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They have become the boss of the international gangsters." — Hisashi Inoue |
U.S. Officials Exclude Car Bombs in Touting Drop in Iraq Violence
Thursday, April 26, 2007 McClatchy Newspapers
WASHINGTON - U.S. officials who say there has been a dramatic drop in sectarian violence in Iraq since President Bush began
sending more American troops into Baghdad aren't counting one of the main killers of Iraqi civilians. Car bombs and other
explosive devices have killed thousands of Iraqis in the past three years, but the administration doesn't include them
in the casualty counts it has been citing as evidence that the surge of additional U.S. forces is beginning to defuse
tensions between Shiite and Sunni Muslims.
President Bush explained why in a television interview on Tuesday.
"If the standard of success is no car bombings or suicide bombings, we
have just handed those who commit suicide bombings a huge victory," he
told TV interviewer Charlie Rose. Others, however, say that not counting bombing victims skews the
evidence of how well the Baghdad security plan is protecting the
civilian population - one of the surge's main goals. "Since the administration keeps saying that failure is not an
option, they are redefining success in a way that suits them," said
James Denselow, an Iraq specialist at London-based Chatham House, a
foreign policy think tank. Bush administration officials have pointed to a dramatic decline in
one category of deaths - the bodies dumped daily in Baghdad streets,
which officials call sectarian murders - as evidence that the security
plan is working. Bush said this week that that number had declined by
50 percent, a number confirmed by statistics compiled by McClatchy
Newspapers. But the number of people killed in explosive attacks is rising, the
same statistics show - up from 323 in March, the first full month of
the security plan, to 365 through April 24. Overall, statistics indicate that the number of violent deaths has
declined significantly since December, when 1,391 people died in
Baghdad, either executed and found dead on the street or killed by bomb
blasts. That number was 796 in March and 691 through April 24. Nearly all of that decline, however, can be attributed to a drop in
executions, most of which were blamed on Shiite Muslim militias aligned
with the government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. Much of the
decline occurred before the security plan began on Feb. 15, and since
then radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr has ordered his Mahdi Army
militia to stand down. According to the statistics, which McClatchy reporters in Baghdad
compile daily from Iraqi police reports, 1,030 bodies were found in
December. In January, that number declined 32 percent, to 699. It
declined to 596 February and again to 473 in March. Deaths from car bombings and improvised explosive devices, however,
increased from 361 in December to a peak of 520 in February before
dropping to 323 in March. In that same period, the number of bombings has increased, as well.
In December, there were 65 explosive attacks. That number was unchanged
in January, but it rose to 72 in February, 74 in March and 81 through
April 24. U.S. officials blame the bombings largely on al-Qaida, which they
say is hoping to provoke sectarian conflict by targeting Shiite
neighborhoods with massive explosions. Ryan Crocker, who became the U.S. ambassador in Iraq this month,
said the bombings are a reaction to the surge of additional U.S. troops
into Baghdad. "The terrorists like al-Qaida would make their own surge," Crocker said this week. U.S. officials have said that they don't expect the security plan to stop bombings. "I don't think you're ever going to get rid of all the car bombs,"
Gen. David Petraeus, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, said this week.
"Iraq is going to have to learn as did, say, Northern Ireland, to live
with some degree of sensational attacks." But some think that approach could backfire, with Iraqis eventually blaming the Americans for failing to stop bombings. "To win, the insurgents just have to prove they are not losing," said Denselow, of London's Chatham House. Experts who have studied car bombings say it's no surprise that U.S.
officials would want to exclude their victims from any measure of
success. Car bombs are almost impossible to detect and stop, particularly in
a traffic-jammed city such as Baghdad. U.S. officials in Baghdad
concede that while they've found scores of car bomb factories in Iraq,
they've made only a small dent in the manufacturing of these weapons. Mike Davis, who recently wrote a history of car bombs, said that
once car bombs are introduced into a conflict, they're all but
impossible to eradicate. A few people with rudimentary skills can
assemble one with massive effect. "They really don't have to be very sophisticated; they just have to be very big," Davis said. Davis said checkpoints are useful in detecting car bombs "until they
blow up the checkpoint," and erecting walls is not practically feasible
in communities. When U.S. officials proposed building walls around
Baghdad's most troubled neighborhoods to fend off car bomb attacks,
residents balked, saying the walls would further divide the city along
sectarian lines. Bombers also have shown that they can adapt quickly. When the U.S.
military blocked off markets to vehicular traffic, bombers wearing
explosive vests were able to walk into the areas. Finding a defense against car bombs has fallen to the Joint IED
Defeat Organization, a Pentagon task force created in 2003 to find ways
to protect U.S. troops from roadside bombs, which remain the No. 1
killer of Americans in Iraq. But car bombs aren't the primary killer of American service members,
said Christine Devries, the task force's spokeswoman. Roadside bombs
are.
ABOUT IRAQI CIVILIAN CASUALTIES There are no authoritative statistics on Iraqi civilian casualties.
The Iraq Study Group in its report last year found that the Pentagon
routinely underreports violence. Other groups have criticized the Iraqi
government's statistics as unreliable - a moot point since the
government recently stopped releasing comprehensive totals. On
Wednesday, the United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq chastised the
Iraqi government for withholding statistics on sectarian violence. One study, conducted by Johns Hopkins University's Bloomberg School
of Public Health and Mustansiriyah University in Baghdad, estimated
that 78,000 Iraqis were killed by car bombings between March 2003 and
June 2006. Iraq Body Count, which keeps statistics based on news reports, finds
that there have been just over 1,050 car bombs that have killed more
than one person since August 2003, when a car bomb detonated in front
of what was the United Nations headquarters, killing 17. McClatchy gathers its statistics daily from police contacts, and
while they're not comprehensive, they're collected the same way every
day. A roundup of Iraq violence is posted daily on the McClatchy Washington Bureau Web site, http://www.mcclatchydc.com. Click on Iraq War Coverage. © 2007 McClatchy Washington Bureau and wire service sources. |