Defeat: Why They Lost IraqAs the dreadful reality of the coalition's defeat in Iraq begins to sink in, one question dominates Washington and London: Why? In this controversial new book, Jonathan Steele provides a stark and arresting answer: Bush and Blair were defeated from the day they decided to occupy the country. Steele describes the centuries of humiliation that have scarred the Iraqi national psyche, creating a powerful and deeply felt nationalism and spreading cultural landmines along the road to winning Baghdad. Steele shows for the first time how the invasion and occupation were perceived by ordinary Iraqis, whose feelings and experiences were completely ignored by Western policymakers. The result of such arrogance, Steele demonstrates, was a failure that will forever resonate with such dark chapters of American and British history as the Vietnam War and the Suez Canal crisis. Blending vivid reportage, informed analysis, and sweeping historical narrative, "Defeat" is the definitive post-mortem on this pivotal catastrophe. |
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Abu Ghraib Ahmad Chalabi Al-Qaeda Al-Qaeda in Iraq al-Sadr Allawi Americans anger April Arab asked attacks Ayatollah Baath party Baathists Baghdad Basra Bremer Britain British troops called cent civilians coalition Dawa democracy elections exile Fallujah felt forces Foreign Office governing council Green Zone humiliation Hussein Ibid imams insurgency interview invasion Iran Iraq Iraq's Iraqi army Iraqi government Islamic Islamist issue Jaafari Kerbala killed Kurdish Kurds Kuwait later leaders liberal London Mahdi army March Mello Middle East military militias months Moqtada Moqtada al-Sadr mosque Muslim Najaf Nassiriya nationalist neoconservatives occupation officials organised police political politicians prime minister religious resistance Rumsfeld Saddam Sadr Sadr City Sadrists Salafi SCIRI sectarian secular senior Sheikh Shia Shia Islamists Sistani soldiers sovereignty street Sunni Sunnis and Shias tion told took toppled town violence wanted Washington Western withdrawal

