-Caveat Lector-

washingtonpost.com
U.S. Troops' Death Rate Rising in Iraq

By Thomas E. Ricks
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, September 9, 2004; Page A01

With the latest spike in violence in Baghdad, more U.S. troops have died since
the turnover of power to an interim Iraqi government at the end of June than
were killed during the U.S.-led invasion of the country in the spring of 2003.

A total of 148 U.S. military personnel have been killed since the partial
transfer of sovereignty on June 28, compared with 138 who died in March and
April of 2003, Pentagon figures show.

That trend is a grim indication that, 18 months after the invasion, the fighting
appears to be intensifying rather than waning. While attention has been focused
largely on standoffs in Najaf and other well-publicized hotspots, an analysis of
the figures shows the U.S. military has taken more casualties elsewhere,
including the deaths of about 44 troops in the western province of Anbar and 10
others in the city of Samarra.

The wide geographic dispersion of the violence reflects the strength of a
resurgent opposition and also frames the challenge U.S. commanders face in the
coming months as the United States seeks to hold an election to establish a new
Iraqi government, said military officers and defense analysts.

"The 'peace' has been bloodier than the war," said Capt. Russell Burgos, an Army
reservist who recently returned from a tour of duty with an aviation regiment in
Balad, Iraq. In his view, the U.S. experience in Iraq is coming to resemble
Israel's painful 18-year occupation of parts of southern Lebanon.

Before the war, predictions by even the most skeptical Bush administration
critics did not include scenarios of escalating violence this long after the
invasion, or of the U.S. military issuing a news release such as the one it sent
out Tuesday morning, headlined "Fighting Continues in Eastern Baghdad." In
addition, several cities near Baghdad have slipped from U.S. control in recent
months and have become "no-go zones" for U.S. troops.

"No one that I know of, to include the most pessimistic experts, predicted a
full-scale insurgency would break out within a couple of months of the overthrow
of the old regime," said Steven Metz, a guerrilla warfare expert at the Army War
College.

Now, Metz said, "the current situation may be sustained for a very long time."

On Tuesday, as the U.S. military crossed the symbolic 1,000-death mark in Iraq,
Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld delivered a similarly somber assessment.
"It's a tough, difficult business," he said at a Pentagon news conference,
predicting more violence in coming months. But he also expressed confidence in
the outcome, saying that "the offense [is] being effectively waged."

The recent surge in violence has been especially surprising because in the weeks
after the transfer of power there was a phase that, for Iraq, felt to some
almost like a lull.

"July was significantly slower" than the violence of the spring, said Maj.
Richard Gullick, an Army neurosurgeon in Baghdad. Then August roared back with
65 deaths and more than 1,000 U.S. troops wounded. The pace has worsened this
month, with 25 fatalities so far.

The nature of the fighting also has changed. In July, most of the combat losses
with identifiable causes were inflicted by planted explosives -- roadside bombs
and land mines. But in August, deaths by gunfire and by suicide bombings also
became a major cause, indicating that there were more direct confrontations with
enemy fighters. "On a gut level, I'd probably agree that IEDs have played less
of a role lately with respect to U.S. casualties," Gullick said, referring to
improvised explosive devices, or bombs planted along roads.

More than a third of U.S. military deaths last month were in Anbar province, in
Iraq's western desert, where the Marine Corps is posted. Underscoring the
intensity of the engagements there, the Marines lost more people last month --
32 -- than the Army did, only the second time that has occurred since the spring
2003 invasion. The nature of the Marine deaths is harder to analyze because the
Marines generally do not release information about the specific causes.

Air Force Gen. Richard B. Myers, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, on
Tuesday summarized the fighting by noting that there has been a "spike in the
casualties" not only of U.S. and Iraqi government forces but also of the
insurgents, even as their opposition becomes more sophisticated. "The more
aggressive the tactics of the insurgency, the greater their loss of human life,"
he said. Rumsfeld elaborated on that point, estimating that as many as 2,500
insurgents and criminals were killed in August.

Rumsfeld also said this week that casualties among Iraqi security forces allied
with the United States are even heavier than the United States has suffered.
"They've lost more Iraqi security people, killed or wounded, in the last two
months than the coalition has lost people," Rumsfeld said in an interview with
WDAY-AM radio in Fargo, N.D., according to a transcript released by the
Pentagon.

Military experts said the latest round of combat is a sign that the U.S.
military is engaged in what promises to be a protracted war. But they drew
sharply different conclusions about what it means.

"Sadly, the 1,000th military death is but a bookmark on a longer and more
painful road," said retired Army Lt. Col. Carlo D'Este, a historian specializing
in World War II. As in the Vietnam War, he said, "there is no visible light at
the end of the tunnel, nor has the Bush administration articulated a viable exit
strategy, without which the war will continue indefinitely -- that is, years."

But retired Army Brig. Gen. David Grange drew a different conclusion. "We are
fighting a counter-insurgency," he said, in which there is "no short-term fix."
So, he said, the key to victory will be "maintaining the will of the American
people."

Spec. Joseph Roche, a 1st Armored Division soldier who recently returned from
more than a year in Baghdad, said that the U.S. military's morale in Iraq is
high and that troops are performing well. His main worry is whether the American
people will stick by the mission as they see more casualties. "My concern,
honestly, is the impact this is having on the American people and our ability to
be strong in this war."

Researchers Madonna Lebling and Rob Thomason contributed to this report.



� 2004 The Washington Post Company

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