- IN MEMORIAM
-
- Today I'm going to do something a little bit like journalism,
except I haven't done any real follow-up. Still, it's an important issue,
and I'd like any Google maestros reading to help.
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- Go to your local newspaper site, or TV station site,
and do a search for "local man woman killed wounded Iraq". Weed
out the duplicates, total the numbers, and then check them against the
casualty lists, because there's something funny going on here.
-
- I started to notice something several months ago. The
local papers would interview the mother of someone killed or wounded in
Iraq, and more often than not, there'd be a bitter aside: "Of course,
for some reason, he's not included in the official totals."
-
- Somehow, that struck a chord. And the thought crystallized:
They're lying about the numbers. Think about it - it's absurd to think
they wouldn't, considering everything else they've done.
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- So, I started reading. Here's what I've found.
- _____________________________________________________
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- 60 Minutes looks at the casualty count.
-
- (CBS) More than a quarter million American men and women
have served at one time or another in Iraq. Most will return to the United
States more or less intact. But some come home the hard way - on a stretcher,
bloody and broken.
-
- And, as Correspondent Bob Simon says, there are few bloodier
or more broken than Chris Schneider.
-
- Today, Schneider walks with a limp, on his artificial
leg. But even though he was injured during a military mission in a shooting
war zone, he is not included in the Pentagon's casualty count. Their official
tally shows only deaths and wounded in action. It doesn't include "non-combat"
injured, those whose injuries were not the result of enemy fire.
-
- How many injured and ill soldiers, sailors, airmen and
marines - like Chris Schneider - are left off the Pentagon's casualty count?
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- Would you believe 15,000? 60 Minutes asked the Department
of Defense to grant us an interview. They declined. Instead, they sent
a letter, which contains a figure not included in published casualty reports:
"More than 15,000 troops with so-called 'non-battle' injuries and
diseases have been evacuated from Iraq." Yet none of these are included
in the media-reported casualty count, leaving the true human cost of the
war something of a mystery.
-
- "It's difficult to estimate what the total number
is," says John Pike, director of a research group called GlobalSecurity.org
which publishes an informed estimate that goes well beyond what the Pentagon
has released.
-
- "You have to say that the total number of casualties
due to wounds, injury, disease would have to be somewhere in the ballpark
of over 20, maybe 30,000," says Pike.
-
- His calculation, striking as it is, is based on the military's
own definition of casualty - anyone "lost to the organization,"
in this case, for medical reasons. And Pike believes it's no accident that
the military reports a number far lower than his estimate.
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- Then there's dribs and drabs like this:
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- WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Eight U.S. troops were not counted
in the overall casualty numbers for operation in Afghanistan and Iraq,
according to Pentagon officials, who cited an audit by the Department of
Defense.
-
- Pentagon officials said the names were discovered in
the audit conducted after Defense Department officials found that casualty
numbers appeared to be wrong.
-
- There was no immediate answer by the services -- which
have the authority to release names of the dead -- as to why the names
were not originally reported.
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- All of the names released Friday by the Pentagon were
listed as being killed by nonhostile injuries.
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- One name, separate from the eight, was changed from being
killed during the Iraq operation to being killed during the Afghanistan
operation.
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- The increase raises the total number of dead in the Afghanistan
operation from 108 to 112. The overall number of dead during the Iraq operation
rises from 529 to 532.
- ___________________________________________________
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- Here's something I didn't know, and I'll bet you didn't,
either:
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- Information about the number of US casualties in Iraq
is available on a web site of the Pentagon or known as the "War Hub"
at www.pentagon.gov. This information covers only those who are officially
US citizens enlisted with different military services.
-
- Hired security contractors, or mercenaries, and recruits
who are not citizens who enlisted to obtain a "green card," are
not counted or mentioned. A large number of the green card recruits are
from Mexico and Central America. There are no organizations to look after
their rights or help them once they're in Iraq. Most of them are buried
in Iraq when killed.
-
- A videotape produced and distributed by the "Majles
Shora Al-Mojahideen in Fallujah," one of the most important military
wings of the Iraqi resistance, showed a burial site discovered outside
the Iraqi city of Samara with tens of bodies in US military body bags.
The dead were dressed in US uniforms. It is estimated that as many as 40%
of the US troops serving in Iraq are green card recruits.
- _________________________________________________
-
- It seems only right that the American public should know
every single detail. We should know exactly how bad it is before anyone
claims a "mandate":
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- WASHINGTON, Jan. 20 (UPI) -- A soldier who served in
Iraq apparently hung himself with a bedsheet last week at Walter Reed Army
Medical Center, but the Pentagon did not count that death two days later
when it announced "a very small increase" in the suicide rate
from Operation Iraqi Freedom.
-
- It also did not count an Operation Iraqi Freedom soldier
who apparently committed suicide at the same military hospital last July.
The Pentagon said it is not counting suicides among troops who killed themselves
after they left Iraq.
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- A veterans' advocate questioned that decision.
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- "I want to know why stateside suicides are not counted
in the total number of suicides reported by the Department of Defense,"
said Steve Robinson, executive director of the National Gulf War Resource
Center and a former Army Ranger.
-
- Robinson said he fears an epidemic of mental problems
among troops who have served in the war. "There appears to be a significant
increase in both suicides and post-traumatic stress disorder," Robinson
said.
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- Remember the comments made by CNN news chief Eason Jordan
about whether journalists in Iraq were targeted by the military? He resigned
but the questions still linger:
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- Thirty-six journalists - and 18 media support workers
- have been killed since the beginning of hostilities in Iraq in March
2003, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ).
-
- At least nine have died as a result of American fire,
said Ann Cooper, executive director of the CPJ.
-
- Why did he back off? We can only wonder. From August
2003:
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- The Pentagon has confirmed that US troops have shot and
killed a cameraman working for Reuters news agency in Iraq.
-
- The shooting happened at Abu Ghraib prison, west of Baghdad,
where six Iraqis were killed in a mortar attack late on Saturday.
-
- The US military said that soldiers had mistaken Mazen
Dana's camera for a rocket propelled grenade launcher.
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- The 43-year-old Palestinian was described by Reuters
as one of its finest cameramen.
-
- His death brings to 19 the number of journalists and
their assistants who have died in Iraq or have gone missing since the conflict
began.
-
- ***
- The incident took place in daylight on Sunday afternoon.
- Mazen Dana's last pictures show a US tank driving towards
him outside the prison walls.
- Several shots ring out from the tank and the camera falls
to the ground.
- His sound engineer, Nael al-Shyoukhi, said that the pair
had spoken to a US soldier near the prison shortly before the shooting.
- "They saw us and they knew about our identities
and our mission," he said.
- ________________________________________________
-
- Now, keeping that in mind, read this from Indymedia:
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- According to Islamonline.net and other sources, Dana's
family, when interviewed after the murder, had stated to investigators
that Dana was murdered because he was shooting video footage of mass graves
of US soldiers --- i.e., soldiers killed who were not counted in the official
Pentagon casualty figures --- for a television documentary on the subject
for Reuters.
- Just days before the murder, he told his brother that
US military intelligence had been following him around continuously and
that he was certain that, sooner or later, he would be killed. According
to another article in www.aztlan.net, the mass graves in various locations
in Iraq contained large numbers of Mexican nationals fighting on the US
army front lines, persons who had been promised US "green cards"
and even US citizenship by unscrupulous US Army recruiters if they were
willing to risk almost certain combat death.
- __________________________________________________
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- These are a few posts from an online military forum:
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- The website of the Pentagon divides the causalities in
Iraq into three categories:
- 1)"Combat Casualties" -- 1,300 dead, and 9,000
injured since March, 2003. Both figures are false.
- 2) "Non-Combat Causalities." The site does
not report how many of these were injured or killed. Last fall, 60 Minutes
concluded that the figure could be around 3,000 killed and over 25,000
injured.
- 3) "Coalition Causalities." Information under
this category was posted briefly, then deleted. The figures showed 750
killed and 1,034 injured. It is not clear who these people were. If they
were "coalition forces," then why are their countries not claiming
them?
-
- This:
-
- Well, for starters, MIAs are not counted as fatalities.
Those are called KIAs. Spec Ops guys ARE counted but often the circumstances
of their deaths are classified. As for illegals and guys without families,
what makes you think there is a special category for them?
-
- Everybody has to designate somebody to receive their
life insurance, unpaid wages, and personal property in the event of their
deaths. Before any service member deploys he must update and verify his
"Page 2", the service record page that records such data. These
pages don't simply disappear if the guy in question is Spec[ial] Ops or
some other of your special categories.
-
- People might disappear without explanation but paperwork
in the military is eternal. Nothing happens without the paperwork. Nothing.
-
- That last post leads me to believe that if an actual
journalist, someone with resources, balls and determination, filed the
right FOIA requests, we might begin to get some numbers we can trust.
- June 2003, from columnist and Vietnam vet James Glaser:
-
- How would you feel if your son was killed in Iraq and
your government refused to count him as a causality of the war? Let us
say your son and his unit were heading down a road at high speed, trying
to get to where some other American troops were under attack and their
vehicle flips over because of bad roads and all are killed.
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- According to the way Washington counts battle deaths
in Iraq, your son died in an unfortunate accident and is not counted as
dying in combat for his nation. You see, it sounds better if President
Bush can say that only 25 Americans have lost their lives since he said
the war was over on that flight deck thirty miles off our coast.
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- In reports from Washington and in every major newspaper
the smaller number of combat deaths is reported as the amount of Americans
killed in Iraq since the end of the hostilities, even though the real number
is more than twice as high.
-
- With 25 deaths that is only one every two and a half
days, but if they were honest, they would tell us the real number. Sixty
five Americans have lost their lives since May 1st when we started counting
Post War deaths and that is over one per day. Washington wants to keep
these numbers as low as possible, otherwise Americans might stop supporting
our continued occupation of Iraq.
- And that's the crux of it, after all.
-
- If the American people knew it was closer to, say, 4,000
troops dead and 30,000 wounded, it wouldn't look like such a good trade.
It might even lead people to question the wisdom of starting the same game
all over again in Iran.
-
- And we can't have that, can we?
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