We Are Way Past 4,000 In Iraq

by: Chris Bowers

Mon Mar 24, 2008 at 13:25


Whenever one a terrible milestone is reach in Iraq for the number of American soldiers killed, such as 4,000 today, it is necessary to point out that the milestone being focused on was actually reached a long time ago. In addition to the 4,000 dead American soldiers, the following fatalities have also occurred in Iraq over the past five years:

We are way, way past 4,000 deaths in Iraq. The non-civilian death toll, including journalists, all coalition military forces, contractors and Iraqi security forces, currently stands at a minimum of 13,501, or about 15 every two days since the start of the war. The civilian death toll is actually the greatest humanitarian crisis since the Rwanda genocide, and possibly since even before then (I don't want to start ranking genocides). Somewhere between 4% and 5% of the Iraqi population has died what is termed an "excess death" since the start of the Iraq war. For the sake of comparison, Pennsylvania represents just under 4% of the population of the United States.

Also, keep in mind that these are just deaths, and damage has been done in many other ways. Nearly four million living Iraqis are now refugees, roughly 16% of the population, 40% of the middle class, and larger percentages of religious and ethnic minorities. Between 60% and 70% of Iraqi children suffer from psychological trauma. Tens of thousands of American soldiers, and hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians, have been injured. And oh yeah, the war will cost more than two trillion dollars.

All of this needs to be pointed out because, whenever one of these milestones are reached, it implies that the only suffering taking place as a result of the Iraq war is to be found within the American military. Such a narrow focus ignores the wide swath of destruction that the Iraq war has wrought. As long as there is a narrow focus on the efforts of the United States military, the war appears to be an honorable, gracious effort on the part of America with costs that, while grave, are ultimately discrete and containable. However, when one considers that the war has either killed or displaced more than 20% of Iraq's pre-war population, that is has resulted in the European Union surpassing the United States as the world's leading economic power, and that it has both caused and revealed significant weakness in our military capacity, the true nature of the Iraq war becomes apparent. In effect, we instigated a genocide in Iraq, and lost our status as the world's sole superpower as a result. At this point, we are about one presidential election away from becoming the Soviet Union after their invasion of Afghanistan, and watching Americans who were ten years old when the war began die in the sands of Mesopotamia.

We are way, way past 4,000 deaths in Iraq. We have become death, the destroyer of worlds. There is nothing we could ever do in Iraq that will be worth these costs. Shantih shantih shantih.  

Chris Bowers :: We Are Way Past 4,000 In Iraq

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yeah (4.00 / 1)
That's what gets me.  I think the Republicans are still hoping to be able to stabilize Iraq and then claim it "all worked out in the end" but no level of success from this point could possibly be seen as worth the price already paid.


no, that's no good here (4.00 / 1)
The Iraq war is not a pre-ordained moment in time, as the moments of time in Slaughterhouse Five are.  The future is not inevitable; it is the result of human choices.

We didn't have to fight this war.  The dead didn't have to die.


[ Parent ]
over one million dead Iraqis and counting. Is that genocide? (4.00 / 1)
When we mumble the word "genocide" about other people in other places, our lips should twist a little.  A million dead since 2003 makes us second only to the Congo, where five or six million have perished since about 1996, and where Western companies benefit from the slaughter and chaos by extracting low-cost resources.

But a million dead, or maybe 1.2 or 1.3 million, out of a population of 27 million is really something that we ought to keep putting out there.  

Lots of folks know it, but cannot, will not face it directly.    How can they be made to face this awful crime, committed on our watch, in our name, with our money, and at some of our hands?  A million people have died in this oil and resource war, this "war of choice".  That's something to wrap our heads around.

If a million dead Iraqis is not a "genocide", what is?

"If you want that good feeling that comes from doing things for other people, then you have to pay for it in abuse and misunderstanding..."
Zora Neale Hurston


I think (0.00 / 0)
The key difference for many people is that the deaths have come from multiple sources, rather than just one. That is why I emphasized "instigated" the genocide, rather than directly carrying it out. Our actions led to events that are effectively genocide.

[ Parent ]
What's next? (0.00 / 0)
What can the American public do to remedy this situation?  Is there anything that we can do?

I sincerely believe that this country has an obligation to act when unthinkable human crises occur.  Four million refugees.  What can we do?


[ Parent ]
and about 4 million displaced (0.00 / 0)
Five million: that's nearly 20% of the Iraqi population dead or displaced.

What a noble mission.  


[ Parent ]
I'm sure you're intentionally double-referencing (4.00 / 1)
Shiva and Oppenheimer.  There was another nuclear scientist (whose name escapes me) who said, upon the detonation of the first bomb,

"Well, now we're all assholes."


Could one of the presidential candidates please mention this? (4.00 / 1)
Honestly, we hear about 4000 deaths being a "grim" number, but then this aspect of the war is never mentioned... and it needs to be.

I've literally talked to people who, when mentioning the number of US military deaths, they go "So?  That's nothing... Americans have become pansies.  Way more people died in Vietnam", as if this is the only cost of the war, and as if the 4000 solider sacrifice is "cheap" for... whatever it is we're trying to accomplish over there now.

Thank you, Chris, for writing something poignant and true, and apparently something that our presidential candidates refuse to say.


Who the hell are you talking to that say "so"? (0.00 / 0)
"So." "Tell me how that matters." "How does that affect me." The calling cards of the sociopath.

There were lies that took America to war and now a million people are dead. Faces exploded in front of their parents. Limbs torn from arms holding groceries. Blood soaking the soil. Indifference to human suffering creeping like an infection through society.

And Viet Nam as another example of useless war, killing 2 million Viet Namese, I am speachless.


Change
"We must break up the banks and never again let them get so big that they distort our politics and take down the economy.


[ Parent ]
There are probably way more people than you think that are like this... (4.00 / 1)
They just view it as a relatively "light" cost as far as casualties go, and that the soldiers knew what they were getting into when they signed up for military service.  So they look at Vietnam, where there were a lot more military deaths, and just say "Well, 4000 is comparatively small to the  58k deaths in Vietnam" (that number is from Wikipedia).

And given that US Soldier deaths appears to be the only metric by which John McCain and the media are proclaiming the surge to be a "success", it's not hard to see how a lot of people would have this unfortunate opinion.  


[ Parent ]
Just a further reminder... (0.00 / 0)
Here's Cheney explaining away that the 4000 dead "volunteered", for it:

http://abcnews.go.com/WN/Polit...

Is it any wonder why this has seeped into the brains of many Americans?  That it's ok for 4000 soldiers to die simply because they volunteered for military service?

And is it any wonder why the mind-boggling other costs have been completely ignored when our media refuses to acknowledge it, or ask our leaders to acknowledge it?


[ Parent ]
TX SEN Rick Noriega Suspends Website (0.00 / 0)
http://www.ricknoriega.com/

We won the Battle. Now the Real Fight for Change Begins. Join MoveOn.org and fight for progressive change.  

how many hiroshimas? (0.00 / 0)
thank you Chris ...

Robert Fisk noted:

Minimum estimates for Iraqi dead mean that the civilians of Mesopotamia have suffered six or seven Dresdens or - more terrible still - two Hiroshimas.
http://www.independent.co.uk/n...


thank you Chris (0.00 / 0)
I wish these numbers could be part of the national conversation. They just aren't. As long as we continue to be selective about who is human, these wars will continue. Forcing this to the national stage has to be part of any long-term progressive strategy.

a small point maybe (0.00 / 0)
A small point by way of correction, the greatest humanitarian crisis since the Rwanda genocide is not the death toll, however regretable, in Iraq but the 5 million deaths lost to the civil war in the Democratic Republic of Congo over the last ten years.

I guess I consider those two events (0.00 / 0)
As part of the Great African War, which is the worst event since World War Two.

[ Parent ]
On the one hand, on the other (4.00 / 1)
On the one hand, there's a good article in this month's Atlantic that takes the methodology of the Johns Hopkins/Lancet survey of Iraqi civilian deaths -- the 650,000 figure from 2006 -- to task, and I have to say the case is well made. Even so, the same article says that though some estimates are as little as 81,020, up to the 1 million mentioned here, Megan McArdle made the point that all casualty studies have problems. Better estimates, she opined, put the figure around 150,000, but when we argue about the figure's veracity, we lose sight of the fact that that's still a lot of bodies piling up.

That said, I thought I read early on in the Iraq campaign that U.S. soldiers who are wounded in the field, and transported out of theater to hospitals in Europe, the U.S. and elsewhere (Kuwait? Dubai?) are not counted as war dead if they die later on of their wounds.  Can anyone confirm or deny this, and if so, can we reconcile a figure for our accounting.


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