| Posted on Fri, Sep. 05, 2003 | ![]() |
HELEN THOMAS
Who's counting the dead in Iraq? Remember the enemy body counts during the Vietnam War? Some of those U.S. tabulations were highly exaggerated in an effort to show gains on the battlefield. Well, we don't do that anymore. The Pentagon has meticulously reported the American fatality toll in Iraq, now up to 286. That number includes 183 deaths from hostile fire since the start of the war. It also includes 148 dead since May 1 when President Bush declared the end of major combat operations. A Pentagon spokesman said that 1,105 U.S. service personnel have been wounded since the war began. That kind of numerical precision doesn't apply throughout Iraq. I asked Pentagon officials: ''How many Iraqis have been killed in this
war?'' The reply to my first Pentagon call was: ``We don't track them (Iraqi dead).'' Weeks later I pursued the question and was told by a Defense Department
official: I later asked for an explanation of why there has been no attempt to find
out the number of Iraqi war dead. ''If the Iraqis laid down their arms,'' he added, ''there was no
problem. ''We achieved our military objective. We did not count'' the enemy dead, he
said. Various news organizations have come up with estimates of Iraqi dead that
range from 1,700 to 3,000 persons. An official at the U.S. Army Center of Military History acknowledged that
the question of enemy fatalities Books at the history center refer to 50,000 Americans killed in World War I and some 250,000 Americans in World War II. Germany lost 1.8 million soldiers in World War I, and, as our archenemy in World War II, lost about 3.25 million people. We do know, however, that in the Vietnam War 58,198 Americans died -- and many thousands more Vietnamese. White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan was asked this week whether
President Bush knows how many people were killed and wounded in Iraq -- ''not
just Americans but the total people killed and wounded in Iraq since the
beginning of the war. On March 18, two days before the U.S. invasion, Barbara Bush had an interview with ABC-TV's Diane Sawyer. ''Why should we hear about body bags and deaths and how many, what day it's
gonna happen?'' If we do not know or care about the human cost of war for the winners
and losers, |