Tuesday, February 28, 2006

How bloody is Iraq?

From the Post:

Grisly attacks and other sectarian violence unleashed by last week's bombing of a Shiite Muslim shrine have killed more than 1,300 Iraqis, making the past few days the deadliest of the war outside of major U.S. offensives, according to Baghdad's main morgue. The toll was more than three times higher than the figure previously reported by the U.S. military and the news media.

Hundreds of unclaimed dead lay at the morgue at midday Monday -- blood-caked men who had been shot, knifed, garroted or apparently suffocated by the plastic bags still over their heads. Many of the bodies were sprawled with their hands still bound -- and many of them had wound up at the morgue after what their families said was their abduction by the Mahdi Army, the Shiite militia of cleric Moqtada al-Sadr.

1,300 is just a number. But these are real human beings who are being slaughtered. Whatever our positions on the war, on whether it should have been waged in the first place, on what should be done now, let's not forget this human cost.

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2 Comments:

  • hmmmm, "human cost"

    For each death (and all the unreported injured who did not die or have not yet died and therefore havent made the count),
    the "cost" is not paid once.

    When someone dies or is maimed, it affects and continues to affect ALL those they knew for a long time.

    Violence is quick. The aftermath hurts much more and takes a long time.

    Why is the human heart no longer a concept used in policy and politics? Why is numeric quantity now more important than non-numeric quality of personal life experience in our time?????

    Numbers change all the time, and are often wrong. A person's life experience is what they actually live.

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 10:08 AM  

  • Why is the human heart no longer a concept used in policy and politics? Why is numeric quantity now more important than non-numeric quality of personal life experience in our time?????

    Because the americans want results, things that they can quantify. Emotions, nothingness, things that cannot be judged are meaningless for the people now a days. In a consumer society, your existence is quantified.

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 2:00 PM  

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