Episodes

  • Presenting Iraq with Alexandra Reeves
    1 min
  • Desert Storm and the Sanctions Decade
    Sep 15 2025
    Emerging from the Iran-Iraq War with massive debts and a militarized society, Saddam Hussein fatally miscalculated international responses when he invaded Kuwait in August 1990. The swift Desert Storm campaign devastated Iraqi forces, but Saddam survived by brutally crushing post-war uprisings. The UN sanctions regime that followed aimed to force compliance with weapons inspections while weakening the regime. Instead, sanctions devastated civilian populations—causing widespread malnutrition, collapsing healthcare, and creating humanitarian catastrophe—while Saddam strengthened his grip on power. The decade of isolation demonstrated the limitations of economic pressure as a tool for political change, setting the stage for more dramatic intervention.
    https://amzn.to/424pzou

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
    Show More Show Less
    25 mins
  • The Rise and Rule of the Ba'ath
    Sep 15 2025
    Following the 1958 revolution, Iraq descended into political chaos marked by competing ideologies and military coups. The Ba'ath Party, promising Arab unity and socialist transformation, seized power in 1963 but was quickly overthrown. Learning from failure, they rebuilt systematically and returned in 1968 under Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr. His deputy, Saddam Hussein, gradually consolidated control through ruthless elimination of rivals and expansion of security apparatus. By 1979, Saddam had become absolute dictator, launching the devastating Iran-Iraq War that militarized society and completed his transformation from revolutionary to tyrant. What began as promises of Arab renaissance became systematic oppression that would dominate Iraqi life for decades.
    https://amzn.to/424pzou

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
    Show More Show Less
    24 mins
  • Ancient Crossroads to Modern Nation
    Sep 15 2025
    Iraq's story begins where human civilization itself emerged—in the fertile valleys between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. From Sumerian city-states and Babylonian empires to the Islamic Golden Age when Baghdad was the world's intellectual center, this land has always been a crossroads of cultures and ideas. AI host Alexandra Reeves traces Iraq's journey through Ottoman rule, British colonial control, and the establishment of the Hashemite monarchy under King Faisal I. Despite oil wealth and modernization efforts, growing nationalism and resentment of foreign influence culminated in the 1958 revolution that overthrew the monarchy, ending Iraq's first experiment with constitutional government and setting the stage for decades of political upheaval.
    https://amzn.to/424pzou

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
    Show More Show Less
    21 mins