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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Study documents US-inflicted carnage on Iraqi people
By James Cogan
26 July 2005
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The Dossier of Civilian Casualties 2003-2005, published
this month by the organisation Iraq Body Count (IBC), is the most
detailed assessment to date of how the illegal US-led invasion
and occupation of Iraq have caused the death and injury of tens
of thousands of civilians.
The dossier examines 24,865 civilian fatalities and 42,500
injuries in Iraq between March 19, 2003 and March 19, 2005. The
studys methodology was meticulous but conservative, meaning
the figures underestimate the extent of the carnage inflicted
on the Iraqi people. Only deaths that were reported by at least
two out of 152 English-language news sources have been counted.
Associated Press, Agence France Presse and Reuters provided over
one third of the casualty reports. Other sources were journalists
working for Knight Ridder, the New York Times, the Washington
Post, CNN, the Guardian, the Independent, the
BBC, UPI and other major international news outlets.
The dossier notes that the reliance on English-only sources
means it is possible that our count has excluded some victims
as a result. As well, the report does not include the deaths
and injuries suffered by the Iraqi military during the invasion,
or the casualties that have been sustained by the anti-occupation
resistance movement. Nor does it include the casualties inflicted
by the resistance on the pro-occupation Iraqi military fighting
alongside the US forces.
The fact that the report does not include thousands of deaths
makes its statistics even more horrifying. In Tikrit, for example,
the hometown of Saddam Hussein and the target of heavy bombing
in March 2003, IBC has documented that at least one out of every
90 civilians has been killed. In Baghdad, at least one out of
every 500 people has been killed since the US invasion.
Across the country, IBC has recorded that a minimum of one
out of every 1,000 Iraqi civilians suffered a violent death between
March 19, 2003 and March 19, 2005. If a similar death toll was
suffered in the United States, more than 295,000 people would
have lost their lives100 times the number killed in the
September 11, 2001 terror attacks on New York and Washington.
The population of Fallujah, the target of two US military offensives
during 2004, has most likely suffered the greatest proportional
loss of life. IBC has data showing that at least one out of every
137 civilians has been killed1,874 people. Large numbers
of deaths in the city, however, were never reported. The US military
claimed to have killed over 1,200 Iraqi fighters during the bloody
assault that took place in November 2004, many of whom may well
have been noncombatants.
IBC had age and gender information for 13,811 of the reported
civilian deaths. Males made up 81.7 percent, women 8.7 percent,
9.3 percent were children under 18 and 0.4 percent were babies
up to two years old. The dossier notes: Given the high number
of male adult deaths, we can know that many Iraqis have been left
fatherless and widowed.
The image presented in the US medias daily propaganda
is that terrorists or Iraqi insurgents are responsible
for the bulk of civilian casualties in Iraq. IBC proves that the
opposite is the case. The US-led occupation forces have caused
the largest number of the reported civilian deaths9,270
or 37.3 percent of the total.
IBC attributes 2,353 civilian deaths to the actions of anti-occupation
forces9.5 percent of the total. In another 1,258 cases,
where civilians were killed during clashes between US-led forces
and the resistance, it is unclear which party caused the deaths.
Of the civilian fatalities directly attributed by IBC to the
US-led forces, 6,882 occurred during the invasion of Iraq from
March 20 to May 1, 2003. Air strikes have consistently been responsible
for the greatest number of casualties. Between July and October
2004, for example, 55 US air strikes on cities such as Fallujah,
Kut, Tal Afar and Samarra killed 547 civilians. These attacks
received only the most cursory coverage in the American media.
IBC classified 2,731 fatalities, or 11 percent of the deaths,
as being caused by unknown agents. Included in this
number are the victims of bombings and suicide bombings that targeted
only civilians, and deaths where no clear information exists as
to who was responsible.
The studys decision not to blame these deaths on the
Iraqi resistance is correct. While the indiscriminate bombings
that have slaughtered scores of innocents are almost ritualistically
blamed on Al Qaeda and Jordanian extremist Abu Musaab al-Zarqawi,
in Iraq itself, many have been blamed on pro-occupation factions.
There is also credible evidence that extra-judicial murders are
being carried out by Iraqi government special police units. IBC
notes that some of the people killed by unknown agents
were clearly opposed to the military occupation.
One of the most important findings of the IBC dossier is that
the second largest cause of civilian deaths over the first two
years of the occupation was crime. In the two-year period, there
were 8,935 more reported fatalities attributed to criminal violence
than the rate registered in Iraq before the invasion. Far from
bringing liberation to the Iraqi people, the US invasion
has produced the disintegration of civil society and the collapse
of a credible legal framework. For over two years there has not
been a functioning police force or judiciary in large parts of
the country, while unemployment stands at over 50 percent. An
epidemic of criminal activities, murders, revenge killings and
gang turf battles has resulted.
The reports findings on Iraqi wounded are just as sobering
as the statistics on the number of deaths. The figure of 42,500
injuries implies that a minimum of one out of every 560 people
in Iraq has been injured by bombs, explosions or small arms fire
since the US invasion.
The US-led forces were directly responsible for at least 21,000
of the wounded. Anti-occupation forces caused 4,992, while unknown
agents caused 4,831. Another 10,257 civilians were wounded
by what the Iraqi Ministry of Health classifies as military
operations or terrorist attackswith two
thirds of the casualties resulting from clashes between US forces
and insurgents, and one third from terrorism. In all, the US-led
forces were involved in 68.6 percent of all civilian injuries.
Taken as a whole, the IBC dossier is a valuable contribution.
It lends weight to the study published last October by Lancet
magazine, which estimated that 98,000 Iraqis had lost their lives
as a direct byproduct of the US-led invasionwhether they
died from violence or as a result of the social breakdown in the
country. Both reports combat the attempt by the US-led occupation
to conceal the real cost of the war by simply refusing to count
the victims. Neither the US or British governments, or the pro-American
Iraqi government, have undertaken any count of civilian casualties.
The IBC dossier constitutes a record of the atrocities that
have been committed in Iraq, providing weighty evidence for future
war crime trials of those responsiblethe Bush administration,
its international allies, and its local Iraqi government stooges.
See Also:
More killings of civilians by US-led
forces in Iraq
[14 July 2005]
As US prepares
mass killings in Fallujah
Study estimates 100,000 additional Iraqi deaths since the invasion
[30 October 2004]
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