Posted on 08/10/2003 11:28:16 AM PDT by Ragtime Cowgirl
# of Iraqis not killed by Coalition compared to estimates # of Iraqis not murdered by Saddam since deposed* x # of days since 1 May 03 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ( ) x (birth rate per day of those saved above x # of days since 1 May 03) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ( ) - # of Iraqi deaths reported by www.iraqbodycount.net -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- # of Iraqis alive because of the compassion, competence and love of humanity by the US-led Coalition. * incl. # of Iraqis not dying from sanctions since they were lifted A Calculated example for Sunday, August 10, 2003: Minimum Maximum 48,000 3,900,000 + 47/day x 71 days 548/day x 71 days ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ( 51,337 ) ( 3,938,908 ) + ( 34.2 per 1000 population per year x (51,337 or 3,938,908) / 365 days ) x 71 days ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ( 51,678 ) ( 3,965,112 ) - 6087 7798 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 45,591 3,957,313
References:
http://www.tellthechildrenthetruth.com/Saddam_Hussein.htm
http://www.cesr.org/iraq/docs/humancosts.pdf
http://www.medact.org/tbx/docs/Medact%20Iraq%20report-spread.pdf
http://www.ippnw.org/CollateralDamage.html
http://www.geographyiq.com/countries/iz/Iraq_rankings.htm
http://www.casi.org.uk/info/undocs/internal.html
World Health Organization
(with support from UNICEF)
(WHO estimates 100,000 to 500,000 civilian casualties.)
There are several calculations estimating civilian deaths:
MedAct estimates a range from 48,000 to 261,000 for a conventional conflict and additional deaths from postwar adverse health effects could total 200,000.5 The World Health Organization estimates 100,000 direct and 400,000 indirect casualties and anticipates that as many as 500,000 people could require treatment to a greater or lesser degree as a result of direct or indirect injuries.6
Estimated Casualties
The World Health Organization is estimating 500,000 casualties distributed in the following manner:
South 100,000
Center 200,000
Baghdad and surrounding area 200,000
the policies of Saddam's regimes led to an average of perhaps 200,000 Iraqis dying per year through brutal repression, slaughter by chemical weapons, government-forced poverty and so forth
http://www.deanesmay.com/archives/000840.html
I would love to sit down and figure out how many people Saddams regime slaughters every day. Then, we could make some sort of counter that reads Peace with Iraq has claimed (x) lives. The counter would include every death that can be laid at Saddams feet going back to the end of the Gulf war and go up daily. Let the other side A.N.S.W.E.R. for that
Posted by Andrew Cory at February 20, 2003 09:41 PM
Dean (and Andrew),
Here are some preliminary numbers. Unfortunately, I won't have much time today to follow-up, but should over the weekend.
According to an article printed by Genocide Watch, an NGO founded in the Hague, Netherlands in May of 1999, Saddam is responsible for the deaths of roughly one million Iraqis.
http://www.genocidewatch.org/IraqkilledJanuary26.htm.
(This article was written by John F Burns, a NYT correspondent who also wrote the article that Dean linked to a few days ago.
Of those one million, 500,000 died in the war with Iran, and another 100,000 died in Gulf War I. I am inclined to exclude those for the sake of being conservative. This means that Saddam is responsible for the deaths of 400,000 purely civilian Iraqis.
Saddam Hussein has been in power since July 16, 1979. Through the writing of the article I cited above that is 8,740 days meaning that on average roughly 47 Iraqi civilians die every day Saddam Hussein is in power. You can do the math yourself, but since I have already done it thats nearly 1,500 per month, or 17,000 per year.
In direct response to your question Andrew, Saddam is responsible for roughly 200,000 purely civilian deaths since the Gulf War (using my form of analysis).
I would like to stress that this is an EXTREMELY conservative number. I have read quite a few articles on the topic since Andrews post and I feel confident that most experts on the situation would agree that my numbers are a low-ball estimate.
Posted by Mike Plaiss at February 21, 2003 10:01 AM
It's been my experience over the past few years that going to the mainstream press is a waste of time. They know what they're doing.
I e-mail conservative talk show hosts, websites - bloggers - reporters, yes - and sympathetic groups: homeschoolers, Veterans, police and firefighters, church groups, family organizations - friends and neighbors, ask them to please pass on info, stand up for the troops.
A few more articles, and the WH and DOD websites both have detailed, regularly updated accounts of Saddam's atrocities:
"How Many People Has Saddam Hussein Killed?"
...Just as in Stalin's Russia, the machinery of death is mostly invisible, except for the effects it works on those brushed by it in the loss of relatives and friends, and in the universal terror that others have of falling into the abyss. If anybody wants to know what terror looks like, its face is visible every day on every street of Iraq.
"Minders," the men who watch visiting reporters day and night, are supposedly drawn from among the regime's harder men. But even they break down, hands shaking, eyes brimming, voices desperate, when reporters ask ordinary Iraqis edgy questions about Mr. Hussein.
"You have killed me, and killed my family," one minder said after a photographer for The New York Times made unauthorized photographs of an exhibition of statues of the Iraqi dictator during a November visit to Baghdad's College of Fine Arts. In recent years, the inexorable nature of Iraq's horrors have been demonstrated by new campaigns bearing the special hallmark of Mr. Hussein. In 1999, a complaint about prison overcrowding led to an instruction from the Iraqi leader for a "prison cleansing" drive. This resulted, according to human rights groups, in hundreds, and possibly thousands, of executions....
Committee of the Missing (Saddam's victims may number eight million)
Newsweek via MSNBC.com ^ | 5/8/03 | Rod Nordland
...The Committees view is that Saddam Husseins regime slaughtered 8 million people; in a country of 25 million thats a pretty extreme estimate. Hitler was a minor student in the school of Saddam, and not a very good student by comparison, Idrisi said. Just in my small family, my cousin was in prison, my father, brother, and five or six other cousins disappeared, he said. Saleh agreed. No family in Iraq is without its missing. My brother, too. Still I havent reached his grave, but I saw the file.
Challenging such over-the-top figures provokes annoyance among the Committee members. How can we have 8 million? Ill show you. Saleh produces an armful of fat file folders. Look at this one. Look at the file number. Its stamped TOP SECRET, labeled Department of General Security, Branch 45, File No. 12584. Branch 45 specialized in the banned Shiite group Al Dawa. This is a case file concerning one Satter Jaber Meslain, an investigation that lasted from 1981-1983. As the result of his confession and other investigative leads that his interrogation produced, 55 persons are implicated; all are listed here as condemned to death on one page, and then, on a paper dated hours later, confirmed hanged by a rope until dead. On the front of the file folio is a strip of computer stickers, the kind used to track inventory, bearing the number 507989493; they seem to be file locators. Look how big that number is. It was indescribable what they did. There are millions of files, millions.
He pulls out another, quite similar file, Branch 45, File No. 1055. An investigation into one person, led to 54 persons executed. And a third file, 28 executed. And a fourth, 26 executed. The floor next to his desk is stacked high with these; and thats just this days work.
The doors of the villa are tightly controlled now, by guards with their AK-47s laid across a desk blocking the way. Only those on Committee business are let inside, and those whose discoveries on the walls outside have made them so distraught they need comforting. Committee members speak in hushed tones to the bereaved; it helps to know how many others have had the same experience. In his quiet, stern way, Idrisi has the same message, over and over. The files also had the names of the torturers and the executioners. Theyre in code, but they hope to break that code. We will catch them. And when we catch them, we wont do the same thing they did to us. We will take them to court and put them on television and let the people see who they are, and what they did.
Basil Jaber, the man whose brother had not yet grown his mustache, leaves oddly reassured. He never really expected to find his brothers alive, anyway, but at least someone is trying to do something about it. We are not animals, he says. There is law. Those who did this will go to court. My brothers were only going to pray, thats all they did.
The guards have let a woman named Suheila Daoud come inside; she is wailing and beating the sides of her head with both fists. Only her face can be seen under the black abaya; it is wet with tears. Her neighbor is let in to try to calm her. One of her brothers had been an opposition agitator; authorities first arrested him and then came later for her other four brothers. The youngest, Muhammed, was only 12 years old, another, Ali, was 13, the rest in their 20s. She has just found their names on the wall outside, ordered hanged many years before. Late last year she saw the Iraqi minister of information, Mohammed Sayid al Sahaf, on the street, and got down on her knees in front of him. I kissed his hand and said, Please, just let me see one of my brothers, only the small one, hes still a baby, let me come to him, please. And he said, OK, all will get out, dont worry. They lied. Then the Americans came and she was filled with hope that her brothers would come out alive from one of the prisons, until she saw their names on the Committees wall lists. I want only one thing now, to catch Saddam and bring him in front of us. Tell Mr. Bush our hearts will never rest until he is punished. ...
You might want to check the link to 'Chrome Dome' - it's great. He leads those dangerous convoys, writes colorful tales about his exploits - and linked Free Republic to his sight. (^:
Thanks to LT Smash for directing loyal readers to both Chief and Chrome Dome.
LT Smash is coming home.
A Calculated example for Sunday, August 10, 2003: Minimum Maximum 48,000 3,900,000 + 47/day x 102 days 548/day x 102 days ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ( 52,794 ) ( 3,955,896 ) + ( 34.2 per 1000 population per year x (52,794 or 3,955,896) / 365 days ) x 102 days ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ( 53,298 ) ( 3,993,703 ) - 6087 7798 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 47,211 3,985,905
Thanks for the great work. That article in the Observer angered me as well. It seems to me that the greatest threat to the troops and the memory of those who have made the ultimate sacrifice, is to have our support recede or the confidence in the mission eroded by unreasonable expectations and the reactions of weak kneed politicians. The press and every single Dem presidential candidate are leading the effort to make this so.
Amen. It's a major scandal.
Gen. Myers felt it necessary to say this last week:
You know the press is behaving very badly when a military leader criticizes them in public. Gen. Myers just put his neck on the block for his troops.
When I read this quote I was so furious. The press will be out for his blood, just as they went after SOD Rumsfeld when he told the watching world that the American people had sense enough to find the trustworthy news sources after the march to Baghdad. Even FoxNews attacked SOD Rumsfeld....and he was only responding to a very hurt young man who just helped win a major victory - only to discover his country's press wasn't on his side.
When the press attacks Gen. Myers, SOD Rumsfeld, Pres. Bush unfairly, and disses our military - they need to know they're attacking "we the people" - and we aren't running for election or subject to military codes of conduct.
PC insanity that parents of the troops trust anyone who intentionally incites fear, hypes negativity daily while ignoring the good works of their sons and daughters, ignoring the gratitude of the Iraqi people and the history of Saddam's brutality. I've seen it here - parents glued to the 'worst case scenario' news, refusing to listen to reports from the troops and their commanders.
Here's one reason - the major military support group is stupidly calling itself the "Worried Families Bureau" - spreading "worry" to the families throughout Britain. Perhaps a Brit visitor could phone these fearmongers and suggest they change their name to reflect the character and dignity of the military:
Our enemies couldn't come up with a better way to undermine morale...parents treating their warriors as babies, as understandable as it may be.
Bill Clinton's peacenik Oxford pals now work for the BBC, and teach journalism. A Rudyard Kipling / Shakespeare revival would help. Too bad the Brits threw out their very real and noble traditions - history of law and chivalry for Utopian PC fluff. The British troops in Basra survived BBC indoctrination and grew up to be honorable and brave defenders of the faith. Hopeful, that.
8 Orwell's Warning - The BBC is blind to its own biases - Opinion Journal ^ | 8/06/03 | MICHAEL GONZALEZ 8 Scandalous [BBC] - AEI ^ | July 28 - AEI, August 11, 2003 - NR | David Frum BBC bias blog:
* http://www.biased-bbc.blogspot.com/
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