Di abad 20 dan 21 Amerika mungkin sudah membunuh 583.000 hingga 1.641.000 
bangsa2 lain !!

http://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/SOD.CHAP13.HTM

Statistics of Democide

Contents | Figures | Tables | Preface

Chapter 1: Summary and Conclusions [Why Democide?...]
Chapter 2: Pre-Twentieth Century Democide
Chapter 3 Japan's Savage Military
Chapter 4: The Khmer Rouge Hell State
Chapter 5: Turkey's Ethnic Purges
Chapter 6: The Vietnamese War State
Chapter 7: Poland's Ethnic Cleansing
Chapter 8: The Pakistani Cutthroat State
Chapter 9: Tito's Slaughterhouse
Chapter 10: Orwellian North Korea
Chapter 11: Barbarous Mexico
Chapter 12: Feudal Russia
Chapter 14: The Gang of Centi-Kilo Murderers
Chapter 15: The Lesser Murderers
Chapter 16: The Social Field of Democide
Chapter 17: Democracy, Power, and Democide
Chapter 18: Social Diversity, Power, and Democide
Chapter 19: Culture and Democide
Chapter 20: The Context of Democide Socio-Economic and Geographic
Chapter 21: War, Rebellion, and Democide
Chapter 22: The Social Field and Democide
Chapter 23: Democide Through the Years
References
Other Democide Related Documents On This Site
Nontechnical:

# What is democide?
# "Democide vs genocide. Which is what?"
# "War isn't this century's biggest killer"
# "How many did communist regimes murder?"

Professional:

# "Democide in totalitarian states: mortacracies and megamurderers"
# "The Holocaust in comparative and historical perspective"
# Graduate Syllabus on Repression and Democide

Statistical:

# "Power kills: genocide and mass murder"
# "Power predicts democide"

Books:

# Lethal Politics
# China's Bloody Century
# Democide
# Death By Government
STATISTICS OF DEMOCIDE
Chapter 13
Death By American Bombing
And Other Democide *

By R.J. Rummel


The bombing of non-combatant populations violated international and 
humanitarian laws.
----American protest to Japan about its bombing of China in 1938

The American Government and the American people have for some time pursued a 
policy of wholeheartedly condemning the unprovoked bombing and machine-gunning 
of civilian populations from the air .
----American President Roosevelt on the Soviet bombing of Helsinki in 1939


In domestic democide, such as lynchings, the American government was probably 
indirectly responsible for around 2,000 killed since 1900. But in foreign wars, 
the American military may have killed hundreds of thousands of foreigners in 
cold blood, virtually all civilians, and the greater majority of these by 
bombing.

Table 13.1 presents the democide and associated sources, estimates, and 
calculations on the United States. I have separated the United States from the 
other centi-kilo murderers listed in table 14.1 because of the special interest 
in this country and likely questions about its foreign democide. The first part 
of Table 13.1 lists the number of Americans killed in wars or foreign military 
violence during this century (lines 2 to 41), which overall total 633,000 dead. 
The remainder of the table concerns American democide and domestic conflict.

The first case of massive and extensive democide was during the Philippine War, 
which the United States fought to takeover the Philippines from a newly 
independent Filipino government and pro-independence guerrilla forces (lines 47 
to 89). With the approval, if not under the command of their officers, American 
soldiers widely used torture, and often shot their prisoners and surrendering 
guerrillas. Moreover, as a military strategy American forces laid waste to 
inhabited areas of guerrilla infested island areas, destroying villages and 
killing many civilians in the process. Surviving civilians were often driven 
into camps or controlled villages, where conditions deteriorated such that many 
died from hunger and disease (e.g., line 61).

Numerous letters from soldiers and other first hand reports during the war 
attest to the responsibility of the American Army for thousands of deaths. 
Estimates of the number for particular campaigns, such as on Luzon or the 
Visayas Islands are difficult to find. Indeed, the Philippine War seems to have 
dropped into a memory hole (it is rarely even recognized as a colonial or 
imperial war--American war-deaths in the Philippines are usually classified 
under the Spanish-American War). The table presents the few mortality figures I 
could find. If possible I classify and consolidate the estimates of primarily 
civilian deaths by province, as for Batangas province (lines 55 to 62); and 
Island, as for Luzon overall (lines 64 to 70). Separately I also give the 
overall estimates (lines 76 to 80). The consolidation of these (line 81) I then 
compare to the sum of the province/island totals (lines 81 and 82), and combine 
them into a final range (line 83) in the usual manner.

Next I list the only two large, democide related, estimates I could find (lines 
87 and 88--scattered throughout the literature, often in the letters home of 
American soldiers, there are accounts of the murder of several to a few dozen 
Filipinos). The problem, then, is to estimate a reasonable overall democide, 
given the range of total deaths already determined above. Based on several 
works on the war1 and taking account of General Bell's claim that on Luzon 
alone one-sixth of the population was killed, or about 600,000 Filipinos,2 I 
assume that 10 to 50 percent of Filipino deaths were due to American democide, 
with 25 percent as the most prudent guess. Calculating these percentages in the 
table (line 89), I get a democide range of 25,000 to 487,000 (showing the huge 
uncertainty involved), with a central estimate of 128,000 murdered

To keep their people in line and to punish collaborators, Filipinos also 
committed democide, particularly the pro-independence guerrillas. This was, 
however, at a comparatively low level. I give an estimated range in the table 
(line 92) that seems consistent with the sources.

At the same time the United States was involved in the sack of Peking. 
Following the defeat of the Boxer rebels and Chinese Imperial Army eight 
foreign military contingents sacked Peking and the far countryside. Homes and 
shops were looted, women raped and murdered, and unarmed civilians generally 
killed. Elsewhere I have calculated the overall Chinese toll (shown on line 
96), from which I guess that of the eight contingents American soldiers were 
less (1/16th), as much (1/8th), or more (1/4th) involved. The resulting range 
of 125 to 6,250 murders appears sufficient to well include the actual American 
democide, given the sources;3 this may have been about 625 innocent Chinese.

The United States committed its greatest democide during the Second World War. 
This was in the indiscriminate area bombing of German and Japanese cities, 
including Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Not all American strategic bombing was of 
this type. Early in the war the American Air Force concentrated on precision 
bombing of both Germany and Japan. But as the war progressed British pressure 
and American bomber losses in such bombing persuaded the Americans to join the 
British in broadly targeting the center of urban areas. Regarding Japan, the 
apparent lack of success of precision bombing led to the assumption of command 
over the bombing by General Curtis Lemay, who was disposed to massive area 
bombing of Japanese cities. The bloody aftermath of this inhuman and barbarous 
form of warfare I lay out in the table (lines 100 to 226).

I first give and consolidate many of the available mortality estimates for the 
Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bombings (lines 101 to 113, 116 to 127); and for 
the conventional blast/fire bombing of Tokyo and Yokohama (lines 130 to 137) 
and other Japanese urban areas (line 140).

I also show and consolidate estimates of the overall toll from this bombing 
(lines 142 to 145). This consolidated range for the total killed can now be 
compared to the sum (line 146) of those killed in Hiroshima, Nagasaki, 
Tokyo/Yokohama, and other urban bombing. Both lows and mid-values (lines 145 
and 146) are relatively close. To get the final range, as usual I take the 
lowest low and highest high and average the two mid-values (line 147). This is 
not yet the democide toll, for there was, as mentioned, also nondemocidal 
precision bombing which surely contributed to the toll. Given, however, the 
sheer weight and deadliness of area bombing, precision bombing must have 
accounted for a small number, perhaps no more than a range of 5 to 15 percent 
of the total, with 10 percent a most reasonable proportion. Taking this into 
account , I then calculate (line 148) that through indiscriminate urban bombing 
the American Air Force probably murdered4 337,000 Japanese during the war .

Similarly determining the democide associated with bombing German cities is 
more complicated, especially because of the far more extensive precision 
bombing and the extended urban bombing of the Royal Air Force. The toll of 
American and British bombing is given in the table, subdivided illustratively 
into that of Berlin (lines 152-154) and Hamburg (lines 157 to 162); and, the 
most infamous, of Dresden (lines 165 to 180). The table then lists and 
consolidates estimates of the overall bombing toll for Germany (lines 183 to 
192), which amounts to a range of 300,000 to 600,000 killed (line 193).

The problem now is to determine how many of these deaths were due to urban area 
bombing by the United States. Probably the tons of bombs dropped on urban areas 
provides the best index. In the table I give estimates of this for Britain 
(lines 196 to 199), for the United States and Britain combined (lines 201 to 
204), for the United States (lines 206 to 207); and for comparison, that 
dropped by each in precision bombing on the most important 
targets--oil/chemical plants and refineries (lines 209 and 210). Using these 
statistics I calculate the area bombing tonnage for Britain (line 212) and the 
United States (line 213). From the proportion of British to American tonnage I 
then estimate the British and American democide (lines 215 and 216) from the 
overall urban bombing toll (line 193). Most probably, then, the American Air 
Force in Europe murdered at least 16,000 German civilians, probably 32,000 
overall, from indiscriminate bombing.

Similar bombing was also carried out against Rumania and Hungary. Virtually no 
estimates are available in the sources of those killed, but to at least show 
that these raids were not inconsequential in civilian lives, the table gives 
one estimate for a series of raids in April 1944 on Bucharest (line 219). Based 
on the sources, I give a likely range of estimated deaths for urban bombing of 
these two countries (line 220), and then estimate the relative British and 
American democide of Rumanians and Hungarians in proportion to that for their 
bombing of Germany (lines 221 and 222).

Summing the American bombing democide of Japanese, Germans, Rumanians, and 
Hungarians gives an overall, most likely, toll of 372,000 lives (line 226). To 
avoid any misunderstanding, I reiterate that this is the probable toll from the 
indiscriminate bombing of civilians, and not from precision bombing of 
military-industrial targets.

This is not the only American democide during the war. After an intensive study 
of American documents and interviews with survivors and perpetrators, the 
Canadian writer and former publisher James Bacque concluded that just before 
and after the end of the war German POWs and civilians in American detention 
camps in Europe died from hunger, exposure, and disease causing conditions as 
bad as the worse of gulag, and for which General Eisenhower was directly 
responsible. Bacque's figures are stunning: "undoubtedly . . . over 800,000, 
almost certainly over 900,000, and quite likely over a million died."5

Basque's statistics, arguments, and documentation were subjected to careful and 
detailed study by a conference of historians (including Germans) organized by 
Stephen Ambrose, the director of the Eisenhower Center at the University of New 
Orleans. Papers from the conference have been published6 and show that Basque 
misread, misinterpreted, or ignored the relevant documents and that his 
mortality statistics are simply impossible. However, the papers do show that 
some of the camps, particularly the transit camps that became known as the 
Rheinwiesenlager,7 were initially lethal, with thousands of German POWs dying, 
and that these deaths were the responsibility of the American government. While 
the final toll of the American transit camps was far from that alleged by 
Bacque, it still could have reached 56,000 dead (lines 232 and 233). Detailed 
statistical studies by the German Maschke Commission set up to determine the 
fate of German POWs arrived at a figure of 4,537 dead for the most deadly 
Rheinwiesenlager camps (line 229). Other estimates in this range are also 
available (lines 228, 230 to 231). As a result of all this, I ignore Bacque's 
estimates and consolidate the others as shown (line 237)

In total, then, during World War II the United States likely murdered from 
246,000 to 978,000 non-Americans, most likely 378,000 of them (line 239).8

American forces also clearly committed democide during the Vietnam War. These 
have been discussed in the Chapters on Vietnam and Cambodia and here I simply 
reproduce (lines 242 and 242a) and sum (line 243) the final democide range, 
along with an estimate for American bombing in Laos (line 242b).

To turn now to domestic democide, the clearest cases of this are lynchings or 
Ku Klux Clan murders of Blacks in which local officials were involved or toward 
which state or federal government officials turned a blind eye. Sometimes the 
executions of alleged criminals by vigilante groups was similarly supported or 
encouraged. In the table I have given estimates of lynchings and other such 
murders (line 246 to 253). Since none cover this century, I have extrapolated 
the estimates for which this could be done (lines 255 to 258) to the years 1900 
to 1987 and then consolidated them (line 259).

Now, not all the 4,000 to some 8,000 that I calculate as killed was democide. 
Some was in communal or interracial violence, some involved the enforcement of 
private law and order. The sources are not detailed or comprehensive enough to 
judge how much of the killing was done with some sort of state or federal 
government involvement or benevolence. Some of the sources (such as Richard 
Maxwell Brown's useful historical studies on vigilantism and lynching)9 do 
suggest that probably most, and even perhaps all but a small number, of such 
killing was without state or federal government help or compliance (although 
local governments in the shape of a sheriff or judge may have participated). 
Accordingly, I assume that 25, 35, and 50 percent of those killed will give an 
approximate measure of the democide that occurred (line 260), which is around 
1,000 to 4,000 Americans murdered, probably about 2,000 in total.

Other forms of nondemocidal violence has occurred and the table classifies and 
lists its estimated dead (lines 263 to 317). My purpose in presenting these is 
to display the variety of American domestic violence and its magnitude, and to 
get some overall measure of the extent of non-democidal violent deaths to 
compare to domestic democide. I also give the estimates of overall dead in 
collective or intergroup violence (lines 320 to 323), each of which, if 
possible, I extrapolate to cover the years since 1900 (lines 325 to 327). Below 
these (line 328) I also sum the various consolidations of the estimates. Note 
that this sum is much higher than the estimates of overall dead in the sources, 
even in comparison to my extrapolation from what many consider the most violent 
1960s (line 326). But given the detailed and comprehensive basis of this sum 
(e.g., lines 246 to 258), I am inclined to accept it as is. That is, probable 
some 6,000 Americans were killed in domestic intergroup or collective violence 
in this century. Even if added to its domestic democide (line 260), which would 
give an overall total near 12,000 Americans probably killed since 1900, this 
hardly makes the United States the "most violent country in the world," as some 
journalists and academics contend.

Putting together all the subtotals (lines 333 to 350), in this century the 
United States probably murdered about 583,000 people (line 350), conceivable 
even as many as 1,641,000 all told. Virtually all of these were foreigners 
killed during foreign wars. Domestically, throughout this century the American 
Federal or state governments were responsible for the murder of about 1 out of 
every 1,111,000 Americans per year. 

NOTES

    * From the pre-publisher edited manuscript of Chapter 13 in R.J. Rummel, 
Statistics of Democide, 1997. For full reference to Statistics of Democide, the 
list of its contents, figures, and tables, and the text of its preface, click 
book.

    1. Particularly useful were Francisco (1987), Gates (1973), Linn (1989), 
Miller (1982), Storey and Lichauco (1926), and Ochosa (1989).

    2. For separate accounts of this statement, see Storey and Lichauco (1926, 
p. 121), Francisco (1987), and Schirmer (1972, p. 231)).

    3. Such as O'Connor (1973, pp. 293, 299-300), Esherick (1987, p. 310), and 
Martin (1968, pp. 147-48).

    4. On the use of "murder" in this context, which may be uncomfortable to 
many American readers, keep in mind that democide is defined as murder by 
government and includes the currently and internationally defined war-crime of 
indiscriminate urban bombing. On such bombing as a war crime in the Geneva 
conventions, see Bothe, Partsch, and Solf (1982).

    5. Bacque (1989, p. 2).

    6. Bischof and Ambrose (1992). For a summary of the conference results, see 
Ambrose (1991). Ambrose's summary provoked many letters from former camp 
guards, prison officers, German survivors, and others, who wrote to verify or 
deny Bacque's allegations. See, for example, The New York Times Book Review 
(April 14, 1991).

    7. Overmans (1992, p. 148)

    8. The results for Great Britain are listed in Table 14.1E, beginning with 
line 2309.

    9. Brown (1969a, 1969b, 1975). 

For citations see the Statistics of Democide REFERENCES


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