Three Days in Iraq: Marines, Journalists, and Civilians Killed

While the past three days have been fairly average in terms of violence in Iraq, with the exception of the 21 Marines killed, a sampling of events in Iraq over the past three days present the reality of occupied Iraq quite clearly:

With the military clearly being unable to defeat the insurgency, there has recently been increased discussion about the withdrawal of US troops in Iraq from officials in the military and the Bush administration. However, these calls are being made largely for public relations purposes, with the hope that talk of a withdrawal will deflect attention from the ongoing occupation while allowing the occupation to continue. This strategy could be especially important with the 2006 Congressional elections, as many Republican and Democrat supporters of the war may run the risk of being voted out of office if the election is decided primarily on the basis of the Iraq war.

It is the ongoing human cost of the war in Iraq that may make some Congress members vulnerable in 2006. The total number of United States soldiers killed in Iraq has reached 1,821. The rough number of police and Iraqi soldiers killed in 2005 has reached 1,479, although the numbers, based primarily on corporate media reporting and CENTCOM news releases, may be incomplete. An estimated 26,264 Iraqi civilians have been killed since the start of the invasion in March of 2003. These numbers will no doubt increase during the upcoming year, as will the financial costs (currently at $185 billion).

Related posts:

  1. Iraq Watch: Destroying Iraq’s Cultural Heritage, 37,000 Civilians Killed, US Arrests Iraqi Journalist
  2. Iraq Watch: Study Estimated 100,000 Civilian Casaulties, Criminal Probe of Halliburton, 600 Civilians Killed in Fallujah Siege
  3. Iraq Watch: Women in Iraq, Continued Violence, Marines Miss Recruiting Quota, Vermont Towns against the War
  4. Representative Ehlers Admits “Tens of Thousands” of Civilians Killed in Iraq
  5. Journalists continue to be targeted in Iraq

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