its presumed threat to the United States.
his personal hatred of Saddam Hussein.
the need to acquire Iraq’s oil.
Great Britain’s refusal to participate in the conflict.
revenge for Iraq’s involvement in the September 11 attacks.
27. Which of the following statements accurately characterizes the Iraq War?
Because dozens of countries participated in the war, Bush avoided the need to spend much in terms
of government funds and, thus, prevented Americans from feeling any impacts of the war.
The American public was initially unsupportive of the war, but as it progressed and victory seemed
more and more imminent, Americans increasingly got behind the war effort.
The use of nuclear weapons and targeted airstrikes by the Americans made it an unprecedentedly
modernized war in that it involved painstaking preparations and few casualties.
Although the war was hardly successful in Iraq, the efforts meanwhile inadvertently resulted in
stripping power away from the Taliban and other terrorist groups in Afghanistan.
The war lasted far longer and cost far more than expected, as the Bush administration
underestimated what would be involved in occupying, pacifying, and reconstructing postwar Iraq.
28. Bush won a second term in 2004 by defeating
29. After Hurricane Katrina, Bush’s presidency was marked by
renewed confidence and vigor.
continued Republican unity.
growing public disapproval.
serious attempts of impeachment.
a series of legislative victories.
30. What did the bipartisan task force known as the Iraq Study Group conclude?
U.S. combat troops should be withdrawn gradually from Iraq by the spring of 2008.
The United States should send a “surge” of tens of thousands more troops to Iraq.
Iraq should be divided into semi-independent states governed by Kurds, Sunnis, and Shiites.
The United States should cut its losses by leaving Iraq immediately.
Once Iraq was stable, the United States should invade Iran to install a democratic government there.
31. What was a result of the “surge” ordered in Iraq by President Bush?
Most Americans once more began to support military involvement there.
The Iraqi government became a model of democracy for the next decade.
Attacks on American troops ceased, as a definitive end to the war had been reached.
The war in Iraq dramatically decreased in its monetary cost.
Levels of violence in Iraq declined dramatically, although the gains were likely to unravel.