Counting the Bodies 
     by James Ridgeway 
     Village Voice | Mondo Washington 

     Publication Date September 3 - 9, 2003 

     Hard to Keep Track of the Dead in Iraq

     Amid increasing suspicions that the U.S. media have been
underestimating Iraqi casualties, here are the latest more or less reliable
figures culled from several sources, including the government: 

     Iraq Body Count (iraqbodycount.net) reported that the number of
civilian deaths in Iraq ranges from 6,113 to 7,830. Military.com reports
that as of August 28 a total of 281 U.S. soldiers have been killed since the
start of the invasion-that includes 143 since major fighting was declared
"over" on May 1. The Iraq Coalition Casualty Count
(lunaville.org/warcasualties/summary.aspx), based on tallies from Centcom,
the Defense Department, and the British Ministry of Defence, shows that, as
of August 27, 281 U.S. soldiers, 50 British soldiers, and two "other"
coalition soldiers have been reported killed. The estimated wounded? 1,212. 

     But by far the most interesting and quite possibly most realistic
report comes by way of Jude Wanniski, the supply-side economist and ex-Wall
Street Journal reporter who has struck up a correspondence with Mohammad
al-Obaidi, an Iraqi doctor living in Britain. Al-Obaidi coordinates the
small Iraqi Freedom Party, which favors free enterprise and is both
anti-Saddam and anti-U.S. Al-Obaidi tells the Voice that members of his
family have been tortured and killed by Saddam's secret police, and others
have been killed in American air and ground attacks. Al-Obaidi, whose
brother is a retired general now living in Iraq, says he has no ties with
any intelligence service and has nothing to do with the American stooge
Ahmed Chalabi. 

     Al-Obaidi told Wanniski that "hundreds of our party's cadre" spent five
weeks interviewing undertakers, hospital officials, and ordinary citizens in
all of Iraq (except for what's controlled by the Kurds) and came up with a
total figure of 37,137 civilians killed since the beginning of the invasion,
6,103 of them in Baghdad. Those figures, according to al-Obaidi, do not
include members of unofficial militias, paramilitary groups, or Saddam's
Fedayeen units. 

http://www.truthout.org/docs_03/083103A.shtml



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