Iraq Veterns Agianst The War Presser
Iraq Veterans Against the War presser on "stop funding the war" Please check spelling of names (they did not spell their names before speaking) 13:13:08 Jeff mallard dc pres, presser newest campaign, funding the war is killing the troops 13:13:29 Iraq vets against war, say no, the more you fund the war it's killing the troops not supporting them 13:13:53 asking people to print out our graphic, push into "funding the troops is killing the troops, 13:14:19 too long democrats blame republican, democrats in charge in power, they are in charge so we are going after them so they make a clear stance that funding the war is killing troops 13:14:48 garret, chairman, second, Adam cockish, former marine, third, rev Lennox year wood, hip hop caucus, air force chaplain Garret . 13:15:27 served as sniper, realized on ground American forces no longer seen as peacekeepers, currently idealists in this country, opposite, funding this war 13:16:29 majority of troops Rev Lennox. 13:19:05 member, still in the marine, currently being discharged, took my oath as an officer, funding this war is killing our troops, funding this war is killing our troops, I am also a registered democrats, progressive democrats of America, here to let Pelosi, Hoyer and Clyburn funding this war is killing the troops 13:20:15 612 men and woman have lost their lives, people put you in office to stand up and speak to this madness, instead of speaking out you are playing politics, humanity is on the line, 600 troops like us lay in the ground 13:21:11 I'm not sure, that quick, life goes out, I'm here as a democrats to speak to Pelosi, what you are doing with humanity is killing the troops time to cut the funding now 13:21:50 stop this madness 13:22:06 not about democrats of republican, about humanity and humanity is losing, funding this war is killing the troops and we are here to let the democrats and republicans know 13:22:38 if we don't stop this war now, 21st century, Pelosi, Clyburn and Hoyer there will be no 13:23:35 sign for flags and send them to congressman Q & A 13:24:27 delivering these at 3pm today.we will be attempting to deliver this today.what every surviving mother gets when they get word 13:25:00 thank you for coming out 13:25:08 Iraq veterans against the war, holding folded flags. with sign in front
Development Road Project to contribute stability in Iraq, entire region: Türkiye's President Erdogan
ANKARA, TÜRKİYE - MAY 8, 2025: The Development Road Project, led by Türkiye and Iraq, will make a "significant contribution" to the stability and prosperity of both Iraq and the entire region, said Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Thursday at a joint news conference with Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani in the capital Ankara. Erdogan expressed Türkiye's desire to make rapid progress on issues such as the resumption of oil shipments through the Iraq-Türkiye Oil Pipeline. "We reaffirmed our determination to continue the fight against PKK, FETO, and DAESH, which pose a threat not only to Türkiye's national security but also to Iraq's," Erdogan added. On Pakistan-India tensions, President Erdogan said that Ankara is working to defuse the crisis before it hits "the point of no return, despite efforts by some to inflame it." Al-Sudani, for his part, said the Development Road Project represents a major opportunity to strengthen integration between Türkiye and Iraq.(Footage by Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
Iraq War Protest Compilation
00:18:00 - 00:38:00 September 2005 - Candle light vigil in support of Cindy Sheehan - women/mothers candle light vigil in Reston, Virginia (Cindy Sheehan is an American anti-war activist, whose son, U.S. Army Specialist Casey Sheehan, was killed by enemy action) 3. October 2002 - Anti-Iraq War demonstration in Washington DC
BAGHDAD/ARNETT LIVE
00:00:00:00 [Funeral procession for those killed in bombing of Amiriya shelter becomes an anti-US demonstration]--VS marching in st, coffins on trucks, men fire guns in air,shouting; banners. [ZERO AT ...
U.S.and Soviet efforts at disarmament during Reagan-Gorbachev era
Film opens with U.S.President Ronald Reagan commenting about mistrust between America and the Soviet Union. View of President Ronald Reagan and Soviet General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev signing the arms control agreement banning the use of intermediate-range nuclear missiles, at the White House in Washington, DC on December 8, 1987. A Soviet RT-2PM Topol mobile ICBM moving on its carrier vehicle. A U.S. intermediate range missile being launched. Another view of U.S.President Reagan and Soviet General Secretary signing the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF Treaty) on December 8, 1987, to become effective on June 1, 1988. Views of ICBMs being test launched from silos. A Soviet Tupolev Tu-95 strategic bomber in flight, seen from the side and from underneath. A U.S. Navy heavy cruiser, armed with cruise missiles. Closeup of a cruise missile rising from the ship and firing across it toward a target. Illustration of a seaborne missile fired from a warship. General Secretary Gorbachev in a group, including his wife, Raisa, visiting a Soviet Navy submarine. Major General William F. Burns, Head of the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency (in civilian clothes), is seen raising doubt about the feasibility of the Soviet suggestion to use scientific methods for checking from a distance about arms control compliance. Artist conception of satellites being shot down in space. Secretary of State, George Schultz and his wife, Helena Maria, descending steps from an airplane upon landing at Moscow, in the Soviet Union to confer with Soviet leaders in Moscow on Nov. 4, 1985, in preparations for the meeting between President Reagan and Mikhail S. Gorbachev, the Soviet leader, later in the month in Geneva, on November 19th and 20th. Negotiating teams assembling in a meeting room in Moscow. Secretary Schultz and Soviet Foreign Minister, Eduard A. Shevardnadze conversing. William F. Burns, saying, " I think we are well on the road to achieving a useful, good, and balanced treaty." Views of civilians killed by chemical weapons in the Iran-Iraq war. Soldiers in protective gear associated with chemical weapons. One soldier decontaminating a tank using a water hose. Tanks moving in Europe. U.S. troops firing an antiaircraft gun. Scenes of World War II showing conventional arms being used on tanks and from landing craft. Afghan fighters carrying a wounded comrade. Glimpse of soldiers in a trench firing a mortar and one firing a machine gun, during the Iran-Iraq war. An armored personnel carrier moving across a muddy field. More views of Reagan and Gorbachev signing the INF treaty in 1987. A U.S. spokesman noting that the USSR has not changed the offensive nature of its force structure and deployment patterns. Location: Washington DC USA. Date: December 8, 1987.
FUNERAL FOR CANADIAN SOLDIER
A funeral in Toronto for a Canadian soldier killed in Afghanistan.
CONTEMPORARY STOCK FOOTAGE
NEWSFEED: 3/26/03 WAR IN IRAQ, PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH, PRIME MINISTER TONY BLAIR, ABU DHABI, PRESS CONFERENCE, CAMP DAVID, REPORTERS NX EXT building @ night, smoke from bomb in bg, Abu Dhabi TV footage of bldgs @ night, reporters voices in Arabic; NX EXT T/H Arab reporter, White House in bg, T/H Arab news, dx Iraqi highway, smoke from bomb in bg; DX INT T/H G.W. Bush speaks about war in Iraq, PM Tony Blair speaks about war in Iraq, updates on achievements; DX INT T/H Blair speaks of British soldiers killed in Iraq, Israel, reporter asks questions, Bush talks length of war; DX INT T/H British reporter asks Blair about length of conflict, Blair responds, Bush speaks about war atrocities; DX INT T/H British reporter asks about lack of UN support, Bush responds, Blair responds, Bush & Blair shake hands, exit stage;
1990s
Iraq - Middle East - Gulf War - Desert Storm - TV documentary story of woman painter killed by bombs - photograph of woman - motorboats on river - mood shots - city - fire in fireplace - painting of woman - river - Iraqi woman comes into nice living room and answers phone - talks on phone in Arabic with English subtitles - waves wash rocks
RUMSFELD CAMPAIGNS AGAINST SADDAM (9/27/2002)
RUMSFELD LAUNCHING SERIES OF SPEECHES TO SPREAD ANTI-SADDAM MESSAGE
AA - Anti - War - Rally
HUNDREDS COME OUT FOR ANTI-WAR RALLY IN DOWNTOWN MINNEAPOLIS MONDAY.
FSN-276 Beta SP
Nigerian President Obasanjo & George W Bush Speech pt. 1
[Interview with Vladimir Putin: Part 1]
US Protest 3 - Families of killed Iraq soldiers, veterans protest
NAME: US PROTEST3 150304N TAPE: EF04/0309 IN_TIME: 10:14:51:00 DURATION: 00:02:00:19 SOURCES: APTN DATELINE: Washington DC - 15 March 2004 RESTRICTIONS: SHOTLIST: 1. Various of protesters with banners marching down street 2. Various of protesters arriving at Lafayette Park, across the street from the White House 3. SOUNDBITE (English), Gordon Clark, Iraq Pledge of Resistance "Thousands and thousands have died and been wounded in a war that is based on lies. And we are here today to say that it is time to start telling the truth, to stop hiding the human cost of the war and to end the war now." 4. Cutaway photographers 5. Various of protesters reading out names and of US soldiers and Iraqis killed in Iraq and then placing the list in make-shift coffin 6. SOUNDBITE: (English) Jim Schulman, Protester: "I am here today to remember those who have died under false pretences in the illegal and immoral war in Iraq. And, also to remember someone who grew up in my hometown who perished in a Black Hawk helicopter crash as part of that false pretence." 7. Wide shot of protesters across the street from the White House 8. SOUNDBITE: (English) Colleen McCarthy, Protester: "Just any way we can think of to say please don''t go to war, please don''t kill US men and women, please don''t kill Iraqi men and women. There''s got to be another way, we are civilised people, we''ve got to be able to figure out another way to solve our differences." 9. Wide shot of protesters across the street from the White House STORYLINE: Carrying memorial wreaths, more than a hundred peace activists gathered in Washington on Monday to honour U.S. troops killed and wounded in Iraq and to call on President George W. Bush to take action to stop the killing. The protesters marched about nine kilometres (5.5 miles) from the Walter Reed Army Medical Centre, where many of the war wounded are treated, to the White House. When they arrived the demonstrators read names of the war victims and said they hoped to deliver a mock coffin to the president. Coordinator of the group Iraq Pledge of Resistance, Gordon Clark, said that it was time to stop hiding "the human cost of the war," which he argued was based on lies, and to bring the fighting to an end.
Halabja residents turn 1988 missile remains into flower pots
HALABJA, IRAQ - MARCH 16, 2025: The remnants of missiles used in the deadly 1988 chemical attack on Halabja have been repurposed by locals into flower pots, transforming symbols of destruction into messages of hope and life. On March 16, 1988, during the Iran-Iraq War, Saddam Hussein's regime launched a chemical attack on the Kurdish-majority town of Halabja. Under the command of Ali Hassan al-Majid, known as "Chemical Ali," bombs filled with sarin and mustard gas were dropped on the city, killing around 5,000 people and injuring 7,000 others. Survivors fled in fear of a second attack, with many seeking refuge across the Iranian border. Many Halabja residents still suffer the physical effects of the attacks. Decades later, the people of Halabja are repurposing the remnants of that tragic day, turning them from weapons of war into containers for plants, symbolizing resilience, remembrance, and a dedication to life. (Footage by Fariq Faraj Mahmood /Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
74682 THE THIRD ARMY IN WORLD WAR II GENERAL GEORGE S PATTON
This tribute to the Third Army in World War II details its 281 days of combat duty, from France and Belgium and into Germany in 1944-45, including the Battle of the Bulge. Features footage of General George S. Patton and the troops he commanded.<p><p>The United States Army Central (formerly the Third Army) is a military formation of the United States Army, which saw service in World War I and World War II, in the 1991 Gulf War, and in the coalition liberation of Iraq. It is best known for its campaigns in World War II under the command of General George S. Patton.<p><p>Mobilization saw Third Army take on the role of training some of the huge numbers of recruits that the draft was bringing into the Armed Forces. Lieutenant General Walter Krueger, later to gain fame for his command of Sixth Army during operations in the Pacific, commanded Third Army from May 1941 until February 1943. Under his leadership, the basis of the Army's later success as a combat formation was laid. Krueger was succeeded by Lieutenant General Courtney Hodges who led the Army for the rest of 1943. The news that many had expected came in December 1943. Third Army was shipped from the U.S. to the United Kingdom.<p><p>Third Army did not take part in the initial stages of Operation Overlord. However, when it did take the field, its field of combat suited the style of its commander far more. Lieutenant General George Patton was one of the U.S. Army's greatest exponents of armored warfare. When Third Army was moved to France, it was just after Bradley's formations had achieved the breakout from Normandy. Third Army followed up on that success and began a great dash across France. It was only the inevitability of logistics problems that halted Patton's force near the borders of Germany.<p><p>After a period of consolidation, Third Army was ready to go on the offensive again. However, the Germans then launched their last great offensive of the war – the Battle of the Bulge. This battle was an attempt to repeat the decisive breakthrough of 1940. However, in 1944, the Germans were doomed to failure. Their own logistical problems surfaced, and they ground to a halt. Nevertheless, they had broken the U.S. front, and it took a great effort to reduce the resulting salient. In one of the great moves of the war, Patton turned Third Army's axis of advance through ninety degrees and set it upon the south of the German forces. The German salient was reduced by the end of January 1945, and the remainder of the process of closing up to the Rhine could be completed. Some vicious fighting took place, but by April there was but one great natural barrier between Third Army and the heart of Germany. Unlike in 1918, the crossing of the Rhine was opposed. However, the bridgehead was won, and Third Army embarked on another great eastward dash. It reached Austria and in May liberated the Mauthausen-Gusen concentration camps complex. Its forces ended up in Czechoslovakia, the furthest east of any American units.<p><p>Third Army After Action reports state that the Third Army captured 765,483 prisoners of war, with an additional 515,205 of the enemy already held in corps and divisional level POW cages processed between 9 May and 13 May 1945, for a total of 1,280,688 POWs, and that, additionally, Third Army forces killed 144,500 enemy soldiers and wounded 386,200, for a total of 1,811,388 in enemy losses. The Third Army suffered 16,596 killed, 96,241 wounded, and 26,809 missing in action for a total of 139,646 casualties.<p><p>Includes footage of the presentation of the Congressional Medal of Honor to Harold Garman by Patton. On August 25, 1944, wounded American soldiers were being evacuated across the Seine River in France. They were midstream when an enemy soldier on the other side of the river began firing at them with a machine gun.<p><p>Immediately the boat emptied, and men began swimming to the opposite shore. One American was so badly injured he could not get out of the boat, and two others were so badly injured that, once out of the boat, they could not swim. They clung desperately to the side of the craft.<p><p>Seeing the crisis unfold before him, twenty-seven-year old private Harold Garman, a medic, dove into the water. Heedless of the danger to himself, he swam to the boat under a hail of fire and, with great difficulty, towed the boat back to shore. Garman’s brave action saved the lives of three fellow soldiers and inspired the rest of the men to resume the evacuation of the wounded.<p><p>This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD and 2k. For more information visit http://www.PeriscopeFilm.com
The 90's, episode 301: MONEY, MONEY, MONEY
9:09 ""Joel Kovner"" by Nancy Cain and Judy Procter. At the First Professional Bank in Santa Monica, California, bank president Joel Kovner gives a brief tour of the vault. ""Before the bank opened we played monopoly with real money."" 12:09 Prof. Paul Nadler commentary by Skip Blumberg. Nadler explains how bank loans have changed with the existence of fixed interest rates. ""Savings and loans started as a family financial center. You brought in your deposits and they'd make mortgage loans. It used to be what you'd call a 3-6-3 business. They'd take your money at 3, they'd lend it back to you at 6, they'd be on the golf course by 3. It didn't take much talent to run a savings and loan. Basically where the money went - they were paying it out, paying it out and not earning it. They refused to admit they were dead, making it the biggest scandal in American financial history. "" 16:59 ""Ed Sadlowski"" by Tony Judge. Ed Sadlowski, of the Steelworkers union in South Chicago talks about the economic disparities in the United States. ""The real question at hand is the distribution of wealth. Look at the situation of health care in this country. It's criminal. Yet who's opposing it the most? The insurance companies. A few years ago if I said we needed a national health insurance program the Lee Laccocas call me communist, socialist, everything else in the world. He's not championing the cause. He's on my side for a change. To share that wealth is to share power. When you start talking that way, pal, they put you up against the wall."" 18:24 ""Andrew Jones in Iraq."" Jones talks to us from a peace camp in Iraq where an international group of protesters have formed a human shield between armies to attempt to prevent the beginning of the Iraq War. ""I'm a black American and Bush had astutely put the deadline [for Iraq to pull out of Kuwait] on Martin Luther King's birthday, January 15. Bush was assaulting an idea - an idea of peace...it could have been January 18, January 20, it could have been any day. I was pissed off at him for desecrating Martin Luther King's birthday."" 25:32 More from Prof. Paul Nadler. ""One of the problems with America is we live in a world where everything has to be solved - instant journalism, instant success. A guy makes a speech and within one minute a reporter has to analyze it...What have we done to this country?"" 27:22 ""Susan Cohn"" by Skip Blumberg. On Broadway in New York, Susan Cohn, a career counselor, talks about American cultural domination and the people's differing definitions of what it means to be rich. 32:40 Andrea Carmen speech by Robble Leppzer. ""At the heart of the struggle is a conflict of world view. We could talk about the indigenous world view and the corporate world view. The indigenous world view looks at this world as something that is alive. The corporate world view sees the world as something dead, something to be used and to be used as profit. The corporate executives of the world are holding us all hostage. If somebody came into your home and pointed a gun at your children, you would act. Don't you feel that desperation that we feel?"" 34:55 ""Eco Rage"" by Robbie Leppzer. A look at a demonstration on Wall Street the day following Earth Day, 1990. ""We got the power to save the earth,"" chant the protesters. They clog up traffic with trash cans and bike racks and encourage Wall Street workers to take the day off. One protester is mercilessly beaten by the New York police after feigning to stop traffic in the street. 37:12 Todd Alcott by Skip Blumberg. 90's regular Todd Alcott rants. ""It used to be if you needed furniture you made furniture. Everybody had the skills they needed to survive. No one makes things anymore, they have jobs. They work at an office...not to produce a thing, but to make money to buy things. We're disassociated from our own possessions. Can you make a shirt? I can't. We have no connection to things and how they're made. Consequently we have no connection to each other. Money has become the fifth element. It can cancel out the other four because it can take their place at any moment. You don't need to tame fire anymore. You just need to pay your gas bill. The Indians used to think the earth was sacred. It was holy. Anyone will tell you today that it 's just capital waiting to be exploited. The whole planet is a business, Earth Inc. Assets 48 kazillion dollars. What is that?!! Is that a reason for opening your eyes in the morning?..."" 40:11 ""Bowery Forger"" by Dee Dee Halleck. Blacksmith Tovey Halleck at work in the Bowery. 43:27 Harry Magdoff commentary by Esti Galili Marpet. Magdoff, an economist, talks about the problem of homelessness in the United States. ""There's no reason that with the resources this country has that there can't be homes for the homeless. When it came to the Second World War we had to build very quickly. It was achieved relatively simply and in record time, but it was for war, it was for destruction. In times of peace, the possibilities are all here."" 46:39 ""Ruth Handler"" by Judith Binder and Jody Procter. Handler, co-founder of Barbie dolls, now produces prosthetic breasts for masectomy patients with a company called ""Nearly Me."" She explains her history of how difficult it was for her after she lost her breasts while giving us a tour of the factory. Handler shows us her prosthetic breasts, literally unbuttoning her dress and taking them out of her bra. 52:38 More from Ed Sadlowski. ""There has never been a man who has worked for another man who was paid his due. People bitch about a ballplayer getting a million dollars a year playing second base for the White Sox. When I take my grandkid to the ballpark I don?t take him to see Jerry Reinsdorf and Eddie Einhorn. I go there to see the ballplayer play. Why shouldn't the ballplayer get the dough rather than two guys sitting in a skybox somewhere?"" 54:00 ""The Money Man Monument"" by Doug Michels. A satirical piece featuring a mock meeting of fundraisers for the Money Man Monument, a skeleton in a suit placed in a tube of money on Washington DC's Mall - ""a permanent tribute to green power and the American Way."" 54:58 More from Prof. Paul Nadler. Nadler talks about the change in tax laws and how 90% of Americans pay more social security tax than they do income tax. 56:03 Wally Nelson by Robbie Leppzer. Wally Nelson has not paid his income tax for 42 years. He refused to fight in WWII and was jailed. ""If I refused to let my body be drafted for killing, I should not let my money get drafted to pay for killing. We do not have to feel we are powerless."
BYRD/BUSH SPECTACLE
/n00:00:00:00 &quot;To me, it is an affront to the Americans killed or injured in Iraq for the President to exploit the trappings of war for the ...
AFTERMATH OF INSURGENT ATTACK IN IRAQ
A U.S. soldier stands guard has other military personnel attach a tow cable to a disabled humvee. Three soldiers riding in the humvee were killed by a roadside bomb.
CONTEMPORARY STOCK FOOTAGE
NEWSFEED: 3/25/03; ABU DHABI, UK REPORT FROM HOUSE OF COMMONS, PRESS CONF. @ PENTAGON, GW BUSH PRESS CONF ON FIRST DAYS ON IRAQ WAR; ABU DHABI NX Baghdad skyline Bldgs Palm trees and thick gray smoke, Baghdad street w/ nondescript bldg Cars go by; INT English woman speaks before House of Commons about plans to aide Iraq after the War; INT England News report Reporter on one side Large Jet or House of Commons on the other; NX same Baghdad street as before, Same street w/ night vision You can hear the airstrikes,INT Pentagon Press conference about treatment of US POW's and Iraq POW's, US treats prisoners w/ dignity, Iraq violates war laws; INT Talk about missing and injured reporters, Talk about victims in helicopter crash and POW's; INT Motions to monitor of bombs and airstrikes, Takes reporters questions about war strategy and US advancements; INT Talk about process for revealing names of missing and killed, Apache Helicopters, Dealing w/ Iraqi treachery; INT Talk about possible POW exchange w/Iraq, Reporters try to ask questions after conference ends;INT President GW Bush stands at podium in front of flags from various nations, Says coalition is making good progress; INT ... at the end of war Iraq will be free and the world will be better ..., Operation Valiant Strike; INT America has accepted the task of advancing the universal hope of freedom, Talks about cost of war; INT Sending aid to Iraq, Waging war on terror, Every dollar we spend must benefit nation; NX Lopsided weird angle view of Baghdad street, Tilt up on electrical wire I don't think the person knows camera is on, White SUV;
Syrian foreign minister visits Baghdad to hold talks with Iraqi counterpart
BAGHDAD, IRAQ - MARCH 14, 2025: Iraqi Foreign Minister Fuad Hussein welcomed on Friday his Syrian counterpart Asaad al-Shaibani, state news agency INA reported. Shaibani arrived in the capital Baghdad, his first official visit to the Arab country. He took charge after the fall of Bashar al-Assad in December. Hussein hosted the Syrian minister in the headquarters of the Foreign Ministry. Further details were not immediately available. On Dec. 6, 2024, Baghdad hosted Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi and Syria’s then-foreign minister, Bassam Sabbagh, just two days before the fall of Assad and his subsequent flight to Russia. The meeting focused on security developments in Syria at that time.(Footage by Wisam Zeyad Mohammed /Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
CHAVEZ/IRAQ
00:00:00:15 Your government is lying to you, it is manipulating you and also is taking the US to start wars based on lines. As the Iraq country -- do you know how many young people have died in Iraq at this moment. Killing innocent women and children, just because an obsession? A devilish obsession. (0:30) /
Rashid Street in Baghdad Part 1
COLOR SYNC A program about the history of Rashid Street (Al-Rasheed Street). The street stretches through the heart of Baghdad. The street is comprised of 1920's style buildings. In the past the street was filled with intellectuals, cafe's . The street goes back to the original parts of Baghdad (historical footage included) and is next to the original gates to the city.Khalil Pasha, Baghdad's last Ottoman governor, inaugurated the street in 1916. Twelve newspapers had their offices here as well, but they shut down when the Ba'ath took over in 1968 and started to control the media. Visuals of many shops (souqs) and markets on the street - jewelers, book market, clothes makers. Also shown is the mosque and people praying. Good shots of the architecture and back alley ways. Also footage of men's baths. GOod BW historical included thorughout. PART 1 01:01:00 - 01:01:48 thriving downtown Baghdad and Rashid Street 01:04:25- 01:05:45 more views of Rashid Street - stores and traffic 01:05:45 - 01:07:00 historical footage showing ancient city and footage of the Ottoman empire entering the city in the early part of hte century 01:07:00 - 01:09:00 Views of the Grand Mosque - exteriors and men praying inside. Other views of crowded streets with market stalls. 01:09:00 - 01:09:40 craftsman at work with lathe, people walking down the small alleyways of the market, shops with clocks and antiques 01:09:40 - 01:12:08 more market shots, views of an exhibit showing past days in the market place, and of previous leaders and famous personalities 01:16:50 - 01;17;10 traffic along Rashid Street 01:19:00 - 01:19:55 more views along the street - market, stalls, high angle looking down over the street, 01:19:55 - 01:23:50 historical views of Rashid Street from early in the century - unpaved roads and horse and carriages - various shots of the stores inside and the objects they sell. - from jewelry, to furniture to baked goods. 01:27:33 - 01:28:10 crowds on Rashid Street. Good shot of tight zoom in of people in busy marketplace to zoom out to wide shot showing market full of people 01:28:10 - 01:30:00 In book selling area man on sidewalk hawking books, displays of books, people walking with piles of magazines (have similiar from 2003 - pre Iraq war) 01:34:39 - 01:38:15 footage from some Arabic film, imam calling people to prayer heard over shot of mosque, people going to mosque, praying, more footage from feature film of people fighting and killing with swords, - more beauty shots of the Grand Mosque 01:38:15 - 01:42:25 jeweler at work, tailors at work 01:44:31 - 01:45:45 restaurant/meeting place for men - coffee house - hookas 01:48:00 - 01:48:30 More views of Rashid street and men buying goods