06.02.2020 Author: Vladimir Platov
How Many US Soldiers Are
Dying in the Middle East and Why?
Column: Politics
Region: Middle East
The US administration and
military leadership have been desperately trying to keep the number of the
US Army’s battlefield casualties, as well as the flag-draped coffins of
American soldiers, from the eye of the press.
There are many reasons for
such secrecy. One of the main ones is the USA’s unwillingness to acknowledge
its losses due to its provocative and aggressive policies in the Middle East
and elsewhere in the world, so as not to cause a wave of protest among American
citizens. Moreover, the actual number of losses would serve as evidence of the
quality and preparedness of the US Army and the efficiency of its weaponry,
which may shake confidence in the power and alleged invincibility promoted by
the US government. In addition, such figures are always utilized in information
warfare. The knowledge of the US Army’s military losses would not only impact
the army itself, but also existing opinions on the country’s foreign policy.
Nevertheless, the attention
this matter garnered from both politicians and the international community is
quite justified. It is enough to recall the past information wars in the US and
Arab media, sparked by the number of American soldiers killed as a result of
military operations carried out by the US and its allies against Iraq. The
operations in question were Desert Storm, started in January 1991, as well
Desert Fox, which took place on December 17-20, 1998. The latter evolved into a
combined operation of the U.S. and the members of the anti-Iraq coalition,
dubbed Shock and Awe and later Iraqi Freedom. Back then, the U.S. claimed that
the number of military casualties was within the limits of 5-6 thousand, while
American and international non-governmental human rights organizations cited
numbers as high as 10 thousand. The members of the Iraqi Resistance, in turn,
reported that about 30-40 thousand American occupants were eliminated.
But the military conflict in
Iraq is not over to this day. In August 2014, the US Armed Forces and their
allies launched a new military operation in the region, titled Inherent Resolve
and aimed at battling the international terrorist organization DAESH (banned in
the Russian Federation).
In January 2013, the US
Department of Veterans Affairs declassified data about the losses of the US
coalition in the Gulf Wars and reported 73 thousand casualties by that point in
time.
Those numbers were even
higher than the losses in the Vietnam War!
In fact, the casualties in
Vietnam were quite difficult to conceal at that time. If a soldier died during
a military mission, it was considered a military loss. The names of 58,195
people who died in Vietnam are carved on a memorial in Washington, D.C.
But something strange
happened during the war in Iraq: the Bush administration made a very cunning
move, opting to report losses only if a soldier was killed directly on a
battlefield on Iraqi soil. This ploy is still in effect today, and quite often,
the deaths of soldiers are passed off as non-military casualties. This allows
the current US Administration to hide the whole picture and the true value of
the lives of the US soldiers involved in Washington’s military ventures in
different parts of the world.
More evidence of the USA’s
harmful policy of hiding true number of losses in their current military
operations has surfaced. The US issued an official statement on the number
of American soldiers killed during the retaliatory strikes on the American
military bases in Iraq, carried out by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps
(IRGC) in response to the murder of Iranian General Qasem Soleimani earlier
this year. At first, the Pentagon remained silent, but then announced that 11
people had been injured and urgently taken to Kuwait and Germany ‘for
treatment.’ That number later climbed to 34, then on January 28, the Pentagon
admitted to 50 soldiers
injured.
However, this is still much less than Iran’s figures: 80 Americans dead and 200
injured.
In this regard, the official
statistics on US casualties reported by representatives of the Pentagon draws
much attention. According to the latest official report, since the beginning of
operation Inherent Resolve and up to January 20 of this year, the US has lost
89 soldiers. That is surprising, however, as the military operation in Iraq has
led to several thousands military losses for the US since its initiation. So
why are there so few losses reported today?
Undoubtedly, the true
figures of military losses will make the American public question why US
citizens have to sacrifice themselves in foreign lands in the first place and
who will be held responsible for this.
Similar misinformation of
the public is also taking place with regard to the US military losses in
Afghanistan. In the past ten years, the American administration spoke out about
just a dozen American soldiers killed in Afghanistan, but news outlets came
forward with another figure based on their sources, revealing that casualties were
as high as 3000.
Then again, this isn’t the
first time the US administration distorted the number of military losses for
the sake of effective propaganda and the false historical glorification of the
role of their armed forces. Thus, Vice-President Michael Pence recently alleged
that the USA lost about two million soldiers during World War II, though
everybody is aware of different figures from official sources, and a while ago,
Washington itself claimed only 400 thousand WWII casualties.
However, regardless of
official US reports on that or the other information about American casualties
in the most recent hot spots, the aggressive US policy in the Middle East and
other regions of the world has recently been stirring anti-American sentiments.
More frequent calls for US Army to leave the Middle East are voiced by
politicians and the local population, in particular, those in Syria and
Iraq. This wave of protest against the USA’s military presence is bound to
increase further.
Vladimir Platov,
Middle East expert, exclusively for the online magazine “New Eastern Outlook”.
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