U.S. Engaged in Combat 226 Days Last Year

The wars Washington doesn't like to talk about



A year ago this week, Reuters reported a single sentence dispatch from Iraq 
that a U.S. airstrike “foiled” an attack on Ain al-Asad airbase in Iraq, where 
U.S. and other international forces were stationed.

It wasn’t the first instance of combat in 2024, and amidst the confusion of 
Secretary of Defense Austin’s secret hospitalization last January, all Pentagon 
spokesperson Major General Pat Ryder said when asked was that Austin along with 
President Biden had “pre-approved” an airstrike near Baghdad. He was referring 
to two separate incidents, but as Ryder himself said, he wasn’t quite sure, 
because what the United States military did out there in the Middle East was 
both automatic and unremarkable.

January 8 is a random day, but on 226 days like it last year, the U.S. military 
“foiled” another attack. In Syria, Jordan, Israel, Iraq and Yemen, as well as 
in Somalia, at sea and from remote bases, American forces attacked or were 
attacked by drones and rockets and missiles and ground fighters. This 
remarkable record, which we pieced together from press releases, social media 
postings, and unit records, shows not just the constant dangers that exist for 
our troops but also how invisible the reality of war is these days.

This state of perpetual war has more or less been the state of affairs for the 
past decade and 2024 was a good illustration. Yemen replaced Afghanistan in 
2024, the active defense of Israel against Iran was added, combat went up 
there, declined elsewhere. But it was still combat, occasions where the armed 
forces were actively in harm’s way, our forces in danger of either death or 
injury.

226 days is particularly extraordinary because both President Biden and Vice 
President Harris bragged during the year that they were presiding over an 
unprecedented year of peace.

On July 24, Biden said that he was “the first president this century to report 
to the American people that the United States is not at war anywhere in the 
world.”

“As of today,” Harris said in her debate with Donald Trump on September 10, 
“there is not one member of the United States military who is in active duty in 
a combat zone in any war zone around the world, the first time this century.”

It wasn’t even the first time in hours, as I reported at the time.

Using those two random days (July 24 and September 10) as examples gives a 
sense of how out of touch those in Washington are with the reality, both as 
seen by America’s enemies and by the Pentagon leadership.

On July 24, while Biden was patting himself on the back for the era of peace he 
had ushered in, U.S. Central Command in the Middle East announced that its 
forces “successfully destroyed two Iranian-backed Houthi missiles on launchers” 
in Yemen, an attack by unnamed aircraft from unnamed locations. On September 
10, the U.S. was at it again, “successfully” destroying five Houthi drones and 
missile. Later in the day, an Iran-backed militia group attacked U.S. military 
personnel and State Department civilians in Iraq. “We reiterate that we reserve 
the right to self-defense and to protect our personnel anywhere in the world,” 
the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad stated.

As the Pentagon describes it, everything it does is “successful” and it is 
always in self-defense. In their mind, when aircraft bomb enemy positions and 
encampments, or when the armed forces (including ships at sea) shoot artillery 
and short-range missiles, or when soldiers and special operators engage the 
enemy on the ground, it is not “combat.” And, by the government’s insistence, 
since it always is done with or on behalf of America’s various “partners” it is 
not war. There is no war, no war zone, no combat. In that way, the dangers and 
the costs are hidden from public view.

We tested the proposition as to whether any of these events are controlled by 
politics by looking more closely at the pace of combat around important 
political events. But the rate of engagements do not seem to let up for 
anything. U.S. forces attacked ISIS militias in Syria in the days leading up to 
the November 5th election, repeatedly.

The hope, now that Donald Trump is returning to office, is that the 
self-professed “America First” president and his advisors will look more 
closely at where U.S. forces are around the world, what they are doing, and 
why. It’s easy to just brush it all under the rug saying that ISIS, the Houthi, 
Iranian militias or al Shabaab shot at us first, that we are only helping our 
friends, or that we are only acting in self-defense.

None of that answers the question of when will it all end, or what are we 
accomplishing. Trump has already bragged that he will end the war in Ukraine 
and that Hamas better released the hostages “or else,” but before the Pentagon 
starts planning non-combat, self-defense operations in Greenland, perhaps we 
could get our shit together where it matters.



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