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Who Really Made ISIS?- Part One

While the United States once again lead campaign against terrorism and radical Islamist fanatics, it's not a bad to look back and see how the same US government have created a fertile ground and sowed the seeds of evil against whom are now fighting.

No, this is not just another conspiracy theory that aims to prove that the US intelligence services directly created the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria. This is the story of how the US administration, with their irresponsible behavior, collapsed one stable regime, brought hell to the country that is attacked for no reason and sowed the seed from which it became something that calls itself the Islamic State.

Many believe that President George W. Bush in January 2001, was determined to start a war against Saddam Hussein and his Iraqi people. Immediately after September 11, the Bush administration began accusing Iraqi leader for cooperation with al-Qaeda and that he helped in the attacks on New York and Washington. They started talking about how Saddam is developing weapons of mass destruction. None of this was true.

So, the war began in March 2003. Bush and all around him were convinced that the war would be over quickly. In fact, they were right, because it happened. After a few days the Iraqi army was completely broken and demoralized and almost no longer ready to continue war.

Baghdad was soon occupied, and the coalition around the United States declared victory after less than a month of fighting.

Furnished scenes of Iraqi citizens who allegedly spontaneously pulled down the colossal statue of Saddam Hussein surprised the world. But nobody knows where the dictator was hiding. However, unlike weapons of mass destruction, he was real, and he was soon found in the hole in his hometown of Tikrit. Two years later, he was sentenced to death and hanged. A strange place for someone who supported the Americans during the eighties, while he fought with the Islamic Republic of Iran.

- In the battle of Iraq, the United States and its allies took the victory - said George Bush on the aircraft carrier "Abraham Lincoln", on May 1 of that year. Behind him was a banner: "Mission accomplished."

Nothing was further from the truth. Because, unfortunately, the White House was not mapped a post-invasion plan, rejecting the objections of the ex- chief of staff, who said it will be necessary several hundred thousand US troops to maintain order after Saddam's fall. Maybe they managed to beat the Iraqi army, but they failed to restore peace in a society that is deeply divided along ethnic and religious lines.


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