Iraq War Anniversary Quietly Passes
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Updated: 12:19 AM Mar 21, 2010
Iraq War Anniversary Quietly Passes
As thousands more soldiers from The Mountain Post are heading to Iraq, there was little mention that Friday was the seventh anniversary since the start of the war in Iraq.
Posted: 10:41 PM Mar 20, 2010
Reporter: Rick Montanez
Email Address: RMontanez@kktv.com
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As thousands more soldiers from The Mountain Post are heading to Iraq, there was little mention that Friday was the seventh anniversary since the start of the war in Iraq.

As the U.S. enters another year of the war, some people seem to be forgetting about it. Even the White House failed to mention anything about the start date.

But in a military community like Colorado Springs, it is hard to forget that more than four thousand men and women have lost their lives since the war started seven years ago.

"These are opening stages of what will be a broad and concerted campaign,” said President George W. Bush in a 2003 address. With that announcement thousands of American troops were sent off to war.

"It's a tragedy for Americans to, so quickly, forget the sacrifices that were made by us troops in Iraq,” said Joe Barrera, a Vietnam War combat veteran. Barrera spends his time working with other veterans. He told 11 News part of the blame for forgetting the day U.S. troops invaded Iraq has to do with American’s short attention span. "We have, in this country, a pattern of amnesia, in which we forget very quickly events that have happened very recently," said Barrera.

Thousands rallied Saturday, calling for an end to the war with protests in Washington, D.C. and San Francisco, CA.

Matters closer to home are reasons the start of the war wasn't on the front lines for some around southern Colorado. The health care debate and the war in Afghanistan are reasons many gave for passing over the war’s start date.

Focus for some troops at Fort Carson is now on Iraq as thousands head there on deployment.

At its height, there were about 170,000 U.S. troops in Iraq, that was back in October 2007. The cost of the war is estimated to be more than 700 billion dollars.

Copyright 2011 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Latest Comments

Posted by: Ed Location: CS on Mar 23, 2010 at 10:29 PM

It passed quietly because it's too controversial. President Barry doesn't need the bad publicity.
Posted by: Anonymous on Mar 23, 2010 at 01:56 PM

Al Qaeda was created by the CIA. No wonder battlegrounds of WWII were called "theaters." Terrorism is theater, too. most of it carefully planned and staged. Homeland Security is the terrorist. No point in winning anything; our biggest business is war, if not drugs.
Posted by: Staff Sergeant Location: Afghanistan on Mar 23, 2010 at 12:46 AM

Your sons and daughters believe that we can win. They certainly didn't offer up their lives in vain. You do them a disrespect by trivializing their pain, sacrifice, and blood let in THEIR PERSONAL Efforts. A Soldier can go AWOL, but no one holds a gun to their heads to fight at anytime; instead 99 percent honorably take the fight to the enemy. Some die. Don't turn it into mindless following of orders. There's more to killing a man and watching your brothers die than that. If the Citizen felt the compulsion a Soldier does to serve his country, to aid and benefit someone who is oppressed or terrorized in a distant land, instead of spoiled rotten by the privlidge of being born in the United States of America, the Terrrorist wouldn't hate us so much! America didn't happen because we let fear and tyranny stand! But, Bush is a good scapegoat. He has big ears.





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