Jonathan Steele and Suzanne Goldenberg: What is the real death toll in Iraq?

Iraq was going to be different. The US would count its own dead (now close to 4,000), but the toll the war was taking on Iraqis was not a matter the Pentagon or any other US government department intended to quantify. Especially once Bush had declared “mission accomplished” on May 1 2003 - after that, every new Iraqi who died by violence would be a signal that the president was wrong, and would show that a war conducted in the name of humanitarian intervention was exacting a mounting humanitarian toll of its own.

But even though the Americans were not counting, people were dying, and every victim had a name and a family. Wedding parties were bombed by US planes, couples driving home at night were shot at checkpoints because they missed a flashlight warning them to stop, and hundreds of other unarmed civilians were killed for no legitimate cause. In just the last three weeks of April 2003, after Saddam’s statue and his regime were toppled, US forces killed at least 266 civilians - a pattern of overeager resort to fire which has continued to this day.

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Posted on March 19th, 2008 at 9:58 am

See also
Rafferty’s rules
World Peace Herald: Iraqi civilian casualties
All shall have prizes
   
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2 Comments

  1. Legofesto (2 comments.) on 19.03.2008 at 13:33 Permalink | Reply

    I’ve been busy for the March 19 Iraq War Blogswarm too. There are two new posts on Legofesto: Mission Accomplished and Body Count.

  2. Dunc on 19.03.2008 at 17:23 Permalink | Reply

    The thing that gets me about this is that all the people driving this war were pretty hard-core managerialists. What’s the first principle of managerialism? Measure and quantify everything - if you’re not measuring it, you don’t, nay can’t, care about it. Yet they constantly bleat about how they take all possible steps to minimise civilian casualties… How can you possibly know whether these purported steps are actually working if you’re not collecting the most basic and essential metric? The first step you need to take to minimise civilian casualties is to count them.

    And yet, apparently intelligent people buy this bullshit.

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