Two sheep travel in their owner's car on a road in Baghdad, Iraq, May 9, 2003.
British Army Chaplain Maj. Gen. John Blackburn, left, and Queen's Bishop David O'Connor, Duke of Windsor, lead a service marking the reclamation of a World War I British Army cemetery, in Al Kut, May 8, 2003. Hundreds of British soldiers who died during the campaign for Mesopotamia were buried there. U.S. Marines, rear, helped to clean up the site.
American soldiers secure a British flag to a flagpole using plastic handcuffs after a ceremony marked the reclamation of a World War I British Army cemetery, in Al Kut, May 8, 2003. The site fell into disprepair and obscurity under the Saddam Hussein regime, becoming a makeshift trash dump.
A Muslim woman sits in a hospital bed next to her daughter, who is under observation for a suspected case of cholera at Basra's civilian hospital, May 8, 2003. There have been 17 reported cases of cholera, but the World Health Organization suspects there are hundreds more and that this might be the start of a major epidemic caused by lack of clean water and sanitation in Basra.
U.S. soldiers mill around the ballroom of one of Saddam Hussein's former palaces, now converted into a makeshift Islamic prayer area and chapel for soldiers, in Baghdad, May 7, 2003. The palace is a base for American and Iraqi personnel working for ORHA, the Office of Reconstruction and Humanitarian Aid
Rasha Muhamed Jazem, 7, who lost her eye and was injured by an unexploded round of ammunition left behind after the war, cries at the Basra hospital in Iraq, May, 7, 2003. When Iraqi forces fled, they left behind dozens of arms caches all over Basra, hidden away in schools and homes. Excess weapons are posing a constant danger in populated areas to civilians, especially children.
Two Iraqi couples get their marriage registered at a courthouse in Baghdad, May 8, 2003. The trial Thursday in the same courthouse of 13 men, accused of crimes from looting to murder, marked the relaunch of the Iraqi legal system.
Pfc. Derek Smolos of Ithaca, N.Y., describes to a military documentary team, May 8, 2003, how his Bradley fighting vehicle was ambushed south of Baghdad, Iraq. The combat camera team is recording a video history of the 3rd Infantry Division's campaign in Iraq for historical purposes, and to highlight the lessons learned by U.S. combat soldiers.
A U.S. soldier subdues an Iraqi man as he fights to free himself, after his arrest for what soldiers say was a suspected but unsucessful attack on several soldiers, next to a bridge on the main road out of Baghdad, May 7, 2003. Soldiers who captured him claim the man approached, and then ran, tossing away an unknown object.