Search Results - "Saddam Hussein"

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    Blind to their doings till the end by Abd Razak, Dzulkifli

    Published 2006
    “…Like Saddam Hussein, there are others who should be charged for war crimes in Iraq. …”
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    Guna akal daripada emosi by Abd Rahman, Saodah

    Published 2004
    “…Peristiwa begini merupakan satu bentuk penghinaan Amerika Syarikat (AS) terhadap umat Islam yang mengharapkan pembelaan selepas kekejaman Saddam Hussein.…”
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  10. 10

    A flawed trial by Abd Razak, Dzulkifli

    Published 2007
    “…Metaphorically speaking, the head of the person who "tried to kill my dad" was finally handed to the US president. For all of Saddam Hussein haters, at least momentarily, there was a feeling of relief, if not triumph. …”
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    Fighting for peace by Abd Razak, Dzulkifli

    Published 2005
    “…A classical case is of course the spin on Saddam Hussein’s weapons of mass destruction and the invasion of Iraq. …”
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    A second Vietnam War for America? by Abd Razak, Dzulkifli

    Published 2003
    “…The bombing, the first after that Bush announcement, is part of Qperation Ivy Cyclone — a new drive to root out guerillas around Tikrit, Saddam Hussein's hometown. It was intended as a "show of force" designed to scare unknown assailants (at one time assumed as undeter mined and unskilled) who were re sponsible for shooting down a Chinook transport helicopter on Nov 2, killing 16 US soldiers, the largest single casualty so far.…”
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    Wilful blindness or blissful ignorance? The United States and the successful denucelarization of Iraq by Ryan, Maria

    Published 2014
    “…US policy towards Iraq, from the Clinton administration onwards, was hyper-politicized; it relied on a default, unchanging view of Saddam Hussein as a rogue leader bent on WMD acquisition and regional domination in an area that was of vital importance to the United States. …”
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    The U.S. geopolitical code and the role of the Persian Gulf oil in the U.S. military intervention in 2003 by Naji, Saeid, Jawan, Jayum

    Published 2014
    “…In this respect, the threat of Saddam Hussein’s Iraqi government to three vast fields of energy reservoirs in the Persian Gulf made it necessary to affect regime change so as to protect the free flow of oil to the West and this was done through the control and preservation of the U.S. hegemonic position.…”
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  16. 16

    Insurgency, political stability and economic performance in post-Saddam Iraq: an evaluation by Jalal Nore, Abdul Wahed Jalal Nore, Abdul Ghani, Ahmad Bashawir

    Published 2009
    “…On March 20, 2003, the coalition forces headed by the United States of America launched Operation Iraqi Freedom to remove the regime of Saddam Hussein. By mid-April, major fighting was essentially over, and on May 1, the United States declared an end to major combat operations. …”
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    The image of man after September 11 / Mohd. Shaharudin Sabu...[et.al] by Sabu, Mohd. Shaharudin, Supar, Mohd. Saharuddin, Ahmad, Hisammudin, Sulaiman, Shaharin, Abdul Rahim, Ahmad Zuraimi, Bebit, Mohd. Ali Azraei, Mohd Kaulan, Shahrul Munir

    Published 2016
    “…First the American greed to conquer the oil rich countries, second to get rid of Saddam Hussein who was powerful in the 1990’s and possessed Weapon of Mass Destruction (WMD) which endangered the security of the Israel people, and thirdly, to introduce American style of democracy which actually the Americans needed to have full political control of all Muslim oil rich countries. …”
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    Kurdistan region: A country profile by Kirmanj, Sherko

    Published 2013
    “…At the end of the Second Gulf War in early 1991, the Kurdish people in Iraq rose against Saddam Hussein’s regime by liberating most of the areas inhabited by them.However, within a few weeks, the uprising was crushed.The Iraqi army’s attack on Kurdish cities and villages and its retaliation against the Kurdish forces and civilians led to a mass exodus of the Kurds to Iran and Turkey.The international community’s intervention resulted in the creation of the northern no-fly-zone by the UN Security Council.This facilitated the return of most of Kurdish refugees back to their habitat.But the continued pressure by the Kurds on the regime forced the government to withdraw its forces, as well as the administrative units from parts of Kurdistan in October 1991.The Kurds then filled the vacuum created by holding elections in 1992, and thus began self-governance in the region.The areas under the control of Kurdish authorities since then came to be known as the Kurdistan Region (RG) which was a self-declared federal region in Iraq until 2005 when the Iraqi constitution officially recognized the region of Kurdistan, along with its existing authorities, as a federal region in Iraq. …”
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    Distribution of powers between federal government and local government: a critical analysis of the Iraqi constitution 2005 by Alsamee, Esraa Mahmood Badr

    Published 2018
    “…Following the downfall of Saddam Hussein and his regime in 2003, Iraq has adopted federalism under the Constitution of 2005, which subsequently transformed the country from a unitary state to a federal state. …”
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    Legal protection of air pollution in Iraq by Ashour, Ameel Jabbar, Abdul Wahab, Harlida

    Published 2016
    “…Environmental experts agree that the current environmental problems in Iraq are the result of three great wars; all kinds of internationally prohibited weapons were used by, Saddam Hussein, the previous Iraqi regime.Needless to say, the effect of the Second Gulf War on the environment in Iraq and other neighboring countries in 1991 is equal to the great environmental pollution resulting from the explosion of the Nuclear Chernobyl Reactor in the Soviet Union in 1986.That war damaged the coastal areas in some countries, led to the increase of earth’s temperature and the pollution of water and air due to a massive oil leak and widespread fires in the oil wells. …”
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