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416
October 15, 2010

Iraq After Us

Operation Iraqi Freedom is over. And the next chapter of Iraq is being written now. But what actually happened there the last seven years? Producer Nancy Updike and reporter Larry Kaplow spent a month in Iraq talking to Iraqis and Americans about the war that tore the country apart, and what's happening as we try to put it back together.
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Nancy Updike

Prologue

Host Ira Glass speaks with reporter Larry Kaplow and producer Nancy Updike, who spent a month in Iraq as the US combat mission was ending, in August 2010, talking to Iraqis. They play excerpts from a conversation they had with a Shiite professor—who had pizza recently with a Sunni friend, and realized just how tense things still are in Iraq. (8 minutes)

By

Ira Glass
Larry Kaplow
Nancy Updike
Act One

What Just Happened?

To understand where we are today in Iraq, we tell the story of one Iraqi, Saad Oraibi Ghaffouri Al-Obeidi, also known as Abu Abed—a man who fought alongside the US during the surge, and is now in exile—and what he saw, and was part of, over seven years of the war. (28 minutes)

By

Nancy Updike
Act Two

Politics as Usual

Larry and Nancy head to Diyala Province north of Baghdad, and meet with a mayor and a member of the provincial council—like a state legislature—to see why is politics in Iraq utterly stalled. (9 minutes)

By

Nancy Updike
Act Three

Today in Babylon

The worst violence ended two years ago. Iraq is stable. Larry and Nancy go to an amusement park in Baghdad, a wedding hall, an herbal medicine shop, and other places to see what stability means—and doesn't mean—for Iraqis' everyday lives. (9 minutes)

Larry Kaplow reported from Iraq for six and a half years. Here are a few articles he wrote while he was Iraq bureau chief for Newsweek:
The Last Day of the Iraq War
Iraq Steps Out of Iran’s Shadow

By

Nancy Updike

Song:

“Wen Inti, Habibit Umri? (Where Are You, the Love of My Life?)” by Hussam Al-Rassam

Additional This American Life Stories On The War in Iraq

Private Contractors
True Number of Iraqi Deaths
Lessons Learned in the War
Soldiers' Stories
Soldier Bloggers
A House in Baghdad
Citizen-Diplomat Tries to End the War
Two Random Guys Try to Help
Trying to Rebuild Iraq
Start of the War

And on the aftermath:
Talk to an Iraqi - from TV series
Sam Slaven

By

Ira Glass

Related

If you enjoyed this episode, you may like these
445: Ten Years In
Sept. 9, 2011

Act Three: Put on a Happy Face

In 2008, reporter Chris Neary told the story of John, a soldier who returned from tours of Iraq and Afghanistan with severe PTSD, and ended up attacking his fiancee and her mother.
515: Good Guys
Jan. 10, 2014

Act Four: The Deepest Darkest Open Secret

In 2009, a U.S. soldier contacted our show and offered to send audio dispatches from his deployment in Afghanistan, to do a story about what it's really like to go to war.
246: My Pen Pal
Sept. 12, 2003

Act One: Who Put The "Pistol" In "Epistolary?"

Andrea Morningstar tells the story of a ten-year-old girl from small town Michigan named Sarah York, and how she became pen pals with a man who was considered an enemy of the United States, a dictator, a drug trafficker, and a murderer: Manuel Noriega.

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The rise and fall of a school maintenance man in Schenectady, New York who terrorized his staff and got away with it for decades.

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Will They Know Me Back Home?

Stories of people who've grown so accustomed to wartime that the lives they've left behind no longer make sense.

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This American Life is produced in collaboration with WBEZ Chicago and delivered to stations by PRX The Public Radio Exchange.

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