Remembering Our Soldiers and the Human Cost of War
On this Memorial Day, it is important to put things in context. First, remember those sons and daughters, wives and husbands, friends and lovers who have died and/or been injured in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The following statistics are from antiwar.com. Each of these statistics represents a living, breathing loved one to someone prior to the war.
American Military Casualties in Iraq
American Deaths
Since war began (3/19/03): 4300 Total 3448 In Combat
Since “Mission Accomplished” (5/1/03) 4,161 Total 3340 In combat
Total Wounded: 31285 Official Others estimate Over 100,000
Latest Fatality May 23, 2009
CNN has an article about “area 60″ of Arlington National Cemetery where 500 soldiers, Marines, airmen and sailors who have died in Iraq and Afghanistan are buried. It is a very good story to remember when we think about our economic condition and how things used to be better.
Flowers arrived at Capt. Marissa Alexander’s office at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, on June 3, 2005.
Her husband, Staff Sgt. Leroy Alexander, was half a world away fighting with the Special Forces in Afghanistan, but he had found a way to send a floral arrangement to his wife, who was five months pregnant with twins.
“He called me and asked me what building I worked in. He said he had to update some records,” Alexander said. The flowers lifted her spirits.
But a few hours later, her emotions would be thrown into a tailspin. Alexander saw two Armyofficers in dress uniforms knock on her front door.
One of the officers started to talk: “We regret to inform you…”
If he said any more, Alexander doesn’t remember. “The next memory I have is in my kitchen, banging on the floor. I just couldn’t believe it,” she said.
A roadside bomb had made her a widow.
Staff Sgt. Alexander now lies in area 60 along with hundreds of other fallen soldiers.
Iraqi Deaths due to US Invasion
When you see the members of the Bush administration talk about how much better off the Iraqi people are than they were under Saddam Hussein consider the below statitstics from antiwar.com. If you want to know why the man who threw his shoes at Bush was such a hero in Iraq, try to wrap your mind around the following statistic and think again. The next time Cheney brings himself back out of hiding to say how safe the Bush administration made us, think about the below number of Iraqi dead to date in this war, how collectively angry we were when foreigners came to our country and killed 3,000 people on our soil, how we wanted revenge for the murders and how we were willing to do whatever it takes to get that revenge.
1,331,578
Now think about how there never was any link between al Qaeda and Saddam and that Cheney and Bush tortured to try to establish that link to justify a war that had no basis in fact and which was premised upon multiple lies from the Bush administration.
Do you feel safer because of Cheney and Bush torture policies and their war in Iraq?
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Great post, Catherine. I have always been angered by the fact that the human toll this is taking on civilians seems to get lost in the fluff they call news these days.
Very powerful comparison between the number of Americans who lost their lives in September 2001 and the climbing numbers of “collateral damage” in this unjustified and holier-than-thou war our country finds itself in.
skyewriter
May 24, 2009 at 4:44 pm
And then there are all the suicides. I wonder if the ones that occur once the person is back state-side are considered part of the war casualties… I tend to doubt it. I hope I’m wrong.
morelightthanheat
May 24, 2009 at 10:08 pm
Thanks for articulating this so well. I couldn’t have put it into better words if I had even tried.
D
May 24, 2009 at 11:20 pm
I keep the Iraqi death counter on my blog as a reminder of the REAL cost. People grossly underestimate the number of Iraqis killed in the war. And then there are the 5 million who have been displaced and are refugees.
There was a HBO documentary about Section 60 that was shown recently. It is powerful and moving.
We need to keep in front of the public the tremendous cost of the war in people. It is a huge price to pay for a war that never should have been started.
Diane Beeler
May 25, 2009 at 9:12 pm
You know so many interesting infomation. You might be very wise. I like such people. Don’t top writing.
GarykPatton
June 15, 2009 at 9:00 pm