What happened when Iraq was invaded 20 years ago?
Twenty years ago, the US and the UK announced that Saddam Hussein, the president of Iraq, was stockpiling weapons of mass destruction and supporting “terrorist groups”.
On March 19, 2003, a US-led coalition began bombing Iraq, and one day later a ground invasion began. In the coalition were US, UK, Australian, and Polish soldiers.
Al Jazeera breaks down some of the war’s defining moments in the following timeline.
Building up to invasion
After the September 11, 2001, attacks, US President George W Bush began claiming that Iraq had WMDs – a claim later proved false – and that it supported al-Qaeda, making disarming it a new priority.
2003
Bush sends Saddam an ultimatum
On March 17, 2003, Bush declared an end to diplomacy and gave Saddam and his sons an ultimatum to “leave Iraq within 48 hours”.
March 19, 2003
In a televised statement, George W Bush says coalition forces are in the “early stages of a military operation to disarm Iraq” from its purported WMDs and remove Saddam from power.
The first assaults on Baghdad begin shortly after the expiry of the 48-hour deadline for Saddam and his sons to leave Iraq.
March 20, 2003
March 23, 2003
Military operations move into southern Iraq, coming up against Iraqi resistance in the Battle of Nasiriyah, which lasted till April 2.
April 9, 2003
US forces roll into the Iraqi capital and Baghdad is occupied.
May 1, 2003
George W Bush declares an end to the invasion, marking the beginning of the military occupation.
Despite being a secular leader, Saddam’s dictatorship was viewed by the majority, which was Shia Muslim, as inherently sectarian. Many Shia Muslims were forced out of Iraq under his regime’s Sunni minority rule.
De-Baathification gutted the civil service and disbanded the military, security and other organisations central to public order.
2004
2004
A resistance effort against Western occupation forces in the country begins. Hundreds are reported killed in fighting during a US military siege of Falluja, an hour west of Baghdad, that began April 4.
The Arab League chief visits Iraq to prepare for a reconciliation conference, and the US military begins paying Iraqi contractors in dinars rather than in dollars.
2005
On January 30, the first multi-party elections in 50 years are held amid stringent security measures. Jalal Talabani, a Kurdish politician, is sworn in as president.
Voters accept a new constitution that aims to create an Islamic federal democracy. Iraqis vote for a government and parliament.
The United Iraqi Alliance – a Shia-led party – wins the parliamentary elections.
2006
By April of 2006, al-Qaeda in Iraq was fighting both against the occupation and other Iraqi sects, leaving the country awash in blood.
On May 20, 2006, Nouri al-Maliki becomes Iraq’s first democratically elected prime minister.
In February 2006, the dome of the al-Askari Shia shrine in Samarra was destroyed in a bombing. Sunni fighters are largely blamed for the attack, escalating sectarian tensions into what quickly became known as the Iraqi civil war.
Fighters loyal to Shia cleric Muqtada al-Sadr target 40 Sunnis at checkpoints in Baghdad, and nearly two dozen people were killed in a car bombing in Sadr City, a Shia district in eastern Baghdad, killing 62 and injuring 114 on July 1.
In July, the deadliest month for attacks and bombings, nearly 3,500 Iraqis were killed, about 110 people a day.
‘”Death squads” and bombings killed thousands, with neighbourhoods in mixed cities like Baghdad adopting more sectarian identities as minorities left.
On the morning of the start of Eid al-Adha on December 30, 2006, Saddam Hussein is executed for crimes against humanity.
2007
An escalation in rebel activity prompts President Bush to propose a surge of 21,500 additional troops into Iraq in January 2007.
By October of that year, there are 171,00 US soldiers in Iraq and 12,000 from other countries.
Britain hands over the security of Basra to Iraqi forces as the country pushes towards reducing the number of its troops in Iraq.
2008
Violence continues to escalate despite a troop surge. In April the British defence secretary says the final withdrawal of troops has been postponed after clashes between Shia fighters and Iraqi security forces.
By the end of 2008, the total number of foreign troops in the country – including US soldiers – stands at just over 151,000.
2009
In February 2009, new US President Barack Obama announces that the US combat mission in Iraq would end by August 31, 2010, and that the final withdrawal of all US forces would take place at the end of 2011.
By April, Britain officially ends combat operations in southern Iraq. It hands control of its Basra base to US forces.
2010
Parliamentary elections are held in March and no coalition wins enough votes for a majority as Iraq’s neighbours anxiously eye the voting.
Iraq’s leading army official criticises the planned withdrawal of US troops, saying that Iraq may not be ready for the move. The last US combat brigade leaves Iraq in August, but 50,000 troops remain for training and advisory purposes.
In November, Jalal Talabani is appointed as president and Nouri al-Maliki as prime minister. Parliament approves a new government that includes the major factions.
2011
In January, Muqtada al-Sadr returns to Iraq after years of self-imposed exile in Iran.
Thousands gather in Baghdad and northern Iraq, demanding improved services and an end to corruption, apparently inspired by the Arab Spring protests that have spread across the region.
The Iraqi government plans a summit to decide whether US troops are needed in the country past the 2011 withdrawal deadline, as US officials continue to advocate for a future presence.
Al-Sadr says his fighters will suspend military attacks on the US, which will resume only if the US fails to pull out in time.
In October, US officials announces they have abandoned plans to keep troops in Iraq and will leave by the end-of-year withdrawal deadline.
By December, the US announces an end to combat operations.