Where is Chilcot's Iraq inquiry report?
Five years after the Chilcot Inquiry was set up, and ten years after the invasion, why is the non-publication of the inquiry’s report such a low key issue?
US Marine Corps veteran Brandon Blackstone suffered severe injuries when his unit ran over a tank mine. But 10 years on from the invasion, he still believes George W Bush was right to go into Iraq.
It was the most divisive war of modern times. In our second special report a decade after the Iraq invasion, Channel 4 News asks leading figures what have we learned from it all?
Young men are far more likely to commit violent crimes if they have served in the armed forces, according to a major study.
Graphic photographs of alleged victims of torture are shown at the long-awaited inquiry into the treatment of Iraqi detainees by British soldiers during the Iraq war.
The writer Ian McEwan has spoken of a “crisis of institutional failure” in the ten years since the mass demonstration against the invasion of Iraq that inspired one of his most celebrated novels.
Five years after the Chilcot Inquiry was set up, and ten years after the invasion, why is the non-publication of the inquiry’s report such a low key issue?
SAS soldier Sgt Danny Nightingale, detained for having a pistol given to him as a present in Iraq, says he has been “let down” by the system overwhelmed by the support he has received.
The UK’s most senior judges will decide in February whether the relatives of soldiers killed whilst fighting in Iraq can pursue the government for damages.
The Iraqi government cancels a $4.2bn deal to buy military jets, helicopters and missiles from Russia, blaming possible corruption in the contract.
Families of soldiers killed in Iraq are given permission to pursue the government for damages for allegedly failing to provide armoured vehicles or equipment that could have save their loved ones.
More than 100 people are killed, and hundreds more wounded, in a string of bombings and shootings in Iraq.
Bombs targeting Shi’ite pilgrims in Baghdad and police in southern Iraq kill at least 44 people in a wave of attacks during a major religious festival, police and hospital sources say.
Ex-Daily Mirror political editor and spin doctor Alastair Campbell returns to the Leveson inquiry to discuss politicians and their relationship with the “putrid” media he now distances himself from.
A double agent allegedly recruited by MI5 and MI6 was a British passport holder, according to American media reports.
Krishnan Guru-Murthy describes meeting some of the heroes of post-war Iraq as Unreported World gains exclusive access to the Baghdad bomb squad.