US,
Allies Drop 46 Bombs Per Day for 20 Years,
Research Reveals
The United States has been at war for nearly
every year of its existence as an independent
nation, fighting in 227 years of its 244-year
history.
By Alan Macleod
March 10, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - - "MPN"
- The United States and its allies
have dropped at least 326,000 bombs and missiles on
countries in the greater Middle East/ North Africa
region since 2001. That is the conclusion of
new research by Medea Benjamin and Nicolas J.S.
Davies of anti-war group CODEPINK.
Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan and Yemen are the
countries that have felt the worst of the violence,
but Lebanon, Libya, Pakistan, Palestine and Somalia
have also been targeted. The total amounts to an
average of 46 bombs dropped per day over the last 20
years.
CODEPINK’s numbers are based primarily on
official U.S. military releases, as well as data
from the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, the
Yemen Data Project, and the New America Foundation.
As striking as the figure of 326,000 is, it is an
underestimate, as the Trump administration
ceased publishing figures of its bombing campaigns
in 2020, meaning there is no data for Iraq, Syria or
Afghanistan for either of the previous two years.
Also not counted are bombs or missiles used in
helicopter strikes, AC-130 gunship attacks, strafing
runs from U.S. bombers, or any counterinsurgency or
counter-terrorism operations in other parts of the
world.
Tough but nice?
Last week President Joe Biden gave the order to
attack Iraqi militias in Syria, dropping 1.75 tons
of bombs on a border village and killing 22 people —
something that brought
cheers from Washington insiders and corporate
media pundits alike. The move was reportedly in
response to strikes on U.S. military bases in Iraq —
bases that, last year, the Iraqi parliament
unanimously demanded be closed.
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Yesterday, anonymous administration officials
claimed that Biden called off a second Syria
strike after being warned that women and
children were in the area. Though no evidence
was offered and the officials refused to go on
record, corporate media
diligently
parroted the State Department line, allowing
the new administration to simultaneously present
itself as getting tough on its enemies and as a
champion of human rights.
War, war, and more war
The United States has been at war for nearly
every year of its existence as an independent
nation, fighting in 227 years of its 244-year
history. While both Barack Obama and Donald Trump
offered up anti-war rhetoric when they were on the
campaign trail, both moved steadfastly away from
that position once in office. By 2016, Obama was
bombing
seven countries simultaneously and had
earned the moniker “Drone King.” Trump,
meanwhile,
escalated the war in Yemen and even carried out
the targeted
assasination of Iranian leader Qassem Soleimani
while he was in Iraq for regional peace talks. The
45th president also authorized the use of the
“Mother of All Bombs,” a 21,000 pound (9,500 kg)
explosive dropped on Afghanistan’s Nangarhar
Province in April 2017.
Many of the Biden administration’s early moves
signal that there will be more continuation of than
rupture with previous U.S. foreign policy in the
Middle East. While Biden had pledged to end the U.S.
role in Yemen, the State Department’s qualifying
language makes it clear that the U.S. is merely
returning to Obama’s position on the conflict. Biden
promised only to end support for “offensive” Saudi
campaigns and limit “relevant” arms sales. Yet his
administration immediately began
emphasizing and
denouncing Houthi attacks on Saudi Arabia, and
reaffirming its commitment to help Riyadh “defend”
itself from Houthi aggression. U.S. envoy Timothy
Lenderking even went so far as to
praise Saudi Arabia for its “generous support
over the decades for the people of Yemen.”
On Israel, Biden has fully supported Trump’s
decision to move the American Embassy to Jerusalem,
a controversial move effectively approving the
Israeli occupation of Palestine. Today,
Vice-President Kamala Harris had a meeting with
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in which
she
reaffirmed the White House’s “unwavering
commitment” to Israel and its security.
Meanwhile, on Iran, Biden has dragged his feet on
lifting sanctions and returning to the negotiating
table to bring the U.S. back to the nuclear deal
Trump abandoned. He also framed his Syria attack as
a “message” to Iran.
Despite its
spending almost as much as every other country
combined on defense, the impact of war is largely
unfelt in the United States. As Benjamin and Davies
write: “The American public and the world are left
almost completely in the dark about the death and
destruction our country’s leaders keep wreaking in
our name.” With studies such as this one, CODEPINK
hopes to change that fact.
Feature photo | US airstrikes strike the Old City
a day after Iraq’s prime minister declared “total
victory” in Mosul, Iraq, July 11, 2017. Felipe Dana
| AP
Alan MacLeod is Senior Staff Writer
for MintPress News. After completing his PhD in 2017
he published two books: Bad
News From Venezuela: Twenty Years of Fake News and
Misreporting and Propaganda
in the Information Age: Still Manufacturing Consent, as
well as anumberofacademicarticles. He
has also contributed to FAIR.org, The
Guardian, Salon, The
Grayzone, Jacobin
Magazine, and
Common Dreams.
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