third Persian Gulf War; WAR IN IRAQ; The war on iraq; Battle of Iraq; Iraq war; War of iraq; Operation Iraqi Freedom II; Operation Iraqi Freedom III; Operation Iraqi Freedom 3; Irak War; Battle for iraq; Iraq liberation; Iraq War 2003; The war in iraq; Operation Iraqi Freedom soldier; Iraq War Veteran; Oif soldier; Operation iraqi freedom soldier; Persian Gulf War II; Operation Iraq Freedom; War In Iraq; Operation Iraqi Freedom I; Gulf War 2; Operation Iraqi Freedom VI; Gulf war II; Invasion and Occupation of Iraq; 2003 conflict in Iraq; No War For Oil; No war for oil; Iraq 2003; Second Iraq war; Operation New Dawn (Iraq, 2010-2011); Iraq War (2003-11); Iraq War (2003–11); Operation New Dawn (Iraq, 2010–2011); 2003-2011 iraq war; Iraq War (2003-2011); War crimes in the Iraq War; Foreign involvement in the Iraq War; Economic cost of the Iraq War; Economic costs of the Iraq War
  • governorate]]
  • Abu Ghraib]] released in 2006 shows a pyramid of abused Iraqi prisoners.
  • newspaper=The Irish Times}}</ref>
  • Aerial view of the [[Green Zone]], Baghdad International Airport, and the contiguous Victory Base Complex in Baghdad
  • Convention center for Council of Representatives of Iraq
  • [[Coalition Provisional Authority]] director [[L. Paul Bremer]] signs over sovereignty to the appointed [[Iraqi Interim Government]], 28 June 2004.
  • Nouri al-Maliki meets with [[George W. Bush]], June 2006
  • George W. Bush]] announces the new strategy on Iraq from the White House Library, 10 January 2007.
  • Ramstein]], Germany, for medical treatment (February 2007)
  • Car bombing was a frequently used tactic by insurgents in Iraq.
  • Child killed by a car bomb in Kirkuk, July 2011
  • 20px
  • Gun camera footage of the [[July 12, 2007, Baghdad airstrike]], that killed 12 people, including [[Reuters]] employees [[Namir Noor-Eldeen]] and [[Saeed Chmagh]].
  • M198]] artillery piece firing outside Fallujah in October 2004
  • 20px
  • Alabama Army National Guard MP, MSG Schur, during a joint community policing patrol in Basra, 3 April 2010
  • Iraqi army battalion trains for urban operations
  • Polish [[GROM]] forces in sea operations during the Iraq War
  • Kuwaiti troops]] closing the gate between Kuwait and Iraq on 18 December 2011
  • The US House of Representatives debating the use of military force with Iraq, 8 October 2002
  • An Iraqi soldier and vehicles from the 42nd&nbsp; Brigade, 11th Iraqi Army Division during a firefight with armed militiamen in the Sadr City district of Baghdad 17 April 2008
  • Map of the invasion routes and major operations/battles of the Iraq War through 2007
  • Iraq]] as of September 2003
  • 15px
  • 15px
  • Iraqi [[commandos]] training under the supervision of soldiers from the US [[82nd Airborne]] in December 2010
  • An Iraqi Army unit prepares to board a Task Force Baghdad [[UH-60 Blackhawk]] helicopter for a counterinsurgency mission in [[Baghdad]] in 2007.
  • 3D map of southern Turkey and northern Iraq
  • US Marines]] from [[3rd Battalion 3rd Marines]] clear a house in [[Al Anbar Governorate]].
  • Protesters on 19 March 2005, in [[London]], where over 150,000 marched
  • access-date=26 July 2015}}</ref>
  • [[M1 Abrams]] tanks in Iraqi service, January 2011
  • [[US Navy]] and Coast Guard personnel stand guard aboard the [[Al Basrah Oil Terminal]] in July 2009.
  • Fall of Baghdad]].
  • troop surge]] and its aftermath.
  • A city street in [[Ramadi]] heavily damaged by the fighting in 2006
  • A woman pleads with an [[Iraqi army]] soldier from 2nd Company, 5th Brigade, 2nd Iraqi Army Division to let a suspected insurgent free during a raid near Tafaria, [[Iraq]].
  • [[United States Secretary of State]] [[Colin Powell]] holding a model vial of [[anthrax]] while giving a presentation to the [[United Nations Security Council]]
  • US President [[Barack Obama]] delivering a speech at Camp Lejeune on 27 February 2009
  • The U.S. army testing the harmful radiation fragments on the ground in Basra, Iraq.
  • Marines from D Company, 3rd Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion guard detainees prior to loading them into their vehicle.
  • access-date=19 January 2014}}</ref>
  • [[Saddam Hussein]] being pulled from his hideaway in [[Operation Red Dawn]], 13 December 2003
  • link=
  • link=
  • link=Execution of Saddam Hussein
  • US troops fire mortars.
  • States with an uncertain or no official standpoint}}
  • Street fighting in [[Mosul]] in January 2008
  • Destroyed remains of Iraqi tanks near Al Qadisiyah
  • Syrian Kurds]]}}
  • Iraqi tank on Highway 27 destroyed in April 2003
  • US Army soldier on the roof of an Iraqi police station in [[Haqlaniyah]], July 2011
  • US Marines escort captured enemy prisoners to a holding area in the desert of Iraq on 21 March 2003.
  • Humvee struck by an improvised explosive device attack in Iraq on 29 September 2004. Staff Sgt. Michael F. Barrett, a military policeman in Marine Wing Support Squadron 373, was severely injured in the attack.
  • Marine Corps]] [[M1&nbsp;Abrams]] tank patrols Baghdad after its fall in 2003.
  • US soldiers at the Hands of Victory monument in Baghdad
  • archive-date=1 July 2008}}</ref>
  • The water pollution from chemical spill
  • A UN weapons inspector in Iraq, 2002

Gulf War 2         
Guerra del golfo 2, operazione liberazione dell"Iraq, operazione bellica condotta in Iraq nel marzo 2003 dalle forze americane e alleate allo scopo di disarmare l"Iraq di armi illegali e liberare il paese dal regime di Saddam Hussein
Desert Storm         
  • 3rd Armored Division]] along the Line of Departure
  • A M109A2 howitzer belonging to Battery C, 4th Battalion of the 3rd Field Artillery Regiment, 2nd Armored Division (FWD) moves into position to conduct fire missions during the [[Battle of Norfolk]], February 1991.
  • McDonnell Douglas A-4KU Skyhawk]] [[ground-attack aircraft]]
  • title = The British Challenger 1 Main Battle Tank}}</ref>
  • U. S. M1A1 Abrams tanks move out on a mission during Desert Storm in 1991. A [[Bradley IFV]] and logistics convoy can be seen in the background.
  • Aftermath of an Iraq Armed Forces strike on US barracks
  • U.S. Air Force]], which killed  at least 408 civilians in [[Baghdad]]
  • Comfort}}, February 1991
  • Two Iraqi T-55 tanks lie abandoned near Kuwait City on 26 February 1991.
  • An OH-58D Kiowa helicopter departs from a communications site in the desert during Operation Desert Shield
  • Military operations during Khafji's liberation
  • A Bradley IFV burns after being hit by Iraqi [[T-72]] fire.
  • military forces]] retreating from Kuwait.
  • Thanksgiving Day]], 1990.
  • President Bush visiting American troops in Saudi Arabia on Thanksgiving Day, 1990
  • 1st Battalion, 41st Infantry Regiment]] pose with a captured Iraqi tank, February 1991
  • Canadian [[CF-18 Hornet]]s participated in combat during the Gulf War.
  • [[British Army]] [[Challenger 1]] main battle tank during Operation Desert Storm
  • Prince Sultan, Minister of Defence and Aviation]] in Saudi Arabia to discuss how to handle the [[invasion of Kuwait]].
  • Countries that deployed coalition forces or provided support<ref name="auto7"/> (On behalf of Afghanistan, 300 Mujaheddin joined the coalition on 11 February 1991. Niger contributed 480 troops to guard shrines in Mecca and Medina on 15 January 1991.)<ref name="auto7"/>
  • An [[armored bulldozer]] similar to the ones used in the attack
  • 3rd Field Artillery Regiment]], 2nd Armored Division (FWD) conducts artillery strikes on Iraqi positions during the [[1st Gulf War]]. 4-3 FA was the primary fire support battalion for Task Force 1-41 during the [[1st Gulf War]], February 1991.
  • Destroyed Iraqi civilian and military vehicles on the [[Highway of Death]]
  • Ground troop movements 24–28 February 1991 during [[Operation Desert Storm]]
  • Type 59]] tank lies destroyed after a coalition bombing attack during Operation Desert Storm.
  • A destroyed Iraqi Army T-55 tank lies among the wreckage of many other Iraqi vehicles, such as trucks, cars and buses, somewhere along the [[Highway of Death]] in April 1991.
  • 3rd Armored Division]] fire
  • Iraqi tanks destroyed by [[Task Force 1-41 Infantry]], February 1991
  • Republican Guard]] T-55 tank destroyed by Task Force 1–41 Infantry, February 1991
  • The [[USAF]] [[F-117 Nighthawk]], one of the key aircraft used in Operation Desert Storm
  • Approximate area and major clashes in which DU rounds were used
  • Civilians and coalition military forces wave Kuwaiti and Saudi Arabian flags as they celebrate the retreat of Iraqi forces from Kuwait.
  • HMAS ''Sydney'']] in the Persian Gulf in 1991
  • Type 63]] armored personnel carriers and trucks on Highway 8 in March 1991
  • transport helicopter]], after being captured by a US Marine Corps unit at the start of the ground phase of Operation Desert Storm
  • Iraqi Army]].
  • Type 69]] tank destroyed by the French [[Division Daguet]] during Operation Desert Storm
  • Map of Kuwait
  • [[Iraqi Kurds]] fleeing to Turkey shortly after the war
  • Chieftain]] [[main battle tank]]s
  • Kuwaiti Armed Forces [[M-84]] [[main battle tank]]s
  • A M109A2 howitzer belonging to Battery C, 4th Battalion of the 3rd Field Artillery Regiment, 2nd Armored Division (FWD) during the Gulf War, February 1991.
  • M3 Bradleys of L Troop, 3rd ACR, stand in line at a holding area during the build-up to Operation Desert Shield.
  • Tomahawk missile]]. The Gulf War was the last conflict in which [[battleship]]s were deployed in a combat role.
  • American F-15Es parked in Saudi Arabia during Operation Desert Shield
  • Oil well fires rage outside Kuwait City in 1991.
  • Gen. [[Colin Powell]] (left), Gen. [[Norman Schwarzkopf Jr.]], and [[Paul Wolfowitz]] (right) listen as Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney addresses reporters regarding the 1991 Gulf War.
  • American AH-64 Apache helicopters proved to be very effective weapons during the 1991 Gulf War.
  • Destroyed [[LAV-25]]
  • [[Donald Rumsfeld]], US special envoy to the Middle East, meets [[Saddam Hussein]] on 19–20 December 1983.
  • Military personnel examine the remains of a Scud.
  • General Norman Schwarzkopf visit Kuwaiti dignitaries in the aftermath of Operation Desert Storm.
  • 11th Air Defense Artillery Brigade]] during the Gulf War
  • Iraqi 'Saddam' main battle tank destroyed during Operation Desert Storm
  • One of the Italian tornadoes used in the operation
  • Marine Artillery played a huge factor in disrupting Iraqi counterattacks during the [[1st Gulf War]], February 1991.
  • F-16C]]
  • Sailors from a US Navy honor guard carry Navy pilot [[Scott Speicher]]'s remains.
  • A sentry patrols along a line-up of OH-58 Kiowa helicopters
  • Coalition troops from Egypt, Syria, Oman, France, and Kuwait during Operation Desert Storm
1990–1991 WAR BETWEEN IRAQ AND AMERICAN-LED COALITION FORCES
First Gulf War; Operation Desert Storm; Desert Storm; Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm; 1991 Persian Gulf War; 1990/1 Gulf War; UN-Iraq war; Operation Desert Shield; Desert Shield; Gulf War I; Gulf War One; Gulf war; 1991 Gulf War; Operation: Desert Storm; Stuart Lockwood; Iraqi wars; Iraq War (1991); 1990 Gulf War; 1991 Iraq war; Naming the Gulf War; The Persian Gulf War; Persain Gulf War; Gulf Crisis; Operation Desert Sword; Persian Gulf war; DESERT STORM; Persian Gulf War of 1991; The Gulf War; Operations Desert Shield; Operation Desert Sabre; American Casualties in Operation Desert Storm; Gulf War 1; Gulf war 1; Desert Shield and Storm; Operation desert shield; 1991 Iraq War; 1990-1991 Iraq War; Desert storm; Operation Desert storm; Naming the gulf war; Gulf 1; Operation Desert Shield/Desert Storm; First US-Iraq War; Persian Gulf War; Arabian Gulf War; 1991 Arabian Gulf War; Operation Desert Storm, 1990; 1st Gulf War; DESERT SHIELD; Operation Desert Shield (Gulf War); Operation Desert Shield/Storm; 1990 Gulf Crisis; 1991 Gulf Crisis; 1990-1991 Gulf War; 1990/1991 Gulf Crisis; 1991 Middle East War; Golf War; 1991 Persian Gulf conflict; Kuwait war; Kuwait War; 1990–1991 Iraq War; Operation Desert Shield/Operation Desert Storm; 1990 invasion of Iraq; First Iraq War; Gulf-War; Casualties of the Gulf War; Video Game War; 1990 Iraq War; War of the Persian Gulf; Persian Gulf crisis; Gulf War of 1991
Tempesta del deserto (nome attribuito dagli americani alla guerra del golfo)
Gulf crisis         
  • 3rd Armored Division]] along the Line of Departure
  • A M109A2 howitzer belonging to Battery C, 4th Battalion of the 3rd Field Artillery Regiment, 2nd Armored Division (FWD) moves into position to conduct fire missions during the [[Battle of Norfolk]], February 1991.
  • McDonnell Douglas A-4KU Skyhawk]] [[ground-attack aircraft]]
  • title = The British Challenger 1 Main Battle Tank}}</ref>
  • U. S. M1A1 Abrams tanks move out on a mission during Desert Storm in 1991. A [[Bradley IFV]] and logistics convoy can be seen in the background.
  • Aftermath of an Iraq Armed Forces strike on US barracks
  • U.S. Air Force]], which killed  at least 408 civilians in [[Baghdad]]
  • Comfort}}, February 1991
  • Two Iraqi T-55 tanks lie abandoned near Kuwait City on 26 February 1991.
  • An OH-58D Kiowa helicopter departs from a communications site in the desert during Operation Desert Shield
  • Military operations during Khafji's liberation
  • A Bradley IFV burns after being hit by Iraqi [[T-72]] fire.
  • military forces]] retreating from Kuwait.
  • Thanksgiving Day]], 1990.
  • President Bush visiting American troops in Saudi Arabia on Thanksgiving Day, 1990
  • 1st Battalion, 41st Infantry Regiment]] pose with a captured Iraqi tank, February 1991
  • Canadian [[CF-18 Hornet]]s participated in combat during the Gulf War.
  • [[British Army]] [[Challenger 1]] main battle tank during Operation Desert Storm
  • Prince Sultan, Minister of Defence and Aviation]] in Saudi Arabia to discuss how to handle the [[invasion of Kuwait]].
  • Countries that deployed coalition forces or provided support<ref name="auto7"/> (On behalf of Afghanistan, 300 Mujaheddin joined the coalition on 11 February 1991. Niger contributed 480 troops to guard shrines in Mecca and Medina on 15 January 1991.)<ref name="auto7"/>
  • An [[armored bulldozer]] similar to the ones used in the attack
  • 3rd Field Artillery Regiment]], 2nd Armored Division (FWD) conducts artillery strikes on Iraqi positions during the [[1st Gulf War]]. 4-3 FA was the primary fire support battalion for Task Force 1-41 during the [[1st Gulf War]], February 1991.
  • Destroyed Iraqi civilian and military vehicles on the [[Highway of Death]]
  • Ground troop movements 24–28 February 1991 during [[Operation Desert Storm]]
  • Type 59]] tank lies destroyed after a coalition bombing attack during Operation Desert Storm.
  • A destroyed Iraqi Army T-55 tank lies among the wreckage of many other Iraqi vehicles, such as trucks, cars and buses, somewhere along the [[Highway of Death]] in April 1991.
  • 3rd Armored Division]] fire
  • Iraqi tanks destroyed by [[Task Force 1-41 Infantry]], February 1991
  • Republican Guard]] T-55 tank destroyed by Task Force 1–41 Infantry, February 1991
  • The [[USAF]] [[F-117 Nighthawk]], one of the key aircraft used in Operation Desert Storm
  • Approximate area and major clashes in which DU rounds were used
  • Civilians and coalition military forces wave Kuwaiti and Saudi Arabian flags as they celebrate the retreat of Iraqi forces from Kuwait.
  • HMAS ''Sydney'']] in the Persian Gulf in 1991
  • Type 63]] armored personnel carriers and trucks on Highway 8 in March 1991
  • transport helicopter]], after being captured by a US Marine Corps unit at the start of the ground phase of Operation Desert Storm
  • Iraqi Army]].
  • Type 69]] tank destroyed by the French [[Division Daguet]] during Operation Desert Storm
  • Map of Kuwait
  • [[Iraqi Kurds]] fleeing to Turkey shortly after the war
  • Chieftain]] [[main battle tank]]s
  • Kuwaiti Armed Forces [[M-84]] [[main battle tank]]s
  • A M109A2 howitzer belonging to Battery C, 4th Battalion of the 3rd Field Artillery Regiment, 2nd Armored Division (FWD) during the Gulf War, February 1991.
  • M3 Bradleys of L Troop, 3rd ACR, stand in line at a holding area during the build-up to Operation Desert Shield.
  • Tomahawk missile]]. The Gulf War was the last conflict in which [[battleship]]s were deployed in a combat role.
  • American F-15Es parked in Saudi Arabia during Operation Desert Shield
  • Oil well fires rage outside Kuwait City in 1991.
  • Gen. [[Colin Powell]] (left), Gen. [[Norman Schwarzkopf Jr.]], and [[Paul Wolfowitz]] (right) listen as Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney addresses reporters regarding the 1991 Gulf War.
  • American AH-64 Apache helicopters proved to be very effective weapons during the 1991 Gulf War.
  • Destroyed [[LAV-25]]
  • [[Donald Rumsfeld]], US special envoy to the Middle East, meets [[Saddam Hussein]] on 19–20 December 1983.
  • Military personnel examine the remains of a Scud.
  • General Norman Schwarzkopf visit Kuwaiti dignitaries in the aftermath of Operation Desert Storm.
  • 11th Air Defense Artillery Brigade]] during the Gulf War
  • Iraqi 'Saddam' main battle tank destroyed during Operation Desert Storm
  • One of the Italian tornadoes used in the operation
  • Marine Artillery played a huge factor in disrupting Iraqi counterattacks during the [[1st Gulf War]], February 1991.
  • F-16C]]
  • Sailors from a US Navy honor guard carry Navy pilot [[Scott Speicher]]'s remains.
  • A sentry patrols along a line-up of OH-58 Kiowa helicopters
  • Coalition troops from Egypt, Syria, Oman, France, and Kuwait during Operation Desert Storm
1990–1991 WAR BETWEEN IRAQ AND AMERICAN-LED COALITION FORCES
First Gulf War; Operation Desert Storm; Desert Storm; Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm; 1991 Persian Gulf War; 1990/1 Gulf War; UN-Iraq war; Operation Desert Shield; Desert Shield; Gulf War I; Gulf War One; Gulf war; 1991 Gulf War; Operation: Desert Storm; Stuart Lockwood; Iraqi wars; Iraq War (1991); 1990 Gulf War; 1991 Iraq war; Naming the Gulf War; The Persian Gulf War; Persain Gulf War; Gulf Crisis; Operation Desert Sword; Persian Gulf war; DESERT STORM; Persian Gulf War of 1991; The Gulf War; Operations Desert Shield; Operation Desert Sabre; American Casualties in Operation Desert Storm; Gulf War 1; Gulf war 1; Desert Shield and Storm; Operation desert shield; 1991 Iraq War; 1990-1991 Iraq War; Desert storm; Operation Desert storm; Naming the gulf war; Gulf 1; Operation Desert Shield/Desert Storm; First US-Iraq War; Persian Gulf War; Arabian Gulf War; 1991 Arabian Gulf War; Operation Desert Storm, 1990; 1st Gulf War; DESERT SHIELD; Operation Desert Shield (Gulf War); Operation Desert Shield/Storm; 1990 Gulf Crisis; 1991 Gulf Crisis; 1990-1991 Gulf War; 1990/1991 Gulf Crisis; 1991 Middle East War; Golf War; 1991 Persian Gulf conflict; Kuwait war; Kuwait War; 1990–1991 Iraq War; Operation Desert Shield/Operation Desert Storm; 1990 invasion of Iraq; First Iraq War; Gulf-War; Casualties of the Gulf War; Video Game War; 1990 Iraq War; War of the Persian Gulf; Persian Gulf crisis; Gulf War of 1991
La crisi del golfo, guerra causata dall"invasione delle forze irachene di Saddam Hussein del Kuweit nel 1991

Definition

Gulf War syndrome
¦ noun an unexplained medical condition affecting some veterans of the 1991 Gulf War, causing fatigue, chronic headaches, and skin and respiratory disorders.

Wikipedia

Iraq War

The Iraq War was a protracted armed conflict in Iraq from 2003 to 2011 that began with the invasion of Iraq by the United States-led coalition that overthrew the Iraqi government of Saddam Hussein. The conflict continued for much of the next decade as an insurgency emerged to oppose the coalition forces and the post-invasion Iraqi government. US troops were officially withdrawn in 2011. The United States became re-involved in 2014 at the head of a new coalition, and the insurgency and many dimensions of the armed conflict are ongoing. The invasion occurred as part of the George W. Bush administration's war on terror following the September 11 attacks, despite no connection between Iraq and the attacks.

In October 2002, Congress granted Bush the power to decide whether to launch any military attack in Iraq. The Iraq War began on 20 March 2003, when the US, joined by the United Kingdom, Australia, and Poland, launched a "shock and awe" bombing campaign. Iraqi forces were quickly overwhelmed as coalition forces swept through the country. The invasion led to the collapse of the Ba'athist government; Saddam Hussein was captured during Operation Red Dawn in December of that same year and executed three years later. The power vacuum following Saddam's demise, and mismanagement by the Coalition Provisional Authority, led to widespread civil war between Shias and Sunnis, as well as a lengthy insurgency against coalition forces. The United States responded with a build-up of 170,000 troops in 2007. This build-up gave greater control to Iraq's government and military. In 2008, President Bush agreed to a withdrawal of all US combat troops from Iraq. The withdrawal was completed under Barack Obama in December 2011.

The United States based most of its rationale for the invasion on claims that Iraq had a weapons of mass destruction (WMD) program and posed a threat to the United States and its allies. Additionally, some US officials accused Saddam of harbouring and supporting al-Qaeda. In 2004, the 9/11 Commission concluded there was no evidence of any relationship between Saddam's regime and al-Qaeda. No stockpiles of WMDs or active WMD program were ever found in Iraq. Bush administration officials made numerous claims about a purported Saddam–al-Qaeda relationship and WMDs that were based on insufficient evidence rejected by intelligence officials. The rationale for war faced heavy criticism both domestically and internationally. Kofi Annan, then the Secretary-General of the United Nations, called the invasion illegal under international law, as it violated the UN Charter. The 2016 Chilcot Report, a British inquiry into the United Kingdom's decision to go to war, concluded that not every peaceful alternative had been examined, that the UK and US had undermined the United Nations Security Council in the process of declaring war, that the process of identification for a legal basis of war was "far from satisfactory", and that, these conclusions taken together, the war was unnecessary. When interrogated by the FBI, Saddam Hussein confirmed that Iraq did not have weapons of mass destruction prior to the US invasion.

In the aftermath of the invasion, Iraq held multi-party elections in 2005. Nouri al-Maliki became Prime Minister in 2006 and remained in office until 2014. The al-Maliki government enacted policies that alienated the country's previously dominant Sunni minority and worsened sectarian tensions. In the summer of 2014, the Islamic State launched a military offensive in northern Iraq and declared a worldwide Islamic caliphate, leading to Operation Inherent Resolve, another military response from the United States and its allies. According to a 2019 US Army study, Iran emerged as "the only victor" of the war.

An estimated 151,000 to 1,033,000 Iraqis died in the first three to five years of conflict. In total, the war caused 100,000 or more civilian deaths - about 61% of the total death count - as well as tens of thousands of military deaths (see estimates below). The majority of deaths occurred as a result of the insurgency and civil conflicts between 2004 and 2007. Subsequently, the War in Iraq of 2013 to 2017, which is considered a domino effect of the invasion and occupation, caused at least 155,000 deaths, in addition to the displacement of more than 3.3 million people within the country. Additionally, the war hampered the domestic popularity and public image of Bush, and also strongly affected Blair's popularity in the United Kingdom, leading to his resignation in 2007.