U.S. Invasion Responsible Deaths of Over 250,000 Civilians in Iraq
by John Stokes, Agora Cosmopolitan
Last Updated:
Friday, May 26, 2006 07:45:24 PM |
New
studies make the Bush administration's "liberation"
argument for a 'pre-emptive' war against Iraq seem questionable.
The invasion of Iraq in March
2003 by U.S.-led coalition forces has been responsible for the death
of at least 150,000 civilians (not including certain of Iraq),
reveals a compilitation of scientific studies and corroborated
eyewitness testimonies.
The majority of these deaths,
which are in addition those normally expected from natural causes,
illness and accidents, have been among women and children, documents
a well-researched study, that had been released by The Lancet
Medical Journal.
The report in the British journal
is based on the work of teams from the Johns Hopkins University and
Columbia University in the U.S., and the Al-Mustansiriya University
in Baghdad.
A similar methodology was used in
the late 1990's to calculate the number of deaths from the war in
Kosovo, put at 10,000.
The information was obtained as
Iraqi interviewers surveyed 808 families, consisting of 7,868
people, in 33 different "clusters" or neighbourhoods spread across
the country.
In each case, they asked how many
births and deaths there had been in the home since January 2002.
That information was then
compared with the death rates in each neighbourhood in the 15 months
before the invasion that toppled president Saddam Hussein, adjusted
for the different time frames, and extrapolated to cover the entire
24.4 million population of Iraq.
The most common cause of death is
as a direct result of a worsening 'culture of violence', mostly
caused by indiscriminate U.S. co-ordinated air strikes, and related
military interventions, reveals the study of almost 1000 households
scattered across Iraq. And the risk of violent death just after the
invasion was 58 times greater than before the war. The overall risk
of death was 1.5 times more after the invasion than before.
The on-going American Occupation
has also created worsened civil strife as well as mass environmental
destructions and related public health problems that is associated
with American bomb-related released radioactive and other
life-threatening pollutions. The American Occupation has also
prevailed over the neglect to the repairing of vital public
services-related infrastructure, which include U.S.-led destructions
of water systems.
The figure of 100,000 had been
based on somewhat "conservative assumptions", notes Les Roberts at
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, U.S.,
who led the study.
That estimate excludes Falluja, a
hotspot for violence. If the data from this town is included, the
compiled studies point to about 250,000 excess deaths since the
outbreak of the U.S.-led war.
Many Americans have complained
that more than $200 billion U.S. tax dollars have been diverted from
vitally needed public services in the United States, into apparently
reckless activities. These activities are resulting in inflicted
mass-casualities against totally innocent civilians, which have
worsened conditions for political extremism, and ensuing
"terrorism".
It is well documented that such
activities are being viewed by many Iraqis, and other peoples
internationally, to undermine a popular feeling of international
security in general. Indeed, polls suggest that Americans felt much
more secure under the former political ledership [sic] of
U.S. President Bill Clinton, as compared to the militaristic
strategies which are being pursued by the George W. Bush
administration.
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