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Analysis : Middle
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More than 100 US soldiers in Iraq killed in April
By Jerry White
1 May 2007
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The death toll for US soldiers in Iraq climbed to at least
104 in Aprilup from 81 in Marchmaking it one of the
deadliest months for US troops since the March 2003 invasion of
Iraq. US military fatalities have topped 100 a month only five
times since the wars beginning, according to the Associated
Press. A total of 3,351 members of the US military have died since
the war started, with another 24,314 wounded.
The spike in American deaths comes as the US surge completes
its third month and the escalation of US military operations in
Baghdad and the western Anbar province continues. US troops have
been increasingly vulnerable to attack as they have left fortified
bases, set up neighborhood outposts and been deployed to the streets
of the capital and other cities to suppress resistance to the
US occupation.
April was also the deadliest month for British forces in Iraq
since the first month of the war. The 11 British troops deaths
reported last month is surpassed only by the 27 who died in March
2003, reflecting increasing violence in southern Iraq where they
are based, particularly among Shiite groups vying for influence
as Britain prepares to reduce its forces.
While the Bush administration and the Democrats trip over each
other to pledge their support for the troops, the
continuation of the warwhich the Democrats are committed
to continue fundingwill condemn hundreds, if not thousands,
more young people to their deaths, bringing incalculable tragedy
to communities across America.
In the last few days of April, at least 14 US soldiers died
in combat. The nine killed last Friday included five who died
in fighting in Anbar province, three who were killed when a roadside
bomb struck their patrol southeast of Baghdad and one who died
in a separate roadside bombing south of the capital. Another US
soldier was fatally wounded Saturday by small arms fire in the
same part of the citya predominantly Shiite area. Three
American soldiers and an Iraqi interpreter were killed by a roadside
bomb Sunday while on a combat patrol in eastern Baghdad, and another
Marine was killed in Anbar province, the military said.
A profile of the US soldiers killed in April is typical of
the thousands of working class youth, many from small rural towns
and lacking decent prospects for a future, who have fallen victim,
along with hundreds of thousands of Iraqis, to this criminal war.
US Army Pfc. David Austin Kirkpatrick, 20, was killed last
Friday when his Humvee was hit by an IED. According to local news
reports, Kirkpatrick was a 2006 graduate of Eastbrook High School
in Matthews, Indianaa rural town of 595 people about 55
miles northeast of Indianapolis. Growing up with a father who
fought in Vietnam, his sister said, We pretty much always
knew hed end up in the Army or the military at some point.
Kirkpatrick was the second soldier from Grant County to die in
Iraq within the last month, and the fifth with ties to the county
since the war began. In all, 80 people from Indiana have died
after being sent to the Middle East since the buildup for the
invasion of Iraq began in 2003.
Earlier in the month, Garrett Knoll, a 23-year-old medic who
had been in Iraq just two months, was among nine US soldiers killed
April 24 when a truck bomb exploded next to their patrol base
in Diyala province. Knoll was a 2001 high school graduate, who
lived with his grandparents in Bad Axe, Michigan, a town 3,462
people. According to Bad Axe High School Principal Wayne Brady,
Knoll attended Verona Mills, a one-room country school, from kindergarten
through eighth grade. When he transferred to Bad Axe High School
as a freshman, he fit right in and joined the cross-country,
track and wrestling teams, Brady said.
The news of a fallen soldier was like a punch in the
gut for residents of his hometown in Michigans Thumb,
the Bay City Times noted. James Stahl was working
in his field when the radio delivered the news about Knoll,
the article continued. I was saddened, said
the president of Bad Axe Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 116. You
hear it all the time, but its not kids from around here.
Eventually, though, it catches up. It made me think about the
Vietnam War and the kids from Huron County who were killed over
there. There were four kids from little Filion alone.
The top military commander in Iraq, General David Petraeus,
said last week that more casualties are to be expected because
the US military was operating in new areas and challenging
elements in those areas. The effort may get harder
before it gets easier, he said. The success of the US military
operation in Iraq would take years, he said, as he denounced any
plan to pull back troops by the fall, claiming this would lead
to an escalation of sectarian violence.
Far from the US surge ending sectarian violence, the death
toll among Iraqi civilians continues to climb despite efforts
by the US and Iraqi government to conceal statistics that would
undermine efforts to paint the military escalation as a success.
Asked by reporters how long the US effort would take, Petraeus
said, I wouldnt try to truly anticipate what level
might be some years down the road. However, he noted historical
precedents to long US peacekeeping missions. It is an endeavor
that clearly is going to require enormous commitment and commitment
over time, but beyond that time I dont want to get into
trying to postulate how many brigades or when we would start to
do something, he said.
Petraeus also blamed growing US casualties on exceedingly
unhelpful activities by Iran and Syria, especially those by Iran.
The general is the architect of a counter-insurgency plan that
borrows heavily from the methods of colonial repression used by
the French in Algeria, the British in Malaysia and the US in Vietnam
and Central America. This includes building 12-foot concrete walls
in Baghdad and controlling gated communities in an
attempt to divide the population and crush opponents of the occupation.
In the near future, the New York Times noted
Sunday, identity cards or internal passports may be issued
in an effort to isolate the enemy in Baghdad, as has been done
with some success in the embattled city of Fallujah, a city
that was laid to waste in one of the worst crimes of the war.
US military forces shelled a Sunni neighborhood in southern
Baghdad Sunday morning the day after nine US soldiers were killed.
Agence France-Presse reported that as the sun rose over
Baghdad, a series of massive detonations could be heard from southwestern
districts, where Iraqi security officials said a US operation
was under way in support of the capitals joint security
plan. The artillery bombardment began after 9 a.m. and lasted
for more than 15 minutes.
There are increasing calls from the Democratic Party in particular
to redeploy US troops throughout Iraq and rely on
air power and special forces to secure US control over the oil
rich nation. By pulling US troops out of the most dangerous urban
areas the Democrats hope to reduce US casualties and thus make
a long drawn out occupation of the country more politically palatable
in the US.
See Also:
US analyst derides ineffective
US-created Iraqi military
[30 April 2007]
Iraq: Nine US troops dead,
20 wounded in Baqubah
[25 April 2007]
Iraqis oppose US plan to divide
Baghdad into ghettos
[25 April 2007]
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