Someday, we will undoubtedly discover that, in
the term "surge" as in the president's "surge" plan (or "new way forward")
announced
to the nation in January was the urge to avoid the language (and experience)
of the Vietnam era. As there were to be no "body bags" (or cameras to film them
as the dead came home), as there were to be no "body counts" ("We have made
a conscious effort not to be a body-count team" was the way the president put
it), as there were to be no "quagmires," nor the need to search for that
"light at the end of the tunnel," so, surely, there were to be no "escalations."
The escalations of the Vietnam era, which left more than 500,000 American soldiers
and vast bases and massive air and naval power in and around Vietnam (Laos,
and Cambodia), had been thoroughly discredited. Each intensification in the
delivery of troops, or simply in ever-widening bombing campaigns, led only to
more misery and death for the Vietnamese and disaster for the U.S. And yet,
not surprisingly, the American experience in Iraq another attempted occupation
of a foreign country and culture has been like a heat-seeking missile heading
for the still-burning American memories of Vietnam.
As historian Marilyn Young noted
in early April 2003 with the invasion of Iraq barely underway: "In less then
two weeks, a 30-year-old vocabulary is back: credibility gap, seek and destroy,
hard to tell friend from foe, civilian interference in military affairs, the
dominance of domestic politics, winning, or more often, losing hearts and minds."
By August 2003, the Bush administration, of course, expected that only perhaps
30,000 American troops
would be left in Iraq, garrisoned on vast "enduring" bases in a pacified country.
So, in a sense, it's been a surge-a-thon ever since. By now, it's beyond time
to call the president's "new way forward" by its Vietnamese equivalent. Admittedly,
a "surge" does sound more comforting, less aggressive, less long-lasting, and
somehow less harmful than an "escalation," but the fact is that we are six months
into the newest escalation of American power in Iraq. It has deposited all-time
high numbers of troops there as well, undoubtedly, as more planes and firepower
in and around that country than at any moment since the invasion of 2003. Naturally
enough, other "all-time highs" of the grimmest sort follow.
This September, Gen. David Petraeus, our escalation commander in Iraq, and
Ryan Crocker, our escalation ambassador there, will present their "progress
report" to Congress. ("Progress" was another word much favored in American official
pronouncements of the Vietnam era.) The very name tells you more or less what
to expect. The report has already been downgraded to a "snapshot" of an
ongoing set of operations, which shouldn't
be truly judged or seriously assessed until at least this November,
or perhaps early 2008, or
With that in mind, here is the second
TomDispatch "by the numbers" report on Iraq. Consider it an attempt to put
the Iraqi quagmire-cum-nightmare two classic Vietnam-era words in perspective.
Few numbers out of Iraq can be trusted. Counting accurately amid widespread
disruption, mayhem, and bloodshed, under a failing occupation, in a land essentially
lacking a central government, in a U.S. media landscape still dizzy from the
endless
spin of the Bush administration and its military commanders, is probably
next to impossible. But however approximate the figures that follow, they still
offer an all-too-vivid picture of what the president's much-desired invasion
let loose. No country could suffer such uprooting, destruction, death, loss,
and deprivation, yet remain collectively sane.
American civilian and military officials now talk about staying in Iraq through
2008, or 2009, or into the next decade, or for undefined but lengthening periods
of time. And yet Iraq (by the numbers) has devolved month by month, year by
year, for four-plus years. There was never any reason to believe that the latest
escalation or any future escalation, whatever it might be called, and whether
accomplished via the U.S. military or by a growing shadow army of guns-for-hire
employed by private-security firms could be capable of anything but hurrying
the pace of that devolution. So imagine what Iraq-by-the-numbers will be like
in 2008 or 2009, given the clear determination of the Bush administration's
"strategic thinkers" to garrison that country into the distant future.
Here, then, is escalation in Iraq by the numbers almost all of them continue
to "surge" as of mid-August 2008:
Number of American troops stationed in Iraq: 162,000
(plus at least several thousand government employees), an all-time high.
Estimated number of U.S.-(taxpayer)-paid private contractors in Iraq:
More
than 180,000, again undoubtedly an all-time high. That figure includes approximately
21,000 Americans, 43,000 non-Iraqi foreign contractors (including Chileans,
Nepalese, Colombians, Indians, Fijians,
El Salvadorans, and Filipinos among others), and 118,000 Iraqis, but does not
include a complete count of "private security contractors who protect government
officials and buildings," according to State Department and Pentagon figures
obtained by the Los Angeles Times.
Percentage of private contractors in total U.S. forces deployed in World
War II and the Korean War: 3-5
percent, according to the congressional testimony of human rights lawyer
Scott Horton. In Vietnam and the first Gulf War, that figure reached 10 percent.
Now, it is at
least near parity.
Number of private companies working in Iraq on contract for the U.S. government:
630, with
personnel from more than 100 countries, according to Jeremy Scahill, author
of the best-selling
Blackwater, The Rise of the World's Most Powerful Mercenary Army.
Typical pay of a former U.S. Special Forces soldier working for a private-security
company in Iraq: $650 a day, according to Scahill, "after the company takes
its cut." That rate, however, can hit $1,000 a day.
Number of trucks on the road each day as part of the U.S. resupply operation
in Iraq: 3,000.
Number of attacks from June 2006 through May 2007 on U.S. supply convoys
guarded by private-security contractors: 869, a near tripling from the previous
12 months.
Number of private contractors who have died in Iraq: Over
1,000, according to the U.S. Department of Labor, based on partial figures
because private companies do not have to declare their war dead.
Predicted cost of a surge of 21,500 American troops into Iraq, according
to White House calculations in January 2007: $5.6
billion, a figure offered the month the president's surge strategy was announced.
Predicted cost of a one-year surge of 30,000-40,000 troops, according to
Robert Sunshine, assistant director for budget analysis of the nonpartisan Congressional
Budget Office: $22
billion (two years for a cut-rate $40 billion). These figures were offered
in testimony to Congress five months after the president's surge was officially
launched.
Percentage of dollars annually appropriated by the U.S. government and
spent on Iraq-related activities: More
than 10 percent, or one dollar out of every 10, according to the CBO's Sunshine.
Estimated monthly cost of the Iraq (and Afghan) Wars: $12
billion $10 billion for Iraq a third higher than in 2006, according
to the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service.
Estimated total cost of the Iraq War, if Robert Sunshine's "optimistic
scenario" 30,000 U.S. troops left in Iraq by 2010 plays out: Over
$1 trillion. (If his less optimistic scenario proves accurate 75,000 troops
in 2010 closer to $1.5 trillion.)
Number of Iraqis estimated to have fled their country: Between
2 million and 2.5 million.
An estimated 750,000 to Jordan; 1.5 million to Syria; 200,000 to Egypt and Lebanon
with another 40,000-50,000 fleeing each month, 2,000
a day, according to UN figures. Officials at the central travel office in
Baghdad are deluged by up
to 3,000 passport applications a week. In addition, though it's anyone's
guess, more
than 2 million Iraqis may now be internal refugees, uprooted from their
homes largely by sectarian violence and ethnic cleansing. Approximately 70 percent
of these are women and children, according to UNICEF.
Number of Iraqi refugees admitted to the United States in July: 57;
only 133
for the year to date.
Number of Iraqis held in American prisons in Iraq: Approximately
22,500, according to U.S. military officials, a leap to an all-time high
from 16,000 in February when the surge began. (American prisons in Iraq also
continue to undergo expansion.)
Number of Iraqis released from American incarceration in the last month:
224.
Number of foreign fighters (jihadists) held by the U.S. military in Iraq:
135
(nearly half are Saudis).
Estimated number of bullets fired by U.S. troops for every insurgent killed
in Iraq (or Afghanistan): 250,000,
according to John Pike, director of the Washington military-research group GlobalSecurity.org.
This comes out to 1.8 billion rounds of small-arms ammunition yearly. With U.S.
munitions factories unable to meet the demand, 313 million rounds of such munitions
were purchased from Israel last year for $10 million more than if produced domestically.
Percentage of amputations performed on U.S. war-wounded in Iraq: An
estimated 6 percent. The average in earlier U.S. conflicts, where the equivalents
of IEDs and car bombings did not play such a role, was 3 percent.
Estimated replacement limbs needed yearly for Iraqis in northern Iraq alone:
3,000,
according to the Red Crescent Society and the director general for health services
in Mosul. (Unlike American soldiers, Iraqis who have lost limbs have access
only to limited numbers of outdated prostheses.)
Cost of a coffin in Baghdad: $50-75.
Cost of a coffin in Saddam Hussein's time, $5-10.
Number of Iraqi civilians who died in July 2007: 1,652,
according to figures compiled by the Iraqi Health, Defense, and Interior Ministries;
2,024, according
to the tally of the Associated Press; 1,539
according to the Washington Post. All but the Post claim this
as a "spike" in casualties. All such figures are, for a variety of reasons,
surely significant
undercounts.
Approximate number of American civilians who would have died in July if
a similar level of killings were underway in the United States: 18,000,
according to Middle East scholar Juan Cole.
Estimated number of Iraqi deaths from the invasion of 2003 through June
2007, if the Lancet study's median figure of 655,000 deaths was accurate
and similar death rates held true for the year since it was published: Just
over 1 million, according to Just
Foreign Policy. (The Lancet study has been the single, on-the-ground,
scientific report on Iraqi casualties in these years.)
Number of Iraqi civilians killed in July in mass-casualty bomb attacks:
378,
a sharp rise over June, according to the Washington Post. The five-month
U.S. surge has caused "no appreciable change" in vehicle-bomb attacks, according
to figures collected by reporters from the McClatchy
Newspapers.
Number of unidentified bodies, assumedly murdered by death squads, found
on the streets of Baghdad in June 2007: 453,
a rise of 41 percent over January 2007, the month before surge operations began,
according to unofficial Iraqi Health Ministry statistics taken from morgue counts.
Number of Iraqi civilians killed or wounded in "escalation of force" incidents
at American checkpoints or near American patrols and convoys in the past year:
429,
according to U.S. military statistics obtained by the McClatchy Newspapers.
These statistics, which "spiked" during the recent escalation months, don't
include civilian deaths during raids on homes or in the midst of battle (and
are considered incomplete in any case, since an unknown number of escalation-of-force
deaths go unreported by U.S. units).
Total number of attacks against U.S. and coalition forces, Iraq security
forces, Iraqi civilians, and infrastructure targets in June 2007: 5,335.
This works out to a daily average of 177.8, an all-time high since May 2003,
according to the Pentagon, and 46
percent more than in June 2006; more than 68 percent of these attacks
3,671 to be exact were launched against U.S. troops, up 7 percent from May
2007.
Number of attacks in July 2007 using the most powerful type of roadside
bomb: 99,
an all-time high, according to Lt. Gen. Ray Odierno, U.S. second-in-command
in Iraq, accounting for one-third of American casualties that month.
Number of American military deaths in the surge months, February-July 2007:
572, according to the Iraq
Coalition Casualties Web site. This represents 189 more American deaths
than in the same set of months in 2004, 215 more than in 2005, 237 more than
in 2006.
Average daytime summer temperature in Baghdad: 110-120 degrees, though
130 degrees is not uncommon. It rarely drops below 100 degrees even at night.
Number of megawatts of electricity produced daily in Iraq: Less
than 4,000 megawatts, below pre-invasion levels in a country where daily
demand is now in the 8,500 to 9,500 range.
Hours of electricity normally delivered to Baghdadis by the national electricity
grid: 1-2 hours a
day. The only recourse, according to French reporter Anne Nivat, who lived
in "red zone" Baghdad for two weeks recently, is electricity produced by small
local generators, which consume up to 20 gallons of gasoline a day.
Number of nationwide blackouts in just two days in July 2007: Four.
The Shi'ite Holy city of Karbala was without any power for at least three consecutive
days in July, during which its water mains "went dry." ("'We no longer need
television documentaries about the Stone Age. We are actually living in it.
We are in constant danger because of the filthy water and rotten food we are
having,' said Hazim Obeid, who sells clothing at a stall in the Karbala market.")
Cost of a bottle of purified water during the present water shortages:
$1.60
for a 10-liter bottle, a rise of 33 percent. (Many Iraqis can't afford to buy
bottled water in a country where, according to a recent Oxfam summary study
of the Iraqi humanitarian crisis, 43 percent of Iraqis live in "absolute poverty,"
earning less than a dollar a day.)
Percentage of water engineers who have left Iraq: 40 percent, according
to Oxfam's report. Similar percentages of middle-class professionals doctors,
teachers, lawyers have evidently fled as well. According to Oxfam, some universities
and hospitals in Baghdad have lost up to 80 percent of their staffs.
Number of Iraqis who have access to clean drinking water: One
in 3, according to UN figures. (In 2007, waterborne diseases, including
diarrhea, "the most prolific killer of children under 5," are up in some areas
by 70 percent over the previous year.)
Of the 3.5 million cubic meters of water Baghdad's six million people are
estimated to need, amount actually delivered: 2.1
million cubic meters.
Number of high-tension lines running into Baghdad that are in operation:
Two of 17,
thanks to insurgent sabotage, according to an Electricity Ministry spokesman.
These are contributing to the worst electricity shortages since the invasion
summer of 2003. The country's power grid is reportedly nearing collapse.
Number of ministers still in the cabinet of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki:
20.
Number of ministers who have walked out: 17.
Number of senior officers who have recently resigned from the Iraqi Army
in protest over the Maliki government: Nine,
including Chief of Staff Maj. Gen. Babaker Zebari.
Number of countries for which Iraq's parliamentarians, who adjourned for
a month-long August vacation, have departed: At
least six, according to the New York Times, including Jordan, Syria,
Dubai, Iran, Great Britain, and Egypt as well as "a resort in Iraq's safest
region, autonomous Kurdistan."
Estimated cost of that vacation time to the U.S. per minute for ongoing
operations in Iraq: $200,000,
according to Bob Schieffer of CBS News.
Amount of oil Iraq possesses: 115
billion barrels in proven oil reserves, the third largest reserves in the
world (after neighboring Saudi Arabia and Iran). Estimates of possible oil deposits
still to be discovered range
from 45 billion additional barrels up to 400 billion additional barrels.
Price of 40 gallons of gas under Saddam Hussein: 50
cents.
Price of 40 gallons of gas in July 2007: $75 on the black market; $35
if a motorist is willing to spend hours, or even days, in line at a gas station.
Percentage of Iraq's revenues that come from the export of oil: More
than 90 percent, though oil production remains below that of the worst days
of Saddam Hussein's rule.
Amount the Iraqi Oil Ministry budgeted for capital expenses to bolster
the oil industry last year: $3.5
billion, according to the latest report by the U.S. Special Inspector General
for Iraq Reconstruction.
Amount the Iraqi Oil Ministry actually spent: $90 million.
Percentage of allocated capital funds spent by the Iraqi government on oil,
electricity, and education projects in 2006: 22 percent.
Amount of money missing due to governmental corruption, as uncovered in
investigations by Iraq's top anti-corruption investigator, Judge Rahdi al Rahdi:
$11 billion.
Number of U.S. dollars invested in "standing up" (training) the Iraqi military
and police: $19.2
billion. This works out to $55,000
per Iraqi recruit, according to a bipartisan U.S. congressional investigation.
Amount the Pentagon has requested for continued training and equipping
of Iraqi security forces: $2
billion.
Percentage of equipment the Pentagon has issued to Iraqi security forces
since 2003 that cannot be accounted for: 30
percent. That includes at least "110,000 AK-47 rifles, 80,000 pistols, 135,000
items of body armor and 115,000 helmets," according to the U.S. Government Accountability
Office (GAO). According to the
Washington Post, "One senior Pentagon official acknowledged that
some of the weapons probably are being used against U.S. forces."
Number of U.S. steel-shipping containers in Iraq and Afghanistan now considered
"lost": 54,390
or one-third of them, according to the GAO.
Estimated cost of training Iraqi (and Afghan) security forces over the
next decade, if present course continues: At
least $50 billion, according to the Congressional Budget Office.
Number of major U.S. bases in Iraq: More
than 75, according to the New York Times.
Cost of U.S. bases in Iraq (which Congress has mandated as not "permanent")
and in Afghanistan (which the Pentagon refers to as "enduring"): Unknown.
In a prestigious engineering magazine in late 2003, Lt. Col. David Holt, the
Army engineer "tasked with facilities development" in Iraq, was already speaking
proudly of "several
billion dollars" being sunk into base construction. According to the Washington
Post, the Congressional Research Service (CRS) claims $2 billion went into
"military construction" in Iraq and Afghanistan, 2004-2006; another $1.7 billion
was approved by Congress for 2007. And the Pentagon is still building. For fiscal
2008, $738.8 million was requested "for 33 critical construction projects for
Iraq and Afghanistan." (When it comes to base construction, these figures are
undoubtedly undercounts.)
Amount that former Halliburton subsidiary Kellogg, Brown, and Root (now
known as KBR) has received so far for a prewar contract to supply the American
military with food, fuel, housing, and other necessities: At
least $20 billion. A Pentagon audit of $16.2 billion worth of KBR's work
"found that $3.2
billion in KBR billing was either questionable or unsupported by documentation."
Percentage of Iraqis who cannot afford to buy enough to eat: 15
percent, according Oxfam.
Percentage of Iraqi children who are malnourished: 28 percent (compared
to 19 percent before the invasion); Percentage of babies born underweight, 11
percent (compared to 3 percent before the invasion).
Percentage of Iraqi children now considered to suffer from learning "impediments":
92 percent, according to one study cited by Oxfam.
The cost of a single Predator unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV), armed with
two Hellfire missiles: More
than $3 million. (At least five Predators have crashed or been shot down
in the last year in Iraq and Afghanistan.)
Cost of the latest UAV, the "hunter-killer" MQ-9 Reaper, now being deployed
to Afghanistan and soon to be deployed to Iraq: $7
million. The Reaper is four
times as heavy as the Predator and can be armed with 14 Hellfire missiles,
or four Hellfires and two 500-pound Joint Direct Attack Munitions. It is considered
equivalent in firepower to the F-16. According to Associated Press reporter
Charles Hanley, "Its pilot, as it bombs targets in Iraq, will sit at a video
console 7,000 miles away in Nevada."
Number of American planes in Iraqi air space at any moment: 100,
according to Hanley.
Increase in bombs dropped in Iraq in the first six months of 2007 compared
to the first six months of 2006: Fivefold.
Percentage of Iraqi oil resources around Basra in Shi'ite southern Iraq,
where, in September 2006, the British launched their own unsuccessful version
of the present American "clear, hold, and reconstruct" escalation operation
in Baghdad: 66
percent.
Number of doctors assassinated by "unidentified gunmen" in "peaceful" Basra
since 2003: 12.
Number of times the airport base outside Basra, which houses a well-barricaded
regional U.S. Embassy office and the last 5,500 of the 40,000 troops England
dispatched to Iraq, has been attacked by mortars or rockets over the past four
months: 600.
Effect of Iraq War spending on the profits of major weapons corporations:
Northrop Grumman has just announced a 15 percent second-quarter increase in
sales over 2006 for its information and services division, 7 percent for its
electronics division; General Dynamics' combat systems unit just recorded a
19 percent rise in sales. Lockheed Martin's profits went up 34 percent to $778
million, according
to Eli Clifton of Inter Press Service.
Estimated cost of deploying an American soldier to Iraq for one year:
$390,000,
according to the Congressional Research Service.
Cost of flying a soldier home from the war zone: $627.80.
That's the price the Pentagon pays FedEx and UPS, among other companies, for
each soldier brought back to the U.S.
Estimated tonnage of U.S. equipment that might be driven out of Iraq and
shipped home from Kuwait in case of a decision to withdraw: One
million tons.
Percentage of Americans in the latest Washington Post-ABC News poll
who had served in Iraq or "had a close friend or relative who served in Iraq,"
who approve of the president's handling of the Iraq conflict: 38
percent. In a May New York Times/CBS News poll, fewer than half of
military families and military members agreed
that "the United States did the right thing in invading Iraq."
[Note: Where, in the above list, a number is unsourced, check the previously
sourced number. I have relied on numerous other Web sites, as well as my own
reading, in compiling this report. Oxfam's recent study of the Iraqi humanitarian
crisis has been indispensable. I used several figures directly from that report
without sourcing above, because it was a .pdf file. The full report can be found
by clicking
here [.pdf]; a succinct summary of some of its numbers can be found in Peter
Rothberg's "Worse
than You Think" at the Nation magazine Web site. I'm now hooked on
Noah Shachtman's "Danger Zone" blog
at Wired magazine, which is invaluable on military and national security
matters. Juan Cole's Informed Comment Web
site remains a must-read, early-morning stop in my Web day, as does Antiwar.com
and Paul Woodward's The War in Context,
all of which I made good use of in compiling this post. Take a look as well
at the always useful Web site Electronic
Iraq.]
Copyright 2007 Tom Engelhardt