Tesserat said:For civilian deaths?
Only the children's mother, Anwar Jawad, and another daughter, 14-year-old Hadil, survived the onslaught, which was unleashed on the family after they drove unwittingly up to an American roadblock.
"Only God knows why they opened fire on us like that," says Anwar. "I was happy when the troops came in April and ousted Saddam Hussein, but now I think they are scum."
Jon_in_london said:
You dont have to worry about civillian deaths. The US doesnt even record how many they kill because we all know the filthy terrotists just aint worth it.
We are finished when there is a viable government in Iraq. To pull out before then would be a repeat of when we pulled out of Vietnam. Civilians who sided with the US would be slaughtered and the country would be plunged into a bloody civil war. Isn't preventing this tragedy that would be the US's fault "worth it"?Tesserat said:For supporters of the war in Iraq:
Is there a point where the casulties in Iraq become so great that you would say "It isn't worth it"?
See above.What would be your limit for american deaths?
Thumper said:I live in a country with 225+ years of freedom.
Thumper said:Taking the long-term view of this, the allowable number of martyrs would be extremely high. It is only if we turn tail and flee that those people would have died in vain.
peptoabysmal said:
We are finished when there is a viable government in Iraq. To pull out before then would be a repeat of when we pulled out of Vietnam. Civilians who sided with the US would be slaughtered and the country would be plunged into a bloody civil war. Isn't preventing this tragedy that would be the US's fault "worth it"?
peptoabysmal said:
For real civilians, one is too many, but it is a fact of war.
peptoabysmal said:
For the non-uniformed combatants (terrorists), I hope we kill as many of them as we can. Part of the deal with the terrorists in Iraq is that they want to induce as many civilian casualties as possible to give the US bad press. This is why they fire their RPG's at US troops from within crowds, to draw fire on the crowd. I give the terrorists credit for being clever and devious. Fight us with the press... never mind what atrocities the terrorists commit, everyone forgets all about that when one Iraqi civilian is killed by US fire. Remember during the war when Saddam's troops deliberately used civilians as shields? But, no, it's those gung-ho cowboy American troops' fault, the bloodthirsty bastards!
shuize said:What was the number the anti-UN-sanction folks were quoting for civilian deaths before the war? Wasn't it some amazing high number like 200,000 civilians per year?
If so, my number would be 200,001 civilan deaths per year.
As for American casualties, I think even one is too many to die for that ◊◊◊◊ hole. But as noted above, without a viable government in place, now is not the time to bug out.
from linkDenis Halliday was UN Assistant Secretary General and head of the oil-for-food program, before resigning his career in protest over sanctions. He says: "For anyone to imply that the men and women of the Baghdad government, Ministry of Health in particular, deliberately withhold basic medicines from children in great need, is monstrous and says more about the unhealthy mind of the accusers than anything else." Press release on "Changing the Spin on Iraq" by Denis J. Halliday, former UN Humanitarian Coordinator in Iraq
Hans Sponeck was the next of the UN oil-for-food program. Responding to claims (such as in a US State Department report) that the Iraqi government deliberately withholds medicines, he says: "It is not --- I repeat, it is not, and you can check this with my colleagues --- a premeditated act of withholding medicines from those who should have it”
From transcript of meeting with Hans von Sponeck and members of a Washington Physicians for Social Responsibility delegation, on April 5, 1999, in Baghdad. It is available at www.scn.org/ccpi, and a report of the delegation back to WPSR and the parent medical organization IPPNW is at www.wpsr.org/mideast.
"For anyone to imply that the men and women of the Baghdad government, Ministry of Health in particular, deliberately withhold basic medicines from children in great need, is monstrous and says more about the unhealthy mind of the accusers than anything else."
"It is not --- I repeat, it is not, and you can check this with my colleagues --- a premeditated act of withholding medicines from those who should have it”
Thumper said:I live in a country with 225+ years of freedom. Taking the long-term view of this, the allowable number of martyrs would be extremely high. It is only if we turn tail and flee that those people would have died in vain.
Garrette said:
I think because their Ministries are different. Not their hospital staff, for the most part. The staff I met, including Hospital Administrators, were intent on serving their patients as best they could. But officials in the Ministry of Health at the national level were not health care professionals first, they were Saddam loyalists first. They were greedy bastards who were allowed to steal money that Saddam had not stolen first. This didn't happen in the Kurdish areas which had/has its own Ministry of Health but which showed no signs of stealing money.
Garrette said:
Finally, regarding the OP. I know there is a limit to what the US could and should sustain before pulling out without success or victory in whatever terms you choose to define it. I do not agree that it is quantifiable before the fact.
This sounds contradictory to me. If I understand you, a better way to say this might be "we can only say what a limit should have been, not what it should be". If this isn't what you mean, then I don't get it.
Which wars can we retroactively apply this to?
Before the US Civil War, should Lincoln have put a limit on acceptable casualties? He did not, but as the war progressed, many in the north felt that the limit, undefined as it was, had been exceeded and wanted peace before victory.
And would that have been an undesirable result, peace before victory?
What about WWI? Should England have placed a limit prior to hostilities? (Actually, this is one instance in which a limit may have served a purpose...).
What about the US? US casualties were comparatively slight, but I doubt few in the US wanted many at all.
WWII? What should the limit have been there? What should it have been made without the luxury of hindsight?
In WWI and II, the allies were fighting for their freedom, in which case it doesn't make sense to stop. In Iraq, the Americans are fighting for the Iraqi's freedom, so if they leave, the biggest damage to the states is political.
I don't think the US got into WWI or II for altruistic reasons.
Of course there is a limit to what can and should be endured, lost, or sustained for any endeavor, whether warlike or not. But to suggest that a set number can or should be placed on some of them, especially when that number regards casualties, is short-sighted and simplistic.
Garrette said:What about the question in reverse?
What, in the minds of those against the war and/or the occupation, would be sufficient to justify either or both?
This sounds contradictory to me. If I understand you, a better way to say this might be "we can only say what a limit should have been, not what it should be". If this isn't what you mean, then I don't get it.
And would that have been an undesirable result, peace before victory?
In WWI and II, the allies were fighting for their freedom, in which case it doesn't make sense to stop. In Iraq, the Americans are fighting for the Iraqi's freedom, so if they leave, the biggest damage to the states is political.
I don't think the US got into WWI or II for altruistic reasons.
Chaos said:I don´t think a finite number should appply.
However, leaders should determine which ratio of casualties (casualties over time or per enemy casualty) they are willing to sustain. If that is exceeded, they should either drastically change their plans or try to end the war.
Edited for typos, and to add:
Also, I guess any military operation has a goal. If that is not being achieved, ANY losses are too much.
It sounds like you're saying that limits should never be set for any endevour. You surely can't be making such a broad statement, because counter examples are easy to find. Such as "I'll drive 10 more miles, then I'll have to turn around, because I don't know how far it is to the last gas station. Corporations, Governments, ect, set limits all the time, in order to minimize risk. To suggest that this isn't sometimes necessary is simplistic.
In a case such as Iraq, if it got to a point where casulties were continuing to mount, and there was no change in the political situation, or in the stability of the country, would you say that there shouldn't be a limit to how long the US stays in Iraq?
The agreement of most of the world that it's a necessary thing to do.
The reason that GWB and Tony Blair were giving as the reason that it was neccesary to invade imediately, was that Saddam had the temperment, desire, and the resources to post an immediate danger to the western world.
Most of the world disagreed with this, and as it happened, they were right.
If there was evidence that Iraq had WMD, the misiles to deploy them, and they were making aggresive moves towards another country, I'd say that was enough reason.
Garrette said:
So we should be stingier when acting altruistically?
Well, the US didn't go into Iraq for altruistic reasons. They went in to keep the US safe from weapons of mass destruction. When they didn't find WMD, they said that they were there to free Iraq. Now they're staying to repair the damage. That's PR, not altruism.
I won't disagree, on assumption that you realize your statement is a simplification for purposes of brevity.