Media Must Stop Minimizing War Crimes in Iraq
By George Monbiot
The Guardian, November 9, 2005
We were told that the Iraqis don’t count. Before the invasion
began, the head of US Central Command, Gen. Thomas Franks,
boasted that “We don’t do body counts.” His claim was repeated
by Donald Rumsfeld in November 2003 (“We don’t do body counts on
other people”) and the Pentagon last January (“The only thing we
keep track of is casualties for US troops and civilians”).
But it’s not true. Almost every week the Pentagon claims to have
killed 50 or 70 or 100 insurgents in its latest assault on the
latest stronghold of the ubiquitous monster Zarqawi. In May the
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff said that his soldiers had
killed 250 of Zarqawi’s “closest lieutenants” (or so 500 of his
best friends had told him). But last week, the Pentagon did
something new. Buried in its latest security report to Congress
is a bar chart labeled “average daily casualties — Iraqi and
coalition. 1 Jan 04-16 Sep 05.”
The claim that it kept no track of Iraqi deaths was false. The
report does not explain what it means by casualty, or if its
figures represent all casualties, only insurgents, or, as the
foregoing paragraph appears to hint, only civilians killed by
insurgents. There is no explanation of how the figures were
gathered or compiled. The only accompanying text consists of the
words “Source: MNC-I,” which means Multi-National Corps — Iraq.
We’ll just have to trust them.
What the chart shows is that these unexplained casualties have
more than doubled since the beginning of the Pentagon’s survey.
From January to March 2004, 26 units of something or other were
happening every day, while in September 2005 the something or
other rose to 64.
But whatever it is that’s been rising, the weird morality of
this war dictates that it is reported as good news. Journalists
have been multiplying the daily average of mystery units by the
number of days, discovering that the figure is lower than
previous estimates of Iraqi deaths, and using it to cast doubts
on them. As ever, the study in the line of fire is the report
published by the Lancet medical journal in October last year.
It was a household survey — of 988 homes in 33 randomly selected
districts — and it suggested, on the basis of the mortality
those households reported before and after the invasion, that
the risk of death in Iraq had risen by a factor of 1.5;
somewhere between 8,000 and 194,000 extra people had died, with
the most probable figure being 98,000. Around half the deaths,
if Fallujah was included, or 15 percent if it was not, were
caused by violence, and the majority of those by attacks on the
part of US forces.
In the US and the UK, the study was either ignored or torn to
bits. The media described it as “inflated,” “overstated,”
“politicized” and “out of proportion.” Just about every possible
misunderstanding and distortion of its statistics was published,
of which the most remarkable was the London-based Observer’s
claim that: “The report’s authors admit it drew heavily on the
rebel stronghold of Fallujah, which has been plagued by fierce
fighting. Strip out Fallujah, as the study itself acknowledged,
and the mortality rate is reduced dramatically.” In fact, as
they made clear on page one, the authors had stripped out
Fallujah; their estimate of 98,000 deaths would otherwise have
been much higher.
But the attacks in the press succeeded in sinking the study.
Now, whenever a newspaper or broadcaster produces an estimate of
civilian deaths, the Lancet report is passed over in favor of
lesser figures.
For the past three months, the editors and subscribers of the
website Medialens have been writing to papers and broadcasters
to try to find out why. The standard response, exemplified by a
letter from the BBC’s online news service last week, is that the
study’s “technique of sampling and extrapolating from samples
has been criticized.”
That’s true, and by the same reasoning we could dismiss the fact
that 6 million people were killed in the Holocaust, on the
grounds that this figure has also been criticized, albeit by
skinheads. The issue is not whether the study has been
criticized, but whether the criticism is valid.
As Medialens has pointed out, it was the same lead author, using
the same techniques, who reported that 1.7 million people had
died as a result of conflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo
(DRC). That finding has been cited by Tony Blair, Colin Powell
and almost every major newspaper on both sides of the Atlantic,
and none has challenged either the method or the result. Using
the Congo study as justification, the UN Security Council called
for all foreign armies to leave the DRC and doubled the
country’s UN aid budget.
The other reason the press gives for burying the Lancet study is
that it is out of line with competing estimates. Like Jack
Straw, wriggling his way around the figures in a written
ministerial statement, they compare it to the statistics
compiled by the Iraqi health ministry and the website Iraq Body
Count.
In December 2003, Associated Press reported that “Iraq’s Health
Ministry has ordered a halt to a count of civilians killed
during the war.” According to the head of the ministry’s
statistics department, both the puppet government and the
Coalition Provisional Authority demanded that it be stopped. As
Naomi Klein has shown, when US soldiers stormed Fallujah (a year
ago today), their first action was to seize the general hospital
and arrest the doctors. The New York Times reported that “the
hospital was selected as an early target because the American
military believed that it was the source of rumors about heavy
casualties.”
After the coalition had used these novel statistical methods to
improve the results, Blair told the UK Parliament that “figures
from the Iraqi Ministry of Health, which are a survey from the
hospitals there, are in our view the most accurate survey there
is.”
Iraq Body Count, whose tally has reached 26,000-30,000, measures
only civilian deaths which can be unambiguously attributed to
the invasion and which have been reported by two independent
news agencies. As the compilers point out, “it is likely that
many if not most civilian casualties will go unreported by the
media ... our own total is certain to be an underestimate of the
true position, because of gaps in reporting or recording.” Of
the seven mortality reports surveyed by the Overseas Development
Institute, the estimate in the Lancet’s paper was only the third
highest. It remains the most thorough study published so far.
Extraordinary as its numbers seem, they are the most likely to
be true.
And what of the idea that most of the violent deaths in Iraq are
caused by coalition troops? Well, according to the Houston
Chronicle, even Blair’s favorite data source, the Iraqi Health
Ministry, reports that twice as many Iraqis — and most of them
civilians — are being killed by US and UK forces as by
insurgents. When the Pentagon claims that it has just killed 50
or 70 or 100 rebel fighters, we have no means of knowing who
those people really were. Everyone it blows to pieces becomes a
terrorist. In July Jack Keane, the former vice chief of staff of
the US Army, claimed that coalition troops had killed or
captured more than 50,000 “insurgents” since the start of the
rebellion. Perhaps they were all Zarqawi’s closest lieutenants.
We can expect the US and UK governments to seek to minimize the
extent of their war crimes. But it’s time the media stopped
collaborating.
http://www.aljazeerah.info/Opinion%20editorials/2005%20Opinion%20Editorials/November/9%20o/Media%20Must%20Stop%20Minimizing%20War%20Crimes%20in%20Iraq%20By%20George%20Monbiot.htm
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