Current:Home > reviewsIraqi journalist who threw shoes at George W. Bush says his only regret is he "only had two shoes" -Core Financial Strategies
Iraqi journalist who threw shoes at George W. Bush says his only regret is he "only had two shoes"
View
Date:2025-04-27 18:35:05
Two decades after the U.S. led the invasion of Iraq, one of the most memorable moments for many in the region remains the 2008 news conference in Baghdad when an Iraqi journalist stood up and hurled his shoes at then-U.S. President George W. Bush. As the U.S. leader spoke alongside Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, he was forced to duck the flying shoes as the journalist shouted: "This is a farewell kiss from the Iraqi people, you dog!"
The man was quickly pounced on by security forces and removed from the room, and says he was subsequently jailed and beaten for his actions.
"The only regret I have is that I only had two shoes," Muntazer al-Zaidi, the Iraqi journalist who expressed the feelings of many Iraqis at the time, told CBS News on Monday, exactly 20 years after the beginning of the U.S.'s campaign of "shock and awe."
- Iraqis still traumatized, but find hope 20 years after U.S.-led invasion
Then-President Bush's administration justified its decision to attack the Iraqi regime headed by Saddam Hussein with assertions that the dictator was hiding chemical or biological "weapons of mass destruction," but no such weapons were ever found.
Al-Zaidi says he didn't throw his shoes in a moment of uncontrolled anger, but that he had actually been waiting for just such an opportunity since the beginning of the U.S.-led invasion. He said Bush had suggested that the Iraqi people would welcome U.S. forces with flowers, which left him looking for an adequate reply.
"I was looking for the opposite and equal reaction to say that Iraqis don't receive occupiers with flowers," the journalist told CBS News, adding that he staged his protest to oppose "this arrogant killer, and out of loyalty to the Iraqi martyrs killed by American occupation soldiers."
Sentenced to three years in prison, al-Zaidi was seen by many Iraqis as a national hero, and he served only nine months of his sentence.
He says he was beaten and tortured for three days following his arrest by Iraqi officers, who he claims sent photos of himself blindfolded to the Americans. He says three months of his jail term were spent in solitary confinement as he suffered medical problems.
- U.S. Senate advances bill to repeal Iraq war authorizations
"Back then, in the midst of being tortured for three days, there was a rumor that I had apologized. I told the investigator I did not apologize, and if time was rewound I would do it all over again," he told CBS News. "Even knowing what I would go through, still I would stand up and throw my shoes at him."
Al-Zaidi said the anxious wait for the expected invasion before March 20, 2003, left Iraqis on edge, with stockpiling food and others fleeing major cites for smaller towns far from Baghdad, fearing American bombs.
"People were like, semi-dead, like zombies, walking as if they were in a different world," al-Zaidi recalled. "Then the zero-hour came. Most if not all Iraqis were woken up by the sound of explosions."
The journalist says some of Iraq's infrastructure still hasn't been repaired, and he blames the invasion for "political and financial corruption" and the current political gridlock in his country, where "every political party has its own armed faction or militia that kills and terrifies people, kills their opposition and assassinates protesters."
Al-Zaidi returned to Iraq after living and working outside the country for years, and he's among the thousands of people who have joined protests since 2011 against Iraq's Western backed government.
"We are trying to tell the world that the Iraqi people are being killed and ripped off," he said. "We are suffering and we will continue to suffer, but the future of Iraq is in our hands and we want to remove this authority that ruled Iraq for the past 20 years."
- In:
- War
- Iraq
- George W. Bush
Ahmed Shawkat is a CBS News producer based in Cairo.
TwitterveryGood! (3728)
Related
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- Jungle between Colombia and Panama becomes highway for hundreds of thousands from around the world
- WWE star Liv Morgan arrested in Florida on marijuana possession charge
- Will 2024 be a 'normal' year for gas prices? And does that mean lower prices at the pump?
- As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
- Original AC/DC drummer Colin Burgess has died at 77. The Australian helped form the group in 1973
- Serbia’s populists look to further tighten grip on power in tense election
- Putin supporters formally nominate him as independent candidate in Russian presidential election
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- Will 2024 be a 'normal' year for gas prices? And does that mean lower prices at the pump?
Ranking
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Jake Browning shines again for Bengals, rallying them to 27-24 overtime win over Vikings
- Willie Nelson shares the secret to writer's block and his approach to songwriting: I haven't quit
- Body of 28-year-old hostage recovered in Gaza, Israel says
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- Demi Lovato and Jutes Are Engaged: See Her Ring
- Juwan Howard cleared to return as Michigan's head basketball coach, AD announces
- Susan Lucci honored, Barbara Walters remembered at 50th Daytime Emmy Awards: Watch
Recommendation
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
You'll Burn for This Update on Bridgerton Season 3
Inflation has cooled a lot. So why do things still feel so expensive?
AP’s Lawrence Knutson, who covered Washington’s transcendent events for nearly 4 decades, has died
See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
Over 60 drown in a migrant vessel off Libya while trying to reach Europe, UN says
Federal judge warns of Jan. 6 case backlog as Supreme Court weighs key obstruction statute
There's still time (barely) to consolidate student loans for a shot at debt forgiveness