Posted on 10/13/2006 12:54:25 PM PDT by lowbridge
Posted by Mark Finkelstein on October 13, 2006 - 14:55.
With timing in the tradition of the leak of the Foley fiasco - geared to have maximum impact on the coming elections - a study was published earlier this week by The Lancet, a British medical science journal, claiming that 655,000 Iraqis have died as a consequence of the war. The MSM predictably accorded the study great attention.
In this item yesterday, I noted that Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld and MNF Commander Casey rejected the study's findings, which is wholly at odds with the US government estimate of 30-50,000 Iraqi civilians killed.
Now, as a Pentagon official has made known, a range of experts - who notably come from across the foreign policy spectrum - has cast doubts on the report's methodology and conclusions. Moreover, one of the study authors has been revealed as an anti-war partisan as has the Lancet editor. The first is a former Democratic congressional candidate, the latter made outlandish accusations about the motivations of the governments leading the war effort.
Expert Criticism of the Study
Partisan Background of Author and Editor
Les Robert is described in the Lancet article as having "instigated" the study "and assisted with the analysis and interpretation of the data and the writing of the manuscript." Roberts is also the author Of The Iraq War: Do Civilian Casualties Matter?, Audit Of The Conventional Wisdom, July 2005), in which he wrote, among other things, that the Iraq war began "under unsupportable, and probably illegal, pretenses. Roberts sought the Democratic nomination for Congress in New Yorks 24th CD [which coincidentally includes most of my home county of Tompkins], before yielding to Michael Arcuri. (Tom Grace, Roberts Drops Out Of 24th District Race, The Daily Star [Oneonta, NY], 5/18/06)
Lancet editor Richard Horton, speaking at an anti-war rally last month, said that [the British] government prefers to support the killing of children instead of the building of hospitals and schools As this axis of Anglo-American imperialism extends its influence through war and conquest, gathering power and wealth as it goes, so millions of people are left to die in poverty and disease. Hat tip Little Green Footballs.
My conclusion: the 'study' should be viewed as pre-election polemics rather than serious science.
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There should be records somewhere showing the 545 deaths per day it would take to equal 655,000 in 40 months.
The Lancet has a reputation that is greatly exaggerated. It is not a peer reviewed scientific journal such as we are used to in the States (such as JAMA or the New England Journal). I am sure some of its articles are authoritative, but it regularly publishes some utter crap.
655000 divided by 40 = 16375 average deaths per month, does anyone ever recall a month with that number of deaths?
Has there *ever* been a one day total of 545?
Thanks for doing such an excellent job of posting this - complete with live links. Is there a technique to post in this way, or to you have cut and paste all the links in some way?
a range of experts
Yes. First, on the newsbusters page, I click on the top of my browswer (or right click) for "View Source". That brings up the html code of the entire page on notepad. I highlight the part of the code of the page I want to post here, then right click on my mouse, then click on "copy". Then I just paste it here.
Excellent - many thanks.
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