[lbo-talk] November's Death Toll Was Highest Since Iraq War Began in March

Yoshie Furuhashi furuhashi.1 at osu.edu
Sat Nov 29 11:41:35 PST 2003


***** November's death toll was highest since Iraq war began in March ROBERT BURNS, AP Military Writer Saturday, November 29, 2003 (11-29) 09:40 PST WASHINGTON (AP) --

November was the deadliest month yet for the American military in Iraq.

Seventy-seven U.S. servicemen and women have died -- compared with 73 in the previous two months combined.

Including six Americans killed in Afghanistan, November was the most costly month for the military since February 1991, when 162 U.S. troops were killed in the climax of the first Gulf War.

Helicopter crashes on Nov. 2, 7 and 15 killed a total of 39 soldiers. Before last month, the insurgency had scant success in targeting U.S. helicopters or other aircraft.

Coincidentally, five of the six killed in Afghanistan in November also were in an aircraft crash -- an Air Force MH-53 special operations helicopter that went down near Bagram on Nov. 23. That crash is under investigation and may not have been caused by hostile fire. . . .

Since the war in Iraq began March 20, 438 service members have died, according to an Associated Press tally based on Pentagon and Central Command announcements of each incident. Of the total, 299 are attributed to hostile action; the others are from illness, suicide or other nonhostile causes.

By comparison, 97 U.S. troops have been killed in Afghanistan since that war began in October 2001. There are about 10,000 troops there, compared with about 130,000 in Iraq. . . .

Until November the deadliest month of the Iraq war had been April, with 73 killed, mostly in the climatic final stage of the drive to Baghdad. Until recently the casualty trend had been downward, with the monthly tally of dead falling from 46 in July to 35 in August and 31 in September.

In October there were 42 killed, of which 33 were classified as hostile deaths.

Of the 77 killed in November, 69 were hostile.

That means there were 102 hostile deaths over the past two months -- nearly equal to the 110 killed by hostile fire during the three weeks it took U.S. forces to reach and topple Baghdad. When President Bush flew aboard an aircraft carrier May 1 to declare major combat operations over the number of deaths -- hostile and non-hostile -- stood at 138. Since then it has more than tripled.

The Pentagon says 2,094 American troops have been wounded in action Iraq.

On the Net:

Defense Department casualty count for Iraq and Afghanistan: www.defenselink.mil/news/Nov2003/d20031126cas.pdf

<http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/news/archive/2003/11/29/national1240EST0504.DTL>

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