US lawmakers slam government on anniversary of Iraq war

By Umar Farooq</p> <p>WASHINGTON (AA) – U.S. lawmakers criticized the government Wednesday for its decision to invade Iraq 16 years ago, questioning the conflict’s legitimacy.</p> <p>Politicians called the invasion disastrous, saying it led to the country’s destruction and affected America’s global standing.</p> <p>&quot;Sixteen years ago, the U.S. illegally invaded Iraq, leaving a trail of destruction and lives lost,&quot; Congresswoman Ilhan Omar said on Twitter.</p> <p>Omar outlined the consequences of the invasion, saying 4,500 U.S. troops lost their lives, more than 100,000 Iraqi civilians were killed and the decision had done &quot;incalculable damage” to America’s reputation in the world.</p> <p>Senator Bernie Sanders also slammed the invasion, saying he had opposed it when the idea was proposed in Congress.</p> <p>&quot;Sixteen years ago, the United States invaded Iraq. I opposed it at the time, warning of unintended consequences. We are still dealing with those disastrous consequences today and will be for many years. We need a foreign policy that focuses on diplomacy, not war,&quot; Sanders tweeted.</p> <p>In March 2003, the U.S. invaded Iraq. Then-President George W. Bush said the country’s goals were to destroy the country's weapons of mass destruction (WMDs) and depose the country's leader, Saddam Hussein.</p> <p>A year later, after U.S. forces defeated the Iraqi army and captured Hussein, the U.S. administration acknowledged that its argument of Iraq having WMDs was mistaken, with David Kay, a former U.S. weapons inspector, saying &quot;we were almost all wrong&quot;.</p> <p>&quot;We must hold accountable those who repeatedly lied in the run-up to war,&quot; Omar said, arguing that both Bush and his vice president, Dick Cheney, had lied about WMDs in order to justify the invasion.</p> <p>The aftermath of the war scarred the image of the United States with the over 100,000-civilian death toll, and in April 2004, evidence of prisoner abuse inside the U.S.-run Abu Ghraib prison became public, showing photographic evidence of American soldiers torturing inmates. Eleven soldiers were convicted by U.S. courts of crimes related to the prison abuse scandal.</p> <p>Earlier this month, a coalition of Democratic lawmakers backed a veteran organization's pledge to end the &quot;forever wars&quot; in Iraq and Afghanistan.</p> <p>Among the congressional sponsors of the pledge were Senators Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders and lawmakers Ilhan Omar, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Ro Khanna.

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