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Saddam hussein capture photographs
Saddam hussein capture photographs










saddam hussein capture photographs
  1. Saddam hussein capture photographs full#
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Most people continued with their daily lives as bombs continued to fall around them. After a week of bombings, it was amazing to witness the Iraqis' remarkable resilience.

saddam hussein capture photographs

On the first night, in spite of the thunderous explosions not far from the hotel the journalists were staying in, we observed that the weapons were destroying the targets with accuracy. I was in Baghdad with a hundred journalists during "Shock and Awe." When the operation began on March 21st, the prospect of dropping thousands bombs and missiles was frightening for everyone on the ground. Dead or still alive, but alone.Ī Sheikh Maaruf cemetery worker carries a reusable casket to the storage house after the funeral of Nidal Ali Jasem, a lonely deaf and dumb woman killed in a rocket blast in the south of Baghdad. After all, this is how I see the whole war thing - a dirty nightmare and ugly emptiness you are alone in. Not long after, I realized that was probably my best frame from the short and bloody desert rally - a simple but powerful picture of an unknown man "of military age" killed and left in an ugly landscape among tank trails, surrounded by nothing but dust and the noise of war. Somewhere near Nassiriya, this man was left to rot under the desert sun - and forgotten on my hard drive.

Saddam hussein capture photographs full#

It immediately got lost, the photo itself, amongst others full of emotions, blood and military action illustrating what would be celebrated as the liberation of a country from a tyrant. More bodies around, in different positions. Not far from this man, there was the wreckage of a truck hit by something powerful. Marines towards the Iraqi capital? I don't know. Who is the person in the picture that I took from atop an armored vehicle carrying U.S. Dead bodies were all around the road to Baghdad. I shot this picture almost ten years ago, just about the time when it was obvious to me that a war - a real one fought between armies - was over. This was the first time I'd seen a collective movement against Saddam Hussein's thuggish rule, though as history would show, this was not an end to the horrors this prison would witness. Frantic prisoners were injured or crushed to death in the mayhem as dozens tried to squeeze through the narrow opening to freedom. Guards stood between the prisoners and their liberators, swinging their clubs in all directions. The security here was heavier, but a portion of the cell block wall had been demolished. Thousands, desperate to find their relatives, streamed into the massive complex.īy dusk I was lost deep within Abu Ghraib, and came upon a frantic scene in an area where political prisoners were being held. In a few hours the waiting families had grown into a desperate mob that tore down the gates.

Saddam hussein capture photographs free#

With the war mounting, Saddam Hussein had agreed to free some of the men as a goodwill gesture. A hopeful crowd had gathered outside the notorious Abu Ghraib prison following a broadcast announcing amnesty for a selection of prisoners.












Saddam hussein capture photographs