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Are We There Yet? |
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by Mark Drolette Email: drolette (nospam) comcast.net (verified) |
13 Dec 2004
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Saddam Hussein has been universally and rightly condemned for filling thousands of mass graves. Might there be a new killer kid on the block? For more details, read on. |
Question: How many people does it take to fill a mass grave?
No, this is not a joke, because although I donât know the âofficialâ answer, the one thing I do know about mass extermination is that itâs typically not a subject that lends itself well to humor.
The question stems not from some ghoulish curiosity but rather from the ongoing slaughter in Iraq, and the reply is also crucial to answering the following (and, really, main) query: Since the Bush administration has reminded us many times that Iraqis no longer need fear being used as filler for Saddam Husseinâs mass graves, might the U.S., by virtue of the number of civilians itâs killed, be in danger of replicating Husseinâs dark deeds?
Sticklers for such things may insist that the combat in Iraq is a âCoalitionâ operation. Sorry, but in my book, America, Great Britain, and then a handful of other countries hard-pressed to scare a gaggle of geese hardly qualify as a coalition. Need it be pointed out there would be no war-related deaths at all if the U.S. hadnât led the charge?
Certainly, itâs no secret Hussein racked up an incredibly ghastly body count. Although genuinely accurate numbers are impossible to know, Human Rights Watch (HRW) pegs its best guess at â290,000 âdisappearedâ and presumed killed [in Iraq, including] the following: more than 100,000 Kurds killed during the 1987-88 Anfal campaign and lead-up to it; between 50,000 and 70,000 Shi`a arrested in the 1980s and held indefinitely without charge, who remain unaccounted for today; an estimated 8,000 males of the Barzani clan removed from resettlement camps in Iraqi Kurdistan in 1983; 10,000 or more males separated from Feyli Kurdish families deported to Iran in the 1980s; an estimated 50,000 opposition activists, including Communists and other leftists, Kurds and other minorities, and out-of-favor Ba`thists, arrested and âdisappearedâ in the 1980s and 1990s; some 30,000 Iraqi Shi`a men rounded up after the abortive March 1991 uprising and not heard from since; hundreds of Shi`a clerics and their students arrested and âdisappearedâ after 1991; several thousand marsh Arabs who disappeared after being taken into custody during military operations in the southern marshlands; and those executed in detention -- in some years several thousand -- in so-called âprison cleansingâ campaigns.â (Per âGeorge Black, Iraqâs Crime of Genocide: the Anfal Campaign against the Kurds [New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press], and Human Rights Watch, Justice for Iraq: A Human Rights Watch Policy Paper, December 2002.â)
By any standard, a gruesome legacy. But note the last year of known mass killings: 1991 or thereabouts, years before the U.S. rather incongruently began killing Iraqis to (allegedly) stop Hussein from killing them.
Not to be glib or dismiss Husseinâs barbarity in the least, but even with mass murder, timing is everything. The Bushies have always glossed over the fact that Husseinâs large-scale butchery had been quiescent for years, a tidy little omission with which the American corporate media have never appeared too concerned.
Itâs also important to note that halting Husseinâs murderous rampages (even had they been ongoing) was never presented by the White House as principal grounds for attacking Iraq. Instead, Americans were repeatedly and grimly warned of Iraqi-generated âmushroom cloudsâ over Main Street, USA, and how Husseinâs devil drones gravely threatened us all.
When this tall tale inevitably came a cropper, the administration trotted out one phony ex post facto excuse after another until finally settling on a couple of âjustificationsâ for the invasion that have been proffered for some time now: instilling democracy in Iraq and stopping Husseinâs slaughter.
The book is still open on whether anything resembling real democracy will ever emerge in Iraq, but it is closed on Husseinâs barbarism. So, in trying to ascertain the number of bodies needed to constitute a mass grave, letâs do some simple math:
According to HRW, âBy February 2004, the Combined Forensic Team of the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) had collected information on 259 mass graves in Iraq.â Dividing HRWâs highest estimated number of deaths (290,000) by CPAâs total of confirmed mass graves (259) equals approximately 1120 bodies per site.
No one would be surprised if more victims of Husseinâs madness are unearthed later, thus likely driving that rough guesstimate even higher. But the âaverageâ of 1120 corpses per mass grave allows us to address the primary question:
When it comes to producing mass graves, is America giving Hussein a bloody run for his money?
A study by Baltimoreâs Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health published in The Lancet in October concludes the number of U.S.-precipitated civilian deaths in Iraq since the war began is approximately 100,000.
If this seems too hard to believe, letâs turn to Iraq Body Count (IBC), a web site that has meticulously been documenting war-related deaths since America fired its first missile into Iraq in March 2003. As of this writing, IBCâs total is 14,619 civilian deaths.
Even if we disregard altogether the Johns Hopkins study estimate of an astounding 100,000 dead and instead opt for the much lower number of IBCâs 14,000-plus, this is still far more than would be needed to fill our now-established standard of 1120 bodies per mass grave. (True, those 14,000-plus dead Iraqis are not all buried together, but excluding them from the discussion because of semantics would be a tad gauche, while still leaving them just as dead no matter how or where theyâve been buried.)
There is no end in sight, of course, to Iraqâs carnage. Whether brought about by military action, car bombings, assassinations, depleted uranium shell-generated illnesses, contaminated water, inadequate medical care, or countless other ways in the violent hell that is todayâs Iraq, civilian deaths are guaranteed to climb significantly. When the suffering will stop is an open question.
But even if by some miracle the bloodshed were to come to a screeching halt immediately, thereâs certainly no doubting the answer if we ask if America is now filling mass graves of its own.
Copyright © 2004 Mark Drolette. All rights reserved.
Published originally in Scoop. http://www.scoop.co.nz/mason/ |
Copyright by the author. All rights reserved. |