Michael O'Brien

America's Destruction of Iraq

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America's Destruction of Iraq by Washington insider Michael M. O'Brien details the origins of radical Islamic terrorism now spreading across the Middle East and North Africa. The outgrowth of America's involvement in Iraq, culminating with its March 2003 invasion, is the Islamic State–the most violent terrorist organization in history.
Michael O'Brien is an outlier: a conservative and former political appointee in the administration of George W. Bush, with an abiding contempt for the political and military mismanagement of the Iraq War, officially referred to as Operation Iraqi Freedom. A graduate of West Point and former Infantry officer, and a former U.S. government Contracting Officer, O'Brien saw the effects of the Iraq invasion from the inside out–not as a soldier but as a contractor advising the new Iraqi Army and Ministry of Defense on its physical infrastructure, including the acquisition of land and Forward Operating Bases (FOBs) originally built for Coalition forces.
Compounding in outrage, compelling in detail, Michael O'Brien condemns the waste of tens of billions of U.S. taxpayer dollars, and the needless loss of American and Iraqi lives. The Bush administration's desire for war was built on fabricated intelligence and the political agendas of a handful of senior officials. But it is the senior American military for whom O'Brien has his greatest disdain. They should have known how to properly execute the invasion of Iraq in March 2003, and the courage to tell their political superiors what it would take to succeed, come what may to their careers.
America's Destruction of Iraq is a detailed exposé of the “military-industrial complex” President Eisenhower warned America of in 1961. Only someone with Michael O'Brien's background and experience, who was at the heart of America's so-called 'reconstruction' of Iraq, can accurately describe America's intervention in Iraq for what it is: a disaster in magnitude equal to the quagmire of the Vietnam War.
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688 printed pages
Original publication
2016
Publication year
2016
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Quotes

  • Jasim Mezbanhas quoted5 years ago
    we had Saddam by the short hairs, his troops sprinting
  • Jasim Mezbanhas quoted5 years ago
    Hector Figueroa, secretary-treasurer of Local 32BJ of the Service Employees International Union, who called Judge Breyer’s ruling “a victory that will halt unnecessary discrimination against workers and turmoil in our economy.” He went on to say, “The court recognized that implementing ‘enforcement only’ policies based on a backlogged and inaccurate database will not fix our broken immigration system. The notion of making immigrant workers miserable—by targeting and scaring them through no-match letters, raids and other punitive measures—is not only inhumane, it’s irrational.”26
    Needless to say, the SEIU didn’t want the letters sent. That would have meant the U.S. was on to employers who weren’t doing what they were supposed to do—not employ illegal aliens. If the letters were sent and employers complied, the illegals would be detained and sent back home. They were here illegally, weren’t they? Isn’t that the law? Isn’t Judge Breyer supposed to enforce the law? But the SEIU won and the Department of Homeland Security lost.
    The Department of Homeland Security’s woes never seem to end. Thirteen years, almost to the date after the Twin Tower attacks, The Washington Post ran a front page story describing the “exodus” of top-level officials from the Department of Homeland Security. Current and former officials say this is undercutting the agency’s ability to stay
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