GlobalThe consequences of global conflicts are always: Destruction, Suffering, Hunger, and Death. Pray for peace. View fullsize View fullsize As the U.S. prepared for war in Iraq, Muslim Brotherhood demonstrators burned an American Flag, Amman, Jordan, 1990. – Time Magazine View fullsize The Muslim Brotherhood demonstrators share their “No, no, and no” passion, Amman, Jordan, 1990. – Time Magazine View fullsize Grandson brandishes the Koran with grandpa during the Muslim Brotherhood demonstration, Amman, Jordan, 1990. – Time Magazine View fullsize With war imminent, a guest worker flees Iraq at the Jordan border, Amman, Jordan, 1990. – Time Magazine View fullsize After Iraq invaded Kuwait, fleeing guest workers camped in the Jordan desert, Amman, 1990. – Time Magazine View fullsize Man screams at the destruction of his neighborhood after Israel bombed Beirut, Lebanon, 2006. – Samaritan’s Purse View fullsize Tribesman flees after ambushing a medical convoy and murdering a rival, Lui, South Sudan, 2005. – Samaritan’s Purse View fullsize Relief workers carry the dying victim to an evacuation airplane after the ambush, Lui, South Sudan, 2005. – Samaritan’s Purse View fullsize The Darfur refugee camp, home for thousands of Sudanese that fled civil war, Sudan-2007. – Samaritan’s Purse View fullsize Sacks of maize await United Nations distribution to Sudanese refugees in Lira, Uganda, 2007. – Samaritan’s Purse View fullsize Sudanese women carry 50 kilo/110 pound sacks of life-saving maize, distributed by the United Nations, Lira, Uganda, 2007. – Samaritan’s Purse View fullsize U.S. Army soldier patrols Panama City next to a graffiti-covered police van during the United Stares invasion, Panama, 1989. – Newsweek Magazine View fullsize U.S. Army soldier guards downtown Panama City atop a tank after the Invasion, Panama, 1989. – Newsweek Magazine View fullsize U.S. Army soldier detains and questions a suspected looter during the invasion, Panama, 1989. – Newsweek Magazine View fullsize Residents view the damage to their Chorrillo neighborhood, bombed during the invasion, Panama, 1989. – Newsweek Magazine View fullsize With their homes destroyed by U.S. bombing, families await relocation, behind a razor-wire barrier, Panama City, Panama, 1989, - Newsweek Magazine View fullsize Haitian woman walks past bullet-riddled mural of President Aristide, ousted in a military coup, Port-au-Prince, 1991. - Newsweek Magazine View fullsize Haitian policeman and a soldier on patrol after a military coup, Port-au-Prince, 1991. – Newsweek Magazine View fullsize Wounded by gunfire during the military coup violence, a woman recovers in the Port-au-Prince Central Hospital, Haiti, 1991. Newsweek Magazine View fullsize Captured at sea fleeing Haiti, man is detained at the U.S. Guantanamo Bay Refugee Camp, Cuba, 1992. – Newsweek Magazine View fullsize During their civil war, Salvadoran Army officers from the feared Arce Battalion pose for a portrait. Bullet-riddled sign offers cash for guerillas to surrender weapons, Perquin, El Salvador, 1988. – Newsweek Magazine. View fullsize A Salvadoran Arce Battalion soldier poses with his machine gun, Perquin, El Salvador, 1988. – Newsweek Magazine. View fullsize Soldiers recover in the amputee ward of the San Salvador Army Hospital. Landmines caused most of the injuries, El Salvador, 1988 – Newsweek Magazine View fullsize In their one-room home, Salvadoran women grieve over their sons, summarily executed as suspected guerillas, San Salvador, 1988. - Newsweek Magazine View fullsize When Salvadoran refugees were returned from Honduras, grandpa was too frightened to leave the bus, El Poy, El Salvador, 1988. – Newsweek Magazine