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WikiLeaks: At Least 100,000 Iraqis Reportedly Killed During War
ABC News ^ | RUSSELL GOLDMAN and LUIS MARTINEZ

Posted on 10/22/2010 3:43:13 PM PDT by Conservative Coulter Fan

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To: God luvs America
this will come as a disappointment to the libs who constantly claimed at least 600K iraqi’s were killed...

600k?

I've heard numbers as high as 3 million from those kooks.

101 posted on 10/23/2010 10:37:00 PM PDT by TheThinker (Communists: taking over the world one kooky doomsday scenario at a time.)
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To: Conservative Coulter Fan

How many of that 100K were killed by suicide bombers and other jihadi terrorists?


102 posted on 10/24/2010 7:55:45 AM PDT by American Infidel (Instead of vilifying success, try to emulate it)
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To: kabar
Pure BS from the UN. Saddam was supposed to use the Oil for Food money to buy food, drugs, etc. Instead he used it to further his own goals and feather his nest.

Oil for Food was implemented in 1995, a year before the Clinton administration was confronted with the reports of 500,000 estimated children dead and gave the infamous "price we're willing to pay" response.

And everyone knew what Hussein was doing, but nobody did anything about it.

The sanctions were being violated more than they were observed. We gave the go ahead to Jordan and Turkey to violate them.

Do you have any references on the impact of this help, because Clinton said during the same time that the sanctions were working.

Saddam killed hundreds of thousands of Iraqis including gassing them. The Marsh Arabs had their region destroyed by Saddam.

Nobody is counting these dead among those killed by the sanctions.

Stop using this UN horsesh*t. This was part of the psychological warfare to lift the sanctions and it was almost successful.

The UN was using psychological warfare to lift the sanctions THEY were imposing, and FAILED?

103 posted on 10/24/2010 10:31:20 AM PDT by TwelveOfTwenty (Compassionate Conservatism? Promoting self reliance is compassionate. Promoting dependency is not.)
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To: TwelveOfTwenty
Oil for Food was implemented in 1995, a year before the Clinton administration was confronted with the reports of 500,000 estimated children dead and gave the infamous "price we're willing to pay" response.

As I said, this was a phony claim to convince the gullible to lift the sanctions. The Oil for Food program was the response. This 500,000 dead claim is pure, unsubstantiated BS.

Nobody is counting these dead among those killed by the sanctions.

No one was killed by the sanctions, but they were wholescale by Saddam. He was a monster who could care less about his own people. Hundreds of thousands of Iraqis died during the 8 year war against Iran, which Saddam initiated

The UN was using psychological warfare to lift the sanctions THEY were imposing, and FAILED?

LOL. No, Saddam and some of his French, Russian, and British friends were trying to get the sanctions lifted so they helped perpetuate this nonsense about dying children. It was pure propaganda.

104 posted on 10/24/2010 12:01:20 PM PDT by kabar
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To: kabar
As I said, this was a phony claim to convince the gullible to lift the sanctions. The Oil for Food program was the response.

Except that Oil for Food, Resolution 986, was adopted before the figures came out.

No one was killed by the sanctions

We'll have to agree to disagree on that.

but they were wholescale by Saddam. He was a monster who could care less about his own people. Hundreds of thousands of Iraqis died during the 8 year war against Iran, which Saddam initiated

Here's an Iranian Newspaper's take on that. It is an Op-Ed and I post it merely as FYI, not as proof of anything.

No, Saddam and some of his French, Russian, and British friends were trying to get the sanctions lifted so they helped perpetuate this nonsense about dying children.

What would be their motive, given that Oil for Food was already in place?

105 posted on 10/24/2010 3:34:25 PM PDT by TwelveOfTwenty (Compassionate Conservatism? Promoting self reliance is compassionate. Promoting dependency is not.)
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To: TwelveOfTwenty
Except that Oil for Food, Resolution 986, was adopted before the figures came out.

As early as 1991, the U.N. Security Council acknowledged that sanctions were causing the Iraqi people undeniable suffering and proposed an oil-for-food humanitarian program to alleviate malnutrition and disease. The plan allowed Iraq limited sales of oil with revenues to be placed in a U.N.-controlled account for the purchase of approved food and medical supplies. Saddam rejected this program as an infringement of his sovereignty. After years of negotiations, Baghdad finally agreed to the program in 1996 with the first deliveries of aid arriving in 1997. Each year since then the Security Council has increased the Oil-for-Food program, and according to Secretary General Kofi Annan, Iraq now has sufficient resources to alleviate life-threatening disease and hunger.

"Saddam Hussein claims the deaths are in excess of one and a half million. Recent reports in leading newspapers and research studies in medical journals now suggest those numbers may be exaggerated. Still, a heated debate continues over the impact of the sanctions and over whether the United Nations and in particular the United States are responsible or whether Saddam himself has blocked humanitarian aid to further his own propaganda war."

What would be their motive, given that Oil for Food was already in place?

To get the sanctions lifted altogether. If it had not been for 9/11, I firmly believe that the sanctions would have been lifted.

Iraq: Oil-For-Food Program, International Sanctions, and Illicit Trade

106 posted on 10/24/2010 4:19:51 PM PDT by kabar
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To: kabar
As early as 1991, the U.N. Security Council acknowledged that sanctions were causing the Iraqi people undeniable suffering and proposed an oil-for-food humanitarian program to alleviate malnutrition and disease.

But they weren't killing anyone, is that your point?

From your link:

"In mid-1999, UNICEF released its first country wide survey of infant and maternal mortality in Iraq since 1991. The survey took a number of precautions to ensure that the survey results would not be altered or modified and UNICEF is confident that the survey information is accurate. It showed that infant mortality in the southern and central sections of Iraq (under the control of the Iraqi government) rose from 47.1 deaths per thousand live births during 1984-1989 to 107.9 deaths per thousand during 1994-1999. The under five-year-old mortality rate rose from 56 to 130.6 per thousand live births in the same time period. According to the report, this increase in mortality resulted in about 500,000 more deaths among children under five than would have been the case if child mortality trends noted prior to 1990 (imposition of sanctions) had continued. In northern Iraq, the mortality rate has declined over the same period: infant mortality dropped from 63.9 per thousand live births in 1984-1989 to 58.7 in 1994-1999 and under five-year-old mortality dropped from 80.2 per thousand live births to 71.8 per thousand.""

To get the sanctions lifted altogether. If it had not been for 9/11, I firmly believe that the sanctions would have been lifted.

Also from your link:

"The smart sanctions plan was intended to defuse criticism by several governments, including permanent members of the U.N. Security Council France, Russia, and China, that the United States was using international sanctions to CRS-10 promote the overthrow of the Iraqi government or to punish Iraq indefinitely for the invasion of Kuwait. These governments appeared to believe that no amount of Iraqi cooperation with the United Nations would be sufficient to persuade the United States to lift sanctions on Iraq, and they and other governments moved unilaterally to skirt or erode the sanctions regime."

107 posted on 10/24/2010 4:43:12 PM PDT by TwelveOfTwenty (Compassionate Conservatism? Promoting self reliance is compassionate. Promoting dependency is not.)
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To: Conservative Coulter Fan

I wonder if the docs show how many of the 109K were killed by AQ and intertribal fighting.


108 posted on 10/24/2010 8:35:30 PM PDT by Marty62 (marty60)
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To: TommyDale

Not one run by Leon Panetta. But there is a tipping point in the covert world.


109 posted on 10/24/2010 8:55:59 PM PDT by John S Mosby (Sic Semper Tyrannis)
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To: Conservative Coulter Fan

>>WikiLeaks: At Least 100,000 Iraqis Reportedly Killed During War<<

I must have been getting my news during the war from some time warp future source, because that is not news to me. I remember them talking about six figures of civilians. And I remember wondering, then how they knew they were really “civilians”.


110 posted on 10/24/2010 9:17:39 PM PDT by RobRoy (The US Today: Revelation 18:4)
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To: Conservative Coulter Fan

Really?

100K only?

But Saddam’s murder of all anti-Saddam Iraqis was around 50 per day.

The status quo would be:

50 x 365 x 8 yrs (2003-2010) = 146,000 murders

Gosh, Bush technically has saved more than 46,000 lives and counting.


111 posted on 10/25/2010 4:52:08 AM PDT by convertedtoreason ( Nature tells us to take a conservative stance.)
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To: Conservative Coulter Fan

That’s all?


112 posted on 10/25/2010 4:56:09 AM PDT by mad_as_he$$ (Playing by the rules only works if both sides do it!)
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To: mad_as_he$$
That’s all?

Really, I would bet that 75% of them were in Saddam's military. That isn't bad.

Another perspective - look at a medium-sized city like Cleveland, Ohio. There are some 2.5 million people in the greater Cleveland area, including all of Cuyahoga County. 100,000 out of 2,500,000 isn't all that many - 4%. And Iraq has a lot more than 2,500,000 people - some 30 million according to 2008 estimates.

113 posted on 10/25/2010 5:07:09 AM PDT by meyer (Tax the productive to carry the freeloaders - What is it with democrats and slavery?)
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To: meyer
Agreed. I am surprised it is that low. I would have expected more like the 250,000 that gets tossed around.
114 posted on 10/25/2010 5:15:20 AM PDT by mad_as_he$$ (Playing by the rules only works if both sides do it!)
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To: TwelveOfTwenty
But they weren't killing anyone, is that your point?

Essentially yes. Your quoting of the bogus UNICEF study was just part of the propaganda. The UN was making a fortune on the Oil for Food program via their administrative fees. They had a vested interest in painting the bleakest picture possible to keep the program going. Claudia Rosett did a fantastic job of uncovering the scam and the UN's complicity. The rise in infant mortality rates, if true, can be laid at the feet of Saddam, not UN sanctions.

Realizing, though, that they were inflicting punishment on Mr. Hussein's people rather than the dictator himself, the member nations of the Security Council offered in Security Council Resolutions 706 and 712 (adopted in August and September of 1991 respectively) the regime a chance to sell limited amounts of its oil abroad for the purchase of critical supplies. Mr. Hussein, demanding instead that all sanctions be lifted from his country, refused both offers of aid and was content to allow his citizens to starve while blaming the international community for their abject living conditions.

And Saddam was getting plenty of money thru oil illegal sales to Jordan, Syria, and Turkey, which the US condoned. Saddam had the money to buy medicines and food.

"The smart sanctions plan was intended to defuse criticism by several governments, including permanent members of the U.N. Security Council France, Russia, and China, that the United States was using international sanctions to CRS-10 promote the overthrow of the Iraqi government or to punish Iraq indefinitely for the invasion of Kuwait. These governments appeared to believe that no amount of Iraqi cooperation with the United Nations would be sufficient to persuade the United States to lift sanctions on Iraq, and they and other governments moved unilaterally to skirt or erode the sanctions regime."

That is exactly what I have been saying. France, Russia, China, and others wanted to lift the sanctions.

Rosett: "But in 1996, with the aim of providing for the people of Iraq while still containing Saddam, the U.N. began running its Oil-for-Food relief program for Iraq. Under terms agreed to by the U.N., Saddam got to sell oil to buy such humanitarian supplies as food and medicine, to be rationed to the Iraqi population. But the terms were hugely in Saddam's favor. The U.N. let Saddam choose his own business partners, kept the details of his deals confidential, and while watching for weapons-related goods did not, as it turns out, exercise much serious financial oversight. Saddam turned this setup to his own advantage, fiddling prices on contracts with his hand-picked partners, and smuggling out oil pumped under U.N. supervision with U.N.-approved new equipment. Thus did we arrive at the recent General Accounting Office estimate that under Oil-for-Food, despite sanctions, Saddam managed to skim and smuggle for himself more than $10 billion out of oil sales meant for relief."

"Later in 1998, Saddam kicked out the weapons inspectors, and he would keep them out for the following four years. The U.N. in 1999 lifted the ceiling entirely on Saddam's oil exports and expanded the range of goods he could buy. It would keep his deals confidential to the end, and it let Saddam do business with scores of companies in such graft-friendly climes as Russia and Nigeria, as well as such terrorist-sponsoring places as Saudi Arabia, Syria, and Sudan, and such financial hideouts as Liechtenstein, Panama, Cyprus, and Switzerland.

"Much of Saddam's illicit Oil-for-Food money has yet to be traced. There are now at least eight official investigations into various aspects of Oil-for-Food, but none so far that combines adequate staffing and access with a focus on Oil-for-Food itself as the little black book of Saddam's possible terrorist links. The same kind of bureaucratic walls that once blocked our own intelligence community from nabbing al Qaeda are here compounded by the problem that Oil-for-Food was not a U.S. program, but on U.N. turf. And though the U.N. is the keeper of many of the records, Kofi Annan has displayed no interest in investigating the possibility that Oil-for-Food might have funded terrorists."

115 posted on 10/25/2010 6:20:35 AM PDT by kabar
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To: John S Mosby

That is sort of my point. Pushed to a real threat, the agencies will do the right thing. I doubt this is a real threat.


116 posted on 10/25/2010 8:09:37 AM PDT by TommyDale (Independent - I already left the GOP because they were too liberal)
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To: clintonh8r

“100,000 isn’t all that many.”

Clearly not enough to stop the war.


117 posted on 10/25/2010 8:48:46 AM PDT by edcoil (No "D's" for me!)
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To: All

War is like the removal of a Bandaid from a hairy arm: get it over as quickly as possible.
By fighting PoliticallyCorrectWars, we are only causing more casualties...
BTW, wonder how many were actually killed by their fellow Iraqis?


118 posted on 10/25/2010 8:48:54 AM PDT by Maverick68
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To: TommyDale

There is a possibility CIA is using wikileaks to throw our military under the bus.


119 posted on 10/25/2010 12:27:30 PM PDT by jd777
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To: kabar

I’m sure some parties had ulterior motives for the actions they took, but none of that proves that a lot of people weren’t killed by our sanctions. Do you have anything that does?


120 posted on 10/25/2010 2:34:49 PM PDT by TwelveOfTwenty (Compassionate Conservatism? Promoting self reliance is compassionate. Promoting dependency is not.)
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