Who needs a civil war to deplete Iraqi civilians? The US military continues to do a bang-up job. In fact, civilian casualty rates have risen each year in the three years following the “end of major combat operations.” Here’s the minimum count according to media reports analyzed by Iraq Body Count. And remember, these are civilians, not soldiers or insurgents or whatever other classification of combatant you care to use. These are farmers, businesspeople, families, children (like my daughter, pictured below). These are innocent people trying to live lives of common goals and normal routines. These people are just as innocent and undeserving of a violent death as every person on every floor of the WTC in New York on September 11th, 2001.
* 6,331 from 1st May 2003 to the first anniversary of the invasion, 19th March 2004 (324 days: Year 1)
* 11,312 from 20th March 2004 to 19th March 2005 (365 days: Year 2)
* 12,617 from 20th March 2005 to 1st March 2006 (346 days: Year 3).
- iraqbodycount.net
These numbers are low. Very low. They represent only reported deaths of civilians, not actual full counts, which are impossible to do in bombed out cities. How do Iraqi civilians get killed? They get bombs dropped on them by US planes. They get bombs driven into them by insurgents. The get shot for failing to stop. They get kidnapped and killed for being “traitors”. Many other ways as well. They are being killed because the situation created there by the US-led invasion has destabilized the country and made it horribly unsafe for life. In this case, they get killed by being in the wrong place at the wrong time when a gang of vengeful murderers come looking for payback.
Ali, 76, whose left leg was amputated years ago because of diabetes, died after being shot in the stomach and chest. His wife, Khamisa, 66, was shot in the back. Ali’s son, Jahid, 43, was hit in the head and chest. Son Walid, 37, was burned to death after a grenade was thrown into his room, and a third son, 28-year-old Rashid, died after he was shot in the head and chest, Rsayef and Hamza said.
Also among the dead were son Walid’s wife, Asma, 32, who was shot in the head, and their son Abdullah, 4, who was shot in the chest, Rsayef and Hamza said.
Walid’s 8-year-old daughter, Iman, and his 6-year-old son, Abdul-Rahman, were wounded and U.S. troops took them to Baghdad for treatment. The only person who escaped unharmed was Walid’s 5-month-old daughter, Asia. The three children now live with their maternal grandparents, Rsayef and Hamza said.
Rsayef said those killed in the second house were his brother Younis, 43, who was shot in the stomach and chest, the brother’s wife Aida, 40, who was shot in the neck and chest while still in bed where she was recuperating from bladder surgery. Their 8-year-old son Mohammed bled to death after being shot in the right arm, Rsayef said.
Also killed were Younis’s daughters, Nour, 14, who was shot in the head; Seba, 10, who was hit in the chest; Zeinab, 5, shot in the chest and stomach; and Aisha, 3, who was shot in the chest. Hoda Yassin, a visiting relative, was also killed, Rsayef and Hamza said.
The only survivor from Younis’s family was his 15-year-old daughter Safa, who pretended she was dead. She is living with her grandparents, Rsayef said.
The troops then shot and killed four brothers who were walking in the street, Rsayef and Hamza said, identifying them as the sons of Ayed Ahmed  Marwan, Qahtan, Jamal and Chaseb.
U.S. troops also shot dead five men who were in a car near the scene, Hamza and Rsayef said. They identified the five as Khaled Ayad al-Zawi and his brother Wajdi as well as Mohammed Battal Mahmoud, Akram Hamid Flayeh and Ahmad Fanni Mosleh.
So, yes. The Liberation of Iraq is ongoing. People like you and me are being liberated from life every day.