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New study says US war has killed 655,000 Iraqis
By the editorial board
12 October 2006
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According to a study published Wednesday in the British medical
journal the Lancet, the US invasion and occupation of Iraq
are responsible for the deaths of an estimated 655,000 Iraqis.
The survey of Iraqi casualties was conducted by a team of Iraqi
physicians under the direction of epidemiologists at Johns Hopkins
Universitys Bloomberg School of Public Health in Maryland.
The estimate of the researchers is more than 12 times the figure
of 44,000 to 49,000 civilian deaths given by the British group
Iraq Body Count, and nearly 22 times the figure of 30,000, more
or less, mentioned by President Bush in a December 2005
press conference.
The number of estimated deaths of Iraqis since the invasion
corresponds to 2.5 percent of the population of Iraq. A matching
percentage of the US population of 300 million would be 7.5 millionnearly
the entire population of New York City.
The number of 655,000 represents the excess deaths
caused by the American invasion and occupation. This is the difference
between the number of people killed since March 2003 and the number
of deaths that would be expected on the basis of pre-war death
rates.
Of the total number of war-related deaths, an estimated 600,000
died as a result of violence, including gun shots, car bombs and
other explosive devices, and air strikes. An estimated 31 percent
of these, or 186,000, are attributed by the study directly to
coalition forcesthat is, these Iraqis were killed by the
American military or its allies. According to the study, gunshot
wounds caused 56 percent of violent deathsan extraordinarily
high figure that points again to the direct role of the US military.
An additional 24 percent of war-related deaths are attributed
to other sources, including sectarian killings and suicide bombings,
while 45 percent are classified as unknown.
These figures give a partial picture of the consequences of
a war crime of vast dimensions. US imperialism has laid waste
to an entire country and killed a significant proportion of the
population in order to seize control of Iraqs vast oil resources
and establish a hegemonic position in the Middle East. The Lancet
report stands as an indictment not only of the Bush administration,
but of the entire US political establishment.
Death on such a scale was an entirely foreseeable result of
the invasion of Iraq. The US attack has produced a social catastrophe
of historical proportions.
The nightmare of death and destruction unleashed by the US
gives the lie to all of the claims, beyond the phony allegations
of weapons of mass destruction and Iraqi support for Al Qaeda,
advanced to justify the warthat it was launched to liberate
the Iraqi people, that it is a war for democracy and freedom,
etc.
The report states that the US intervention has killed more
than twice as many Iraqis in the space of three-and-a-half years
than were killed by the regime of Saddam Hussein in the course
of its 24-year reign, based on the estimate by Human Rights Watch
of 250,000 to 290,000 killings under the deposed Baathist government.
The occupying forces are responsible not only for those they
killed directly, but for all of the violence that has been unleashed
by the invasion. The US policy of supporting different ethnic
groups and pitting them against each other has led to the sharp
increase in sectarian killings over the past year. The ultimate
cause of all the deaths, as well as the uncounted injuries, lies
in the decision to launch the war itself.
The 55,000 additional deaths from non-violent sources are attributed
by the study to heart attacks, cancer, infant mortality and other
illnesses. This increase is directly related to the destruction
of Iraqs social infrastructure, including electricity, sanitation,
clean water and medical care.
The immediate response of the Bush administration to the Lancet
report was a predictable mixture of contempt and indifference.
In a press conference on Wednesday, Bush called the figure of
655,000 not credible and said the methodology used
in the study had been discredited. He did not bother
to explain the basis on which he dismissed the report.
For its part, the Pentagon responded by saying that it regrets
the loss of any innocent life in Iraq or anywhere else.
The pro-forma character of this statement betrays the complete
indifference of the US military. The Pentagon went on to claim,
It would be difficult for the US to precisely determine
the number of civilian deaths in Iraq as a result of insurgent
activity.
This statement, as with virtually all official US statements
on Iraqi casualties, attributes the toll on Iraqi lives entirely
to the resistance, not to US violence. This is yet another in
the mountain of lies employed to justify the war.
Since the invasion, the US government has refused to release
figures on the deaths it has caused. The US-backed Iraqi government
has systematically underestimated the death toll, and has stepped
up its policy of concealment in tandem with the increasing carnage
from US military attacks, mass killings by death squads, and suicide
bombings. Beginning in September, the government of Iraqi Prime
Minister Nouri al-Maliki barred the Baghdad morgue and the Health
Ministry from releasing their own reports on deaths.
The Lancet study is the most credible estimate of deaths
available, and is based on an entirely sound methodology. The
figure of 655,000 is much higher than numbers reported by other
surveys, including Iraq Body Count, because these other estimates
rely on passive surveys of deaths reported in the press. This
method is known to vastly underestimate actual deaths, since most
killings go unreported. Iraq Body Count also includes only civilian
casualties, while the Lancet report includes all deaths.
In an article on Wednesday, the Washington Post cited
several researchers who backed the surveys findings, including
Ronald Waldman, an epidemiologist at Columbia University, who
said the survey methods were tried and true and that
the results were the best estimate of mortality we have
from Iraq. Sarah Leah Whitson, from Human Rights Watch, said that
there was no reason to question the reports
findings.
The Post noted, Both this and the earlier [Johns
Hopkins] study are the only ones to estimate mortality in Iraq
using scientific methods. The technique, called cluster
sampling, is used to estimate mortality in famines and after
natural disasters.
To arrive at their estimate, the researchers selected a random
population sample across different regions of Iraq and then calculated
the number of deaths since the invasion of March 2003 in that
sample. In total, 1,849 households were visited, and a member
of the household was asked to report on deaths in the family from
the period beginning 14 months before the invasion of Iraq through
to the present.
To verify the reported deaths, the interviewers requested death
certificates 87 percent of the time. Of those asked, 92 percent
were able to give certificates.
After calculating the number of post-invasion deaths among
the households sampled, the resulting figure was used to estimate
the number of deaths for the population as a whole. Based on pre-invasion
death rates, the researchers calculated the expected deaths during
the same period. The difference between these two figures yielded
the excess deaths produced by the invasion and occupation.
The 655,000 number is a middle figure. The researchers reported
that they were 95 percent confident that the actual number of
deaths was between 393,000 and 943,000.
Even if one assumes that the low-end of their estimate is correct,
the death toll is staggering, with the US military directly responsible
for more than 110,000 violent deaths.
Claims that the Johns Hopkins research methods are unsound
were also used in an attempt to discredit an earlier report that
estimated 100,000 excess deaths in Iraq from March 2003 to September
2004. The new study gives independent confirmation of that figure,
yielding on the basis of an independent sample an estimate of
112,000 during that same period.
In answering a question on the Lancet report during
his press conference on Wednesday, Bushs comments reeked
of stupidity, indifference and imperial arrogance. Acknowledging
that a lot of innocent people have died, Bush said
he applauded the Iraqi people for their courage in the face
of violence.
This is a society which so wants to be free that... theres
a level of violence they are willing to tolerate, Bush said.
The truth is the exact opposite. The violence is a product of
colonial subjugation of a population that overwhelmingly opposes
the presence of foreign troops in Iraq. Recent polls have found
that at least 60 percent of the population supports attacks on
US military forces.
At the same time, Bush indicated that the level of killing
will increase in the coming period. He declared that it is time
for the Iraqi government to work hard to bring security in neighborhoodsa
reference to US demands for a violent crackdown on Iraqi resistance,
particularly on anti-American Shiite militias. Last weekend, US
forces carried out a major action in Diwaniyah, a city south of
Baghdad, against militias associated with Shiite fundamentalist
cleric Moqtada al-Sadr.
Also on Wednesday, the US Army said that it planned to keep
troop numbers at current levels through 2010. Army Chief of Staff
Peter Schoomaker said the move was intended to insure
that I can continue to shoot as long as they want us to
shoot.
Washington has used the alleged killing of
smaller numbers of people by other governments as a pretext for
military attack. The Clinton administration and the media made
vastly exaggerated and entirely unsubstantiated claims of Serbian
killings of Albanian Kosavars in early 1999 to justify the US
plan to launch an air war against the former Yugoslovia. At that
time, figures in the area of 100,000-200,000 were tossed out and
the regime of Slobodan Milosevic was roundly accused of genocide.
However, following the air war, the Tribunal on War Crimes
in Kosovo issued an estimate of Albanian deaths from Serb attacks
plus the US-led NATO bombing campaign at between 2,000 and 3,000.
This figure is obviously dwarfed by the death toll resulting from
the US rape of Iraq. But there are no charges from any section
of the US political establishment, from either of its two parties,
or from the media of genocide in Iraq.
While Milosevic, at the behest of Washington, was put on trial
at the Hague for war crimes, the very suggestion that Bush and
the top policy makersCheney, Rumsfeld, Rice, Powell, Wolfowitzwho
conspired to launch an unprovoked war against Iraq should suffer
a similar fate would be denounced on all sides as nothing short
of treason.
The scale of death and destruction in Iraq has been systematically
concealed from the American people, with the complicity of the
mass media and the Democratic Party.
There has been very little reporting on the recently launched
military operations in Iraq, in both Shiite and Sunni areas. US
troops have been conducting neighborhood sweeps, seizing and arresting
an untold number of people. How many thousands of people have
been killed during the latest round of military aggression? Without
any independent reports of what is going on, it is impossible
to know.
The silence of the media and both parties reflects the American
ruling elites contempt for human life in general, and the
lives of Iraqis in particular.
The attitude of the Bush administration and the Democrats stands
in sharp contrast to the sentiment of broad sections of the US
population, who are increasingly disgusted, horrified and shamed
by the brutality unleashed by the US invasion in the name of the
American people.
The only party in the November elections that represents this
growing opposition is the Socialist Equality Party. In its election
program (see For a socialist
alternative in the 2006 US elections), the SEP calls
for the immediate and unconditional withdrawal of all US troops
from Iraqthe elementary precondition for putting an end
to the brutal and ongoing slaughter.
The SEP demands that those responsible for the war be tried
as war criminals. The election program also calls for the US government
to compensate the Iraqi people for the destruction and suffering
it has caused, as well as the families of American soldiers killed
in the war and the men and women who have been wounded, both mentally
and physically.
The war in Iraq has been waged in the interests of the American
ruling elite, not the American people. The SEP calls for a break
with the two parties of big business and the building of a new
socialist party of the working class. The only viable basis for
a struggle against imperialist war is the development of a mass
socialist movement against the two-party capitalist system.
We call on all those who oppose the occupation of Iraq to vote
for the SEP candidates where they are standing. Study our program,
donate to our election fund, and contact the SEP to participate
in our campaigns. Join the SEP and help fight for a socialist
alternative to war and social reaction.
See Also:
Provocative US attack on Shiite militia
in Iraq
[11 October 2006]
US casualties soar as military intensifies
violence in Baghdad
[6 October 2006]
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