- Gulf War reporter Arthur Kent returns to southern Iraq to find out if the invasion by U.S. and British forces to topple Saddam Hussein will mark a new beginning for the Iraqi people, or a descent into chaos.
- Five years before the Bush administration launched Operation Iraqi Freedom, Arthur Kent filmed the wedding in Basra of a young baker, Ali al Khalaf, and his sweetheart, Sahar. As the program begins, their fate is a mystery. Have they and their extended families survived the final years of Saddam Hussein? And are the young lovers now parents? Despite Saddam's tyranny, they had planned to have children, lots of them. It's not easy finding one family in a city of two million people, especially while British and U.S. forces continue to battle Saddam loyalists. But gradually, clues appear, eventually leading the way to the home of Ali and Sahar. They and other residents of Basra speak frankly of their years of torment under the old regime - and their anxiety about the future. Promises of aid and reconstruction have yet to relieve the desperate situation in the city, due mainly to the thievery and violence that continues to stalk the streets. Back to Basra: After Saddam explores the harsh choices facing the people of both Iraq and America. In the troubled aftermath of the U.S.-led invasion, the testimony of ordinary civilians proves that the campaign to secure Iraq has only just begun.
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