| |
How much blood for oil?
Asks Michael Munk
To bring the cost of the invasion and occupation of Iraq to the
public, antiwar groups across the country are organizing to mark
the 3,000th death of a member of its military components.
But by focusing only on the number of dead Americans we are
being manipulated along with the media and public by the
administration’s determination to minimize the cost in blood of
establishing permanent military bases in the heart of the Middle
East oil patch. That public relations strategy consists of
prohibiting images of the dead and wounded returning home and
those of US casualties in Iraq in the US media as well as
aggressive efforts to prevent such coverage by foreign media. It
also plants stories and interviews, leaks to FOX and other
Pentagon-friendly reporters and provides generous payola to
foreign (especially Iraqi) news sources.
Still, the most consistent propaganda effort since the invasion
aims to keep public attention away from the actual amount of
blood being shed by the military victims of the war and their
families. That cost now exceeds 50,000 casualties-a far cry from
the 3,000 to which most of the public is restricted to know.
“Casualties” in the military sense is the total number made
unavailable for duty from all causes, including deaths and
wounds suffered in combat as well as injuries, accidents and
illness. So whether caused by “hostile” (24,965 as of December
27, 2006) or “non-hostile” (25,406 as of December 2, 2006)
causes, the Pentagon’s own web sites record more than 50,000 so
far in Iraq.
However, for most Americans who depend on mass media for
information, the number of only 3,000 is the only measure of the
loss of life and limb the media allow them to know. For the rest
of us, here are the facts:
The Pentagon reports deaths on a daily basis at http://www.defenselink.mil/news/casualty.pdf,
although its own total always lags behind the wire services
number because it insists survivors must be informed before a
dead solider, marine, sailor or airman can be added to the
casualty lists. But the Pentagon only reports the wounded on the
weekly basis (usually on Tuesdays) at the same site and it
reports the non fatal casualties from non hostile on another
website http://siadapp.dior.whs.mil/personnel/CASUALTY/OIF-Total.pdf
only monthly.
From those sources, we can count US military occupation forces
casualties as more than 50,371 as of December 27 last year. The
total (as above) includes 2,400 killed and 22,565 wounded (which
includes both severely and less severely wounded) by what the
Pentagon classifies as "hostile" causes. By that date, another
583 military personnel had died from “non hostile” causes such
as accidents, suicides (there were 99 “self inflicted
fatalities) and illness and, as of December 2 last year another
24,823 had been injured or become ill seriously enough to
require medical evacuation. According the excellent site http://www.icasualties.org/oif/,
another 147 US “contractors” have also been killed since they
invaded Iraq.
I urge opponents of the war to make the public aware that the
actual human cost of the invasion and occupation of Iraq exceeds
50,000 troops and their families who have suffered death and
often life-long disability-of whom the 3,000 are just one tragic
part.
Michael Munk is a retired political scientist in Portland, Ore.
Source: Aljazeera.com
|
|