Unworthy Victims: Western Wars Have Killed Four Million
Muslims Since 1990
By Nafeez Ahmed
April 08, 2015 "ICH"
- "MEE"
- Last month, the Washington DC-based Physicians for Social Responsibility (PRS)
released a landmark
study
concluding that the death toll from 10 years of the “War on Terror” since the
9/11 attacks is at least 1.3 million, and could be as high as 2 million.
The 97-page report by the Nobel Peace Prize-winning doctors’
group is the first to tally up the total number of civilian casualties from
US-led counter-terrorism interventions in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan.
The PSR report is authored by an interdisciplinary team of
leading public health experts, including Dr. Robert Gould, director of health
professional outreach and education at the University of California San
Francisco Medical Center, and Professor Tim Takaro of the Faculty of Health
Sciences at Simon Fraser University.
Yet it has been almost completely blacked out by the
English-language media, despite being the first effort by a world-leading public
health organisation to produce a scientifically robust calculation of the number
of people killed by the US-UK-led “war on terror”.
Mind the gaps
The PSR report is described by Dr Hans von Sponeck, former UN
assistant secretary-general, as “a significant contribution to narrowing the gap
between reliable estimates of victims of war, especially civilians in Iraq,
Afghanistan and Pakistan and tendentious, manipulated or even fraudulent
accounts”.
The report conducts a critical review of previous death toll
estimates of “war on terror” casualties. It is heavily critical of the figure
most widely cited by mainstream media as authoritative, namely, the Iraq Body
Count (IBC) estimate of 110,000 dead. That figure is derived from collating
media reports of civilian killings, but the PSR report identifies serious gaps
and methodological problems in this approach.
For instance, although 40,000 corpses had been buried in Najaf
since the launch of the war, IBC recorded only 1,354 deaths in Najaf for the
same period. That example shows how wide the gap is between IBC’s Najaf figure
and the actual death toll – in this case, by a factor of over 30.
Such gaps are replete throughout IBC’s database. In another
instance, IBC recorded just three airstrikes in a period in 2005, when the
number of air attacks had in fact increased from 25 to 120 that year. Again, the
gap here is by a factor of 40.
According to the PSR study, the much-disputed Lancet study
that estimated 655,000 Iraq deaths up to 2006 (and over a million until today by
extrapolation) was likely to be far more accurate than IBC’s figures. In fact,
the report confirms a virtual consensus among epidemiologists on the reliability
of the Lancet study.
Despite some legitimate criticisms, the statistical
methodology it applied is the universally recognised standard to determine
deaths from conflict zones, used by international agencies and governments.
Politicised denial
PSR also reviewed the methodology and design of other studies
showing a lower death toll, such as a paper in the New England Journal of
Medicine, which had a range of serious limitations.
That paper ignored the areas subject to the heaviest violence,
namely Baghdad, Anbar and Nineveh, relying on flawed IBC data to extrapolate for
those regions. It also imposed “politically-motivated restrictions” on
collection and analysis of the data - interviews were conducted by the Iraqi
Ministry of Health, which was “totally dependent on the occupying power” and had
refused to release data on Iraqi registered deaths under US pressure.
In particular, PSR assessed the claims of Michael Spaget, John
Sloboda and others who questioned the Lancet study data collection methods as
potentially fraudulent. All such claims, PSR found, were spurious.
The few “justified criticisms,” PSR concludes, “do not call
into question the results of the Lancet studies as a whole. These figures still
represent the best estimates that are currently available”. The Lancet findings
are also corroborated by the data from a new study in PLOS Medicine, finding
500,000 Iraqi deaths from the war. Overall, PSR concludes that the most likely
number for the civilian death toll in Iraq since 2003 to date is about 1
million.
To this, the PSR study adds at least 220,000 in Afghanistan
and 80,000 in Pakistan, killed as the direct or indirect consequence of US-led
war: a “conservative” total of 1.3 million. The real figure could easily be “in
excess of 2 million”.
Yet even the PSR study suffers from limitations. Firstly, the
post-9/11 “war on terror” was not new, but merely extended previous
interventionist policies in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Secondly, the huge paucity of data on Afghanistan meant the
PSR study probably underestimated the Afghan death toll.
Iraq
The war on Iraq did not begin in 2003, but in 1991 with the
first Gulf War, which was followed by the UN sanctions regime.
An early PSR study by Beth Daponte, then a US government
Census Bureau demographer, found that Iraq deaths caused by the direct and
indirect impact of the first Gulf War amounted to around
200,000 Iraqis, mostly civilians. Meanwhile, her internal government study
was suppressed.
After US-led forces pulled out, the war on Iraq continued in
economic form through the US-UK imposed UN sanctions regime, on the pretext of
denying Saddam Hussein the materials necessary to make weapons of mass
destruction. Items banned from Iraq under this rationale included a vast number
of items needed for everyday life.
Undisputed UN figures show that
1.7 million Iraqi civilians died due to the West’s brutal sanctions regime,
half of whom were children.
The mass death was seemingly intended. Among items banned by
the UN sanctions were chemicals and equipment essential for Iraq’s national
water treatment system. A secret US Defence Intelligence Agency (DIA) document
discovered by Professor Thomas Nagy of the School of Business at George
Washington University amounted, he said, to “an early blueprint for genocide
against the people of Iraq”.
In his
paper
for the Association of Genocide Scholars at the University of Manitoba,
Professor Nagi explained that the DIA document revealed “minute details of a
fully workable method to ‘fully degrade the water treatment system’ of an entire
nation” over a period of a decade. The sanctions policy would create “the
conditions for widespread disease, including full scale epidemics,” thus
“liquidating a significant portion of the population of Iraq”.
This means that in Iraq alone, the US-led war from 1991 to
2003 killed 1.9 million Iraqis; then from 2003 onwards around 1 million:
totalling just under 3 million Iraqis dead over two decades.
Afghanistan
In Afghanistan, PSR’s estimate of overall casualties could
also be very conservative. Six months after the 2001 bombing campaign, The
Guardian’s Jonathan Steele
revealed that anywhere between 1,300 and 8,000 Afghans were killed directly,
and as many as a further 50,000 people died avoidably as an indirect result of
the war.
In his book, Body Count: Global Avoidable Mortality Since
1950 (2007), Professor Gideon Polya applied the same methodology used by
The Guardian to UN Population Division annual mortality data to calculate
plausible figures for excess deaths. A retired biochemist at La Trobe University
in Melbourne, Polya concludes that total avoidable Afghan deaths since 2001
under ongoing war and occupation-imposed deprivation amount to around 3 million
people, about 900,000 of whom are infants under five.
Although Professor Polya’s findings are not published in an
academic journal, his 2007 Body Count study has been recommended by
California State University sociologist Professor Jacqueline Carrigan as “a
data-rich profile of the global mortality situation” in a
review published by the Routledge journal, Socialism and Democracy.
As with Iraq, US intervention in Afghanistan began long before
9/11 in the form of covert military, logistical and financial aid to the Taliban
from around 1992 onwards. This
US assistance propelled the Taliban’s violent conquest of nearly 90 percent
of Afghan territory.
In a 2001 National Academy of Sciences report, Forced
Migration and Mortality, leading epidemiologist Steven Hansch, a director of
Relief International, noted that total excess mortality in Afghanistan due to
the indirect impacts of war through the 1990s could be anywhere between 200,000
and 2 million. The Soviet Union, of course, also bore responsibility for its
role in devastating civilian infrastructure, thus paving the way for these
deaths.
Altogether, this suggests that the total Afghan death toll due
to the direct and indirect impacts of US-led intervention since the early
nineties until now could be as high 3-5 million.
Denial
According to the figures explored here, total deaths from
Western interventions in Iraq and Afghanistan since the 1990s - from direct
killings and the longer-term impact of war-imposed deprivation - likely
constitute around 4 million (2 million in Iraq from 1991-2003, plus 2 million
from the “war on terror”), and could be as high as 6-8 million people when
accounting for higher avoidable death estimates in Afghanistan.
Such figures could well be too high, but will never know for
sure. US and UK armed forces, as a matter of policy, refuse to keep track of the
civilian death toll of military operations - they are an irrelevant
inconvenience.
Due to the severe lack of data in Iraq, almost complete
non-existence of records in Afghanistan, and the indifference of Western
governments to civilian deaths, it is literally impossible to determine the true
extent of loss of life.
In the absence of even the possibility of corroboration, these
figures provide plausible estimates based on applying standard statistical
methodology to the best, if scarce, evidence available. They give an indication
of the scale of the destruction, if not the precise detail.
Much of this death has been justified in the context of
fighting tyranny and terrorism. Yet thanks to the silence of the wider media,
most people have no idea of the true scale of protracted terror wrought in their
name by US and UK tyranny in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Nafeez Ahmed PhD is an investigative journalist, international
security scholar and bestselling author who tracks what he calls the 'crisis of
civilization.' He is a winner of the Project Censored Award for Outstanding
Investigative Journalism for his Guardian reporting on the intersection of
global ecological, energy and economic crises with regional geopolitics and
conflicts. He has also written for The Independent, Sydney Morning Herald, The
Age, The Scotsman, Foreign Policy, The Atlantic, Quartz, Prospect, New
Statesman, Le Monde diplomatique, New Internationalist. His work on the root
causes and covert operations linked to international terrorism officially
contributed to the 9/11 Commission and the 7/7 Coroner’s Inquest.
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