Word: aftermath
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TIME set out to answer that question by traversing the two rough arcs along which the Republican Guard were deployed south of Iraq's capital. Our reporters focused on seven battlefields: Hindiyah, Hillah, Kut, Yusufiyah, Mahmudiyah, Suwayrah and Dawrah. They surveyed the aftermath of the fighting, inspected graveyards, visited hospitals and interviewed eyewitnesses. They also spoke to Republican Guard survivors about their escape and the fates of their comrades...
...Afro-American Studies’ star professors, Former Fletcher University Professor Cornel R. West ’74 and former Carswell Professor of Philosophy K. Anthony Appiah, both left Harvard for Princeton University last year—with West’s move coming in the aftermath of a highly publicized disagreement with University President Lawrence H. Summers...
...aftermath of the war in Afghanistan, the Administration rejected the term peacekeeping to describe postwar efforts there, calling them instead stability operations. Now the phrase is cropping up in news reports of the U.S.'s stay in postwar Iraq. Will this be another success in the Administration's effort to shape the language of war? A scorecard...
...series of phone calls among rowers from both teams ensued in the aftermath of the incident...
...thing to win a victory, quite another to win control. Only in the aftermath of Gulf War I were the most dangerous killers revealed. According to a Columbia University public-health study, far more civilians died after that war than during it. They perished from disease and from Iraqi-on-Iraqi violence (see box, page 49). That's why even the generals talk respectfully about the challenge of winning the peace, a test that begins long before peace has actually arrived. White House officials say President Bush, throughout the prewar planning, was briefed on the humanitarian and postwar efforts...