U.S. Deaths In Iraq Plunge To Wartime Low
Thirteen Fatalities In October Matches Previous Record Low Set In July
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A flag placed by a Boy Scout sits in front of a World War II soldier's head stone ahead of Memorial Day at Long Island National Cemetery in Farmingdale, N.Y., May 26, 2007. (AP Photo/Ed Betz)
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Photo Essay Week In Iraq Photos A daily diary with scenes of the latest attacks and snapshots from the effort to rebuild a nation.
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Interactive Iraq: 5 Years At War Five years after the U.S.-led invasion, the war wears on.
Eight of the 13 Americans died in combat, most of them in northern Iraq where al Qaeda and other Sunni insurgent groups remain active. The U.S. military suffered 25 deaths in September and 23 in August.
In Afghanistan, meanwhile, 15 U.S. military deaths were reported for October. The monthly toll in that combat theater had been in the 20s since June, when 28 Americans were killed - the worst one-month total since that war began in late 2001.
The sharp drop in American fatalities in Iraq reflects the overall security improvements across the country following the Sunni revolt against al Qaeda and the rout suffered by Shiite extremists in fighting last spring in Basra and Baghdad.
But the decline also points to a shift in tactics by extremist groups, which U.S. commanders say are now focusing their attacks on Iraqi soldiers and police that are doing much of the fighting.
Iraqi government figures showed at least 364 Iraqis killed in October - including police, soldiers, civilians and militants.
Despite the sharp decline, the Iraqi death toll serves as a reminder that this remains a dangerous, unstable country despite the security gains, which U.S. military commanders repeatedly warn are fragile and reversible.
U.S. commanders are also worried that security could worsen if the Iraqi parliament refuses to approve a new security agreement by the end of December, when the U.N. Security Council mandate under which the coalition operates in Iraq expires.
Without a new agreement or a new U.N. mandate, U.S. military operations would have to stop. Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's government is pressing for changes in the draft agreement before submitting it to parliament.
Much of that concern focuses on Mosul, Iraq's third largest city about 225 miles northwest of Baghdad. U.S. and Iraqi troops launched a new operation Oct. 15 to clear al Qaeda and other insurgent groups from the city.
Violence occurs almost daily in Mosul, although the U.S. military says attacks there are down by almost half since May.
Attacks and threats against Christians in Mosul prompted about 13,000 of them to flee the city in early October.
On Friday, a local official, Jawdat Ismaeel, said Christians were trickling back after police and soldiers increased patrols and checkpoints in Christian neighborhoods. He said that 35 Christian families, about 210 people, returned in the past week and that the exodus from the city had largely stopped.
The Iraqi government has offered each Christian family that returns 1 million Iraqi dinars - about $865 - although officials say the response so far has been lukewarm.
Also Friday, government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh announced that Iraq and Iran have agreed to exchange bodies of soldiers killed during the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war. He said the exchange - 200 Iraqi bodies for 41 Iranian - would take place Nov. 15 at a border post that he did not identify.
Hundreds of thousands of soldiers from both sides were killed or went missing during the war.
The International Committee of the Red Cross announced Oct. 16 that the two countries agreed on how to gather and share information about the missing and hand over any remains uncovered.
© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- Well, glad to know that 13 is an acceptable number. They were all young people, and they are all still dead, ************.
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- Posted by dragonking5 at 02:59 PM : Nov 01, 2008
Uh.... what has this guy been smoking? - Reply to this comment
- Deaths in Iraq are down and homicides in Chicago are higher? Perhaps we should pull out of Chicago.
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- U.S. Deaths In Iraq Plunge To Wartime Low"
This is truly excellent news!
General Petraeus is a miracle worker. Any chance of his raising the dead? Oh well, I''ll take the good news I can get... - Reply to this comment
- dragonking ???
sounds like it should be signed Dragonqueen in stead of dragonking. - Reply to this comment
- Posted by dragonking5 at 11:27 AM : Nov 01, 2008
dragon, you seem to be an intelligent person and put a lot of thought and time into what you are doing,..........but just what is it that you are doing? - Reply to this comment
- "Thirteen Fatalities In October Matches Previous Record Low Set In July"
And to think that had the Bush klan not lied, the death toll would have been zero. - Reply to this comment
Dont let the libtards read this, they may start to realize the war in Iraq is nothing like Vietnam, what would they b i t c h about then?- Reply to this comment
- And how many months if not YEARS were these
happy little election-time Iraqi news inserts
planned to help the Republican presidential
nominee??,,,,
"The macho bombings in Pakistan by the
"super advanced technology" of the drones
deployed by the commander-in-chief was sure
as hell meant to attract more attention
than 35-count-''em-35 comments on a web site.
"Too cynical" can never be applied to
a reaction suggesting that the motivation
behind a George W. Bush move is dispicable.
And one "suggestion" is,,,the only reason we
are now seeing "25 bombed in Pakistan",,,,
,,"20 bombed in Pakistan" is for the impact
of the mere reporting there-of on the
macho blood thirsty McCain voters to get
them out to the polls - Reply to this comment
- I seem to remember (back when our young were being sent home in planes filled with body bags, that the government had a "Policy" of not releasing a body count. What changed this "Policy'' other than an election campaign and the NIxon style of "Declare Victory and run like Hell out of the area."
- Reply to this comment
Author Thomas Friedman on Obama's Afghanistan plan and the war on terror.




