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The book Operation Iraqi Freedom is a valuable resource for those needing nuance and informed comment beyond the news headlines.
The Iraq Effect is a thought-provoking but flawed study commissioned by the U.S. Air Force on the regional implications of the 2003 Iraq war. Trends discussed may be real, but their presence before Operation Iraqi Freedom suggests that they should not be attributed only to the war.
With hindsight, perhaps Cameron’s decision to intervene militarily in Libya to prevent a humanitarian disaster and remove Muammar Gaddafi’s regime should not have been a surprise to anyone.
Operation Iraqi Freedom was but one campaign in what we have come to call "The Long War" in the Greater Middle East.
While debate has continued in recent months in Washington and Baghdad about the wisdom and need for U.S. forces to remain in Iraq, Obama's statement at the United Nations General Assembly appears to end the debate.
Just days after U.S. forces withdrew from Iraq, a series of attacks in Baghdad have raised doubts about the security of the country, while political upheaval threatens to undermine its government. AEI’s vice president for foreign and defense policy studies, Danielle Pletka, shared some questions with U.S. Senator John McCain.
With the UN-mandated imposition of a no-fly zone over Libya, President Obama has now thrust us into our third Mideast shooting war.
The Iraq campaign is over. Saddam’s statues have fallen. But the march to Baghdad toppled more than a noxious regime. Gone, too, is a half-century of U.S. military doctrine, its long-standing institutions and assumptions buried amidst the rubble of the Ba’athist state. What insights does Operation Iraqi Freedom offer...




