The Human Cost of the Iraq War

AZG Armenian Daily #201, 21/10/2006

World press

THE HUMAN COST OF THE IRAQ WAR

The final indignity, if you are an Iraqi who was shot for accidentally
turning into the path of a US military convoy (they thought you might
be a terrorist), or blown apart by a car bomb or an air strike,
or tortured and murdered by kidnappers, or just for being a Sunni
or a Shia, is that President George W. Bush and Prime Minister Tony
Blair will deny that your death happened. The script they are working
from says (in Mr Bush’s words last December) that only "30,000, more
or less" have been killed in Iraq during and since the invasion in
March, 2003.

So they have a huge incentive to discredit the report in the British
medical journal "The Lancet" this week that an extra 655,000 Iraqis
have died since the invasion in excess of the natural death rate: 2.5
percent of the population. "I don’t consider it a credible report,"
said Mr Bush, without giving any reason why he didn’t. "It is a
fairly small sample they have taken and they have extrapolated it
across the country," said a spokesman of the British Foreign Office,
as if that were an invalid methodology. But it’s not.

The study, led by Dr Les Roberts and a team of epidemiologists from
the Bloomberg School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University in
Baltimore, was based on a survey of 1,849 households, containing 12,801
people, at 47 different locations chosen at random in Iraq. Teams
of four Iraqi doctors — two men and two women — went from house
to house and asked the residents if anybody had died in their family
since January, 2002 (fifteen months before the invasion).

If anybody had, they then inquired when and how the person had
died. They asked for death certificates, and in 92 percent of cases
the families produced them.

Then the Johns Hopkins team of epidemiologists tabulated the statistics
and drew their conclusions.

The most striking thing in the study, in terms of credibility, is that
the pre-war death rate in Iraq for the period January 2002-March 2003,
as calculated from their evidence, was 5.5 per thousand per year.

That is virtually identical to the US government estimate of the death
rate in Iraq for the same period. Then, from the same evidence, they
calculate that the death rate since the invasion has been 13.3 per
thousand per year. The difference between the pre-war and post-war
death rates over a period of forty months is 655,000 deaths.

More precisely, the deaths reported by the 12,801 people surveyed,
when extrapolated to the entire country, indicates a range of between
426,369 and 793,663 excess deaths — but the sample is big enough
that there is a 95% certainty that the true figure is within that
range. What the Johns Hopkins team have done in Iraq is more rigorous
version of the technique that is used to calculate deaths in southern
Sudan and the eastern Congo. To reject it, you must either reject the
whole discipline of statistics, or you must question the professional
integrity of those doing the survey.

The study, which was largely financed by the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology’s Center for International Studies, has been reviewed
by four independent experts. One of them, Paul Bolton of Boston
University, called the methodology "excellent" and said it was
standard procedure in a wide range of studies he has worked on:
"You can’t be sure of the exact number, but you can be quite sure
that you are in the right ballpark."

This is not a political smear job. Johns Hopkins University, Boston
University and MIT are not fly-by-night institutions, and people
who work there have academic reputations to protect. "The Lancet,"
founded 182 years ago, is one of the oldest and most respected medical
journals in the world. These numbers are real. So what do they mean?

Two-thirds of a million Iraqis have died since the invasion who
would almost all be alive if it had not happened. Human Rights Watch
has estimated that between 250,000 and 290,000 Iraqis were killed
during Saddam Hussein’s twenty-year rule, so perhaps 40,000 people
might have died between the invasion and now if he had stayed in
power. (Though probably not anything like that many, really, because
the great majority of Saddam’s killings happened during crises like
the Kurdish rebellion of the late 1980s and the Shia revolt after
the 1990-91 Gulf War.)

Of the 655,000 excess deaths since March, 2003, only about 50,000 can
be attributed to stress, malnutrition, the collapse of medical services
as doctors flee abroad, and other side-effects of the occupation. All
the rest are violent deaths, and 31 percent are directly due to the
actions of foreign "coalition" forces.

The most disturbing thing is the breakdown of the causes of death. Over
half the deaths — 56 percent — are due to gunshot wounds, but 13
percent are due to air strikes. No terrorists do air strikes. No
Iraqi government forces do air strikes, either, because they don’t
have combat aircraft. Air strikes are done by "coalition forces"
(i.e. Americans and British), and air strikes in Iraq have killed
over 75,000 people since the invasion.

Oscar Wilde once observed that "to lose one parent…may be regarded
as a misfortune; to lose both looks like carelessness." To lose 75,000
Iraqis to air strikes looks like carelessness, too.

By Gwynne Dyer