Visitors look at artifacts displayed inside the Iraqi National Museum in Baghdad. Baghdad is set to fully reopen its treasured National Museum, home to priceless artifacts plundered in the unchecked chaos following the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq. – Reuters BAGHDAD – A decade on from the 2003 US-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein and whipped up a tsunami of theft in Baghdad, Iraq's National Museum is preparing to display its treasures of Mesopotamian culture - even if thousands are missing. The looting of the museum under the eyes of US troops has sometimes been compared to the Mongol sack of the Grand Library of Baghdad in 1258. Then-US Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld shrugged it off with the comment “stuff happens.” But if many Iraqis still see the museum's looting as a symbol of the cavalier recklessness of the invasion, its current state is emblematic of the bloodshed, political discord and bureaucratic dysfunction that have racked Iraq ever since. Museum workers also hope it could one day encapsulate the promise and achievements of an oil-rich country which for millennia sat at the heart of human civilization. “The museum is now displaying some of the stolen antiquities that were recovered and restored. From a historical perspective and in terms of restoration, it's a very good thing, and they're ready to be presented,” Shaimaa Abdel Qader, a tour guide with the museum, told Reuters on a recent visit. The museum is open to visitors who get special permits - mostly students, officials and foreign dignitaries - but could admit the general public as early as February or March, depending on construction and preparation efforts, she said. The plundering of the museum, whose collection comprises artifacts from over 5,000 years of Mesopotamian history, was one of the most sensational episodes in the immediate aftermath of the US-led invasion of Iraq. Halls and display cases were stripped of priceless sculptures, amulets, coins and cylinder seals. Today, only seven of the museum's 23 wings are open. Some sections smell of mildew and are only dimly lit by old fluorescent lights. Much of the signage is limited to printed paper replete with misspellings and mounted in plastic holders. Beyond its walls, shootings, car bombs and suicide attacks are near-daily occurrences and the government is combating Al-Qaeda-linked militants in the western desert of Anbar. Undeterred, employees said the museum was adding an entrance hall, installing electronic screens and refurbishing damaged relics. “This is our dream, to reopen,” said one worker brushing up a piece of Qajar dynasty-era woodwork. He asked not to be named because he was not authorized to talk to the media. “The security situation, you know, nothing is totally safe in this world. There are terrorists living in every place in the world, not just the Middle East,” he said. The museum boasts an impressive array of statues, mosaics and bas reliefs of empires from the Sumerians to the Ottomans. Some of the world's first cities, irrigation systems, legal codes and forms of writing were developed in what is now Iraq, earning it the name “the cradle of civilization.” The evidence of the past glory of empires such as the Babylonian and Assyrian contrasts with the reality of modern Baghdad, with its faded and crumbling concrete buildings and streets choked with traffic and checkpoints. Some of the most striking pieces date to the Abbasid period when Baghdad was the administrative and cultural heart of an empire that once stretched from Spain to Uzbekistan. The museum is about as old as modern Iraq. It was founded in 1923 by King Faisal I. That task was never easy. Iraqi politics was a saga of coups and revolutions until Saddam climbed to power in 1979 and ruled with an iron fist until U.S. troops deposed him. — Reuters