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This Day In Iraqi History - May 10 Army forced PM Talib to resign Pres Arif became PM
1920 Nationalist Haras al-Istiqlal decided to increase campaign for independence in Baghdad Agreed on joint Sunni-Shii...
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Dr. Michael Izady of Columbia’s School of International and Public Affairs recently gave an interview to the Swiss-based International Relat...
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Professor Nadje Al-Ali is a professor of gender studies at SOAS, University of London. She has authored several books and articles...
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Mohammed Halbusi was re-elected speaker of parliament in 1st step towards creating a new Iraqi govt (NRT) Iraq’s new parliament met for the ...
4 comments:
From Harry Barnes
I undertook the bulk of my UK National Service at a Movements Unit in Basra from February 1955 to November 1956. Much of my work was with Iraqi State Railways. I was lucky enough not to experience a sand storm. I also only ever heard one gun shot in that time. It was from the Iraqi Army aimed at an escaped prisoner, whom they thankfully missed.
They're called sand storms, but I believe they're actually made out of dust from the decrease in arable land. Large tracks in Iraq are drying up and all the top layer cakes up and gets blown away by the winds creating these huge storms.
Hi Joel,
Excellent blog!
Can you write more about the logistics and your expectations for the withdrawal.
Hi Anon, unfortunately there's not a lot of details being released right now about the U.S. withdrawal. About a month ago the U.S. military decided to cut back on information because they were afraid it would be used by militants to plan attacks.
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