¶ … war on Iraq, and considers whether U.S. policy towards Iraq can prevail, through an analysis of eight facets of this policy: international trade; weapons of mass destruction; democratization; the war against tyranny vs. The grab for oil; the "shock and awe" tactics used at the beginning of the war; the U.S. occupation vs. liberation; whether the new government of Iraq will be Iraqi run or whether Iraq will become a puppet state; and, Operation Iraqi Freedom. The analysis is performed by means of an in-depth literature review, with relevant statistical support, where necessary. It is found that the war on Iraq was founded on false premises, and that the current U.S. policy towards Iraq is not sustainable for the Iraqi people nor for the honour of the U.S. government.
Introduction
The war on Iraq (which some people would argue was an illegal invasion on Iraq, as it happened without regard for international law and also pre-emptively) began almost one year ago, and despite the fact that the U.S. government is trying to persuade its populace that the war is over, by making a show of handing power back to the people of Iraq (although it is not yet known who those people will be, or if those people will agree enough in the meantime to form a democratic governing body), the war is far from over. Day by day, the number of dead and the number of casualties increase in Iraq, with bombings and disagreements amongst rival Iraqi groups, most obviously the different factions of Muslims, the Shi'as and the Sunnis.
This paper looks at the war in Iraq, from an in-depth empirical viewpoint, and asks if U.S. policy can prevail. The following eight facets of U.S. policy towards Iraq are discussed in turn: international trade; weapons of mass destruction; democratization; the war against tyranny vs. The grab for oil; the "shock and awe" tactics used at the beginning of the war; the U.S. occupation vs. liberation; whether the new government of Iraq will be Iraqi run or whether Iraq will become a puppet state; and, Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Methodology and Methods
The methods employed in this paper include sourcing relevant literature, from political science journals, and various U.S. government and Iraqi interim government policy documents, along with reports and documents from various other - neutral - organizations that have independently looked in to some of the claims of the U.S. (in particular the claims about Weapons of Mass Destruction thought to have been present in Iraq, and used as a justification for going to war on Iraq).
Once the most relevant documents had been located, in terms of finding documents that had as broad a range of opinions as possible, to avoid bias in the paper, the sources were studied in-depth, within the framework outlined in the Introduction; each document's relevance to the eight facets of U.S. policy was then screened, and once its pertinence to the question in hand was ascertained, the document was studied thoroughly and used as a basis upon which to undertake the necessary empirical statistical analyses. A review of the thorough analysis of the content of each document, in terms of its relevance for the eight facets of policy under study is given in the Literature Review section.
In terms of harnessing statistical information from each of the documents, raw figures are often the most useful for this exercise i.e., number of dead in Iraq since March 2003, economic factors in Iraq before and after March 2003 etc. These raw figures were picked out from the documents during their thorough analyses: the statistics, and opinions gained from these statistics, with regards to the main question of the paper (i.e., Will U.S. policy in Iraq prevail?) will be presented in the Findings and Results section.
Literature Review
This section covers some pertinent literature reviewed during the course of this investigation. As we have seen, eight facets of U.S. policy on Iraq have been analysed in depth, and the results of the analysis of each of these will be presented in turn in this section.
International trade
In terms of the effect that the war in Iraq had on international trade, many share indices were down before the war in Iraq, and then rose steadily once the war had been 'won'. In addition, the war on Iraq had little impact on the ongoing multilateral trade negotiations in the WTO, even though officials at the WTO confess to have been worried about the possible negative effects of the war on trans-Atlantic commercial relations (International...
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