Subscribe
A Marine from 2nd Battalion, 23rd Marines watches for enemy movement from the cab of a seven-ton truck while convoying north through southern Iraq.

A Marine from 2nd Battalion, 23rd Marines watches for enemy movement from the cab of a seven-ton truck while convoying north through southern Iraq. (Mark Oliva/Stars and Stripes)

It began in President George W. Bush’s State of the Union speech Jan. 29, 2002. He singled out Iraq, Iran and North Korea as nations that support international terrorism.

“States like these, and their terrorist allies, constitute an axis of evil, arming to threaten the peace of the world,” Bush said. “By seeking weapons of mass destruction, these regimes pose a grave and growing danger. … The price of indifference would be catastrophic.”

The focus turned to Iraq. For months the United States lobbied the United Nations and sought to build a coalition. Allies such as Great Britain and Australia immediately offered support. Others, such as France and Germany, balked, and were labeled “old Europe” by Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld.

At 10:16 p.m. EST on March 19, President Bush again addressed the nation.

“My fellow citizens, at this hour, American and coalition forces are in the early stages of military operations to disarm Iraq, to free its people and to defend the world from grave danger.”

An Iraqi Major, right, and private sit flex-cuffed waiting for transport for interrogation along a hihgway south of An-Nasariyah, a city in southern Iraq. The major claimed to be a chemist with the Iraqi 11th Infantry Divison, which capitulated at the beginning of the war, but Marines still battled with irregulars loyal to Saddam Hussein within the city.

An Iraqi Major, right, and private sit flex-cuffed waiting for transport for interrogation along a hihgway south of An-Nasariyah, a city in southern Iraq. The major claimed to be a chemist with the Iraqi 11th Infantry Divison, which capitulated at the beginning of the war, but Marines still battled with irregulars loyal to Saddam Hussein within the city. (Mark Oliva/Stars and Stripes)

Movement through a schoolhouse in Al Fahr, Iraq, is fast and furious.

Movement through a schoolhouse in Al Fahr, Iraq, is fast and furious. (Mark Oliva/Stars and Stripes)

Marines stand at the gate of a suspected terrorist training camp outside of Baghdad on April 7. The mural of Saddam Hussein portrays him as protector of the Rock of the Dome, a sacred religious site in Jerusalem for Muslims.

Marines stand at the gate of a suspected terrorist training camp outside of Baghdad on April 7. The mural of Saddam Hussein portrays him as protector of the Rock of the Dome, a sacred religious site in Jerusalem for Muslims. (Mark Oliva/Stars and Stripes)

Iraqi villagers watch as an American convoy passes their home in the desert near Karbala.

Iraqi villagers watch as an American convoy passes their home in the desert near Karbala. (Joseph Giordono/Stars and Stripes)

An F-117A dropped a bomb in Baghdad, and rumors flew that intelligence had placed Saddam Hussein there.

And before the vaunted “shock and awe” bombing campaign could have any measurable effect, ground forces punched through sand berms on the Iraq-Kuwait border. The war was under way.

The cities began to fall: Umm Qasr, Nasiriyah, Karbala. The British slugged it out in Basra. Sandstorms choked progress. There were fierce battles and tragic encounters with Saddam’s Fedayeen, his black-hooded fighters.

In three weeks, U.S. forces took Baghdad. Though looting and disorder continue, the Saddam regime has been removed, and rebuilding is under way.

For three weeks, gripping tales of triumph and horror emerged from reporters on the scene. These are their stories and a look at how the events they described might change the nature of warfare.

Sign Up for Daily Headlines

Sign up to receive a daily email of today's top military news stories from Stars and Stripes and top news outlets from around the world.

Sign Up Now