The US
government has unleashed untold amounts of violence against hundreds
of thousands of innocent Iraqis over the past twenty or so years for
the sake of economic and strategic interests and in order to remain
the world’s sole superpower. In other words, the US government
routinely kills innocent children of God for the sake of getting gain.
The Flocks of my Brother...
by
William van Wagenen
Since the US invasion of Iraq in 2003, American Mormons have been among
the staunchest supporters of the war, as well as of the war’s
executor, President Bush. As a Mormon who has lived in Iraq and witnessed
first hand the tragedy that has befallen that country, such support
for the bloodshed amongst my fellow Mormons, whom I know to be otherwise
good hearted and kind, is saddening. It is my hope that the following
review of US military activities in Iraq from 1991 until the present,
will cause at least some members of the LDS Church to reevaluate their
current position in support of ongoing US atrocities against the people
of Iraq.
After Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait in August 1990, the US/UK imposed
a blockade and sanctions on Iraq through the UN. The Washington Post
reported that the sanctions were meant to both “inflict serious
pain on Baghdad of the kind that would change Saddam’s behavior”#1
as well as “to incite Iraqi citizens to rise against the Iraqi
leader.”#2 Because Iraq depended on western parts and supplies
to maintain electrical, water treatment, and sewage treatment plants,
embargoing the importation of such supplies gave the US considerable
leverage against Saddam’s regime, as well as the Iraqi population
generally. The US Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) predicted that Saddam’s
regime would seek to circumvent the sanctions because, “Failing
to secure supplies will result in a shortage of pure drinking water
for much of the population. This could lead to increased incidences,
if not epidemics, of disease and to certain pure-water-dependant industries
becoming incapacitated, including petrol chemicals, fertilizers, petroleum
refining, electronics, pharmaceuticals, food processing, textiles, concrete
construction, and thermal power plants. Iraq’s overall water treatment
capability will suffer a slow decline, rather than a precipitous halt.
. .”#3
Because the blockade would include food imports, upon which Iraq was
heavily dependant, the Post, after interviewing a top administration
official about the embargo, thought it useful to wonder how long the
blockade would have to be imposed before Iraq’s available reserves
of wheat, rice, and corn would run out, causing the Iraqi population
to begin to starve.#4 The Post’s administration source admitted
however, that attempting to starve the Iraqi population may not be effective
because, “Electricity, desalinization, infrastructure. . . food
shortages – all will affect Kuwait first. . . I don’t think
anyone thinks people will starve to death in Iraq. If they start starving
it will be in Kuwait.” The same administration official goes on
to say that, “I don’t think we have a clue what Iraq can
sustain,” which is further problematic because, in the Post’s
words, “officials acknowledge that the United States will have
difficulty holding together the embargo, particularly if oil supplies
run short and cause public discontentment in the participating nations.”#5
In addition to spreading mass disease among the Iraqi civilian population
through sanctions, US planners initiated a massive bombing campaign
against Iraq in order to kill as many of Saddam’s conscripted
soldiers as possible, as well as destroy Iraq’s civilian infrastructure
once the Gulf War finally began in February 1991. Rather than simply
forcing an Iraqi withdrawal from Kuwait, the decision was made, in the
words of Assistant Secretary of State for Politico-Military Affairs
Richard A. Clark, to “eliminate Saddam’s army once and for
all.”#6 Consequently, Clark asked a member of his staff, John
Tritak, to explain to the US generals “the ‘unconditional
surrender’ logic that Churchhill had insisted on in World War
II.” When convoys of Iraqi troops were retreating from Kuwait
along the lone desert highway back to Basra in Iraq, US aircraft bombed
the defenseless soldiers mercilessly. Clark laments this, but only because
of its negative impact on US public relations efforts. He comments that,
“the pro-war tenor of U.S. news reporting began to change. American
television carried stories of American aircraft slaughtering retreating
Iraqi troops. Returning pilots were interviewed plane-side talking about
‘turkey shoots.’”#7 As a result of the decision to
eliminate Iraq’s army “once and for all,” the Sunday
Mail reports that, “a senior allied officer in Riyadh estimated
that 60,000 to 80,000 Iraqis were killed by the relentless allied air
strikes before the ground war started, most of them buried alive when
their bunkers collapsed on top of them. It was likely an additional
15,000 to 25,000 Iraqi troops were killed in the four days of combined
air and ground attacks.” In the same article, the Mail reports
that General Schwarzkopf was hesitant to give an exact toll of the dead,
assuring us only that it was “a very, very large number.”
A Defense Intelligence Agency official noted that an exact death toll
was difficult to determine because, “the guys in the field just
weren’t counting. They still aren’t. They just poured them
into common graves and covered them.” So, as a senior official
commented, “A ballpark figure of 100,000 is about as good as we
can do for now.”#8
Turning now to the destruction of Iraq’s civilian infrastructure,
one US officer who played a central role in the air campaign against
Iraq explained that strategic air bombing is meant to strike against
not only military targets, but also against "all those things that
allow a nation to sustain itself."#9 Iraqi power-generating plants
were among the main US targets, as they produced the electricity needed
to keep water and sewage treatment, medicine production, and hospitals
running. US forces flew 215 sorties against the power-generating plants,
using primarily laser-guided GBU-10 bombs. US bombing damaged 17 of
Iraq’s 20 generating plants, 11 of which were destroyed completely,
and none of which could be repaired without significant Western assistance.
After a few days of the air war, one US target planner commented that,
"Not an electron was flowing," from any Iraqi generating stations.
Four months after the war, pentagon analysts estimated Iraqi electricity
production had only returned to 1920 levels, a time before water and
sewage treatment relied on electricity.#10
The logic of destroying civilian infrastructure was explained by Col.
John A. Warden III, deputy director of strategy, doctrine and plans
for the Air Force: "Saddam Hussein cannot restore his own electricity.
He needs help. If there are political objectives that the U.N. coalition
has [after the war], it can say, 'Saddam, when you agree to do these
things, we will allow people to come in and fix your electricity.' It
gives us long-term leverage." And if Saddam still refused to comply,
this “leverage” could be used against the Iraqi people themselves.
Another Air Force planner explains why: "Big picture, we wanted
to let people know, 'Get rid of this guy and we'll be more than happy
to assist in rebuilding. We're not going to tolerate Saddam Hussein
or his regime. Fix that, and we'll fix your electricity.' "#11
US targeting of Iraq’s civilian infrastructure caused the infant
mortality rate among Iraqis to increase significantly. Confirming the
predictions of the DIA noted above, a study sponsored by the United
Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) concluded that, “There were approximately
47,000 excess deaths among children under five years of age during the
first eight months of 1991. The deaths resulted from infectious diseases,
the decreased quality and availability of food and water, and an enfeebled
medical care system hampered by the lack of drugs and supplies.”#12
While in May of 1991, an investigative team from Harvard Medical School
reported that due to the destruction of Iraq’s civilian infrastructure,
"at least 170,000 children under five years of age will die in
the coming year from the delayed effects" of the bombing.#13
Responses varied amongst US war planners regarding later accusations
that targeting Iraq’s infrastructure during the 1991 Gulf War
was unjustified, though all confirmed that the effects on civilians
were deliberate. As one US official stated, "People say, 'You didn't
recognize that it was going to have an effect on water or sewage. Well,
what were we trying to do with [United Nations-approved economic] sanctions
-- help out the Iraqi people? No. What we were doing with the attacks
on infrastructure was to accelerate the effect of the sanctions."#14
One senior Air Force Officer felt targeting Iraqi civilians in this
way was acceptable because, after Saddam’s invasion of Kuwait,
"The definition of innocents gets to be a little bit unclear. They
do live there, and ultimately the people have some control over what
goes on in their country."#15 Satisfied with the way things turned
out, then Secretary of Defense and current Vice President Dick Cheney
commented that all US targets in the bombing of Iraq were “legitimate”
and that, "If I had to do it over again, I would do exactly the
same thing."#16
At the end of the bombing campaign, US forces stopped short of going
on to Baghdad, calling instead on Iraqis to overthrow Saddam. The Iraqi
Shiites and Kurds responded, rising up against Saddam en masse, with
the expectation of receiving US support. Much to the Shiites’
and Kurds’ horror, US troops instead stood by and watched as Saddam
mercilessly crushed the uprising. Richard A. Clark commented on this
event as well, explaining that the first Bush administration allowed
Saddam’s elite republican guard divisions to remain intact after
the 91 war, and that, “at the request of the Iraqis, the no-flying
rule was amended to permit the Iraqi army to fly its helicopters.”
As a result, Clark continues, Saddam “used his surviving Republican
Guard units to massacre those who did rise up against him, notably the
Shi’a, the ‘marsh Arabs’ in the south, and the Kurds
in the north. Iraqi helicopters mowed down the rebels. US forces stood
by.” The bodies of those massacred by Saddam’s republican
guard during these uprisings constitute the vast majority of bodies
in the mass graves discovered after the 2003 US invasion of Iraq. Clark
explains that the US allowed the massacres because the Arab nations
did not “want to see the Shi’a Muslim majority take over
Iraq and set up a pro-Iranian regime.”#17 Richard Perle, a former
member of the current Defense Policy Board, as well as one of the main
architects of the 2003 US invasion commented that:
“The first Bush administration had its reasons for holding back
in 1991. When it had called for an uprising, it had something very different
in mind: a coup in Baghdad by one of Saddam’s Sunni henchmen.
This was and remained the remedy for Saddam recommended by the Central
Intelligence Agency. The CIA contended that the mass uprising in the
south might bring to power Shiite extremists who would then tilt toward
Shiite Iran.”#18
Once Saddam was successful in suppressing the Shiite and Kurdish uprisings,
the Bush administration was content to leave Saddam in power and further
punish the Iraqi people by maintaining the sanctions regime. Thomas
Friedman, the State Department’s semi-official spokesperson at
the New York Times indicated that, “The President felt that Mr.
Hussein and his army were broken and no longer represented any external
threat, especially since Mr. Bush contentedly assumed that his intelligence
reports were correct and that all of Mr. Hussein's nuclear capabilities
had been destroyed. Sooner or later, Mr. Bush argued, sanctions would
force Mr. Hussein's generals to bring him down, and then Washington
would have the best of all worlds: an iron-fisted Iraqi junta without
Saddam Hussein. In the meantime, the foreign policy expert in Mr. Bush
said: Ignore him.”#19
President Clinton kept the sanctions regime in place upon taking power
in 1993. In 1996 as the number of dead Iraqi children due to the sanctions
continued to rise, Clinton’s secretary of State Madeline Albright
was confronted with the moral dilemma of killing children to achieve
political ends. Citing a 1995 U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization
report, 60 Minutes reporter Leslie Stahl asked, “We have heard
that a half million children have died. I mean, that's more children
than died in Hiroshima. And, you know, is the price worth it?”
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, not contesting the number estimate
of dead children, replied: “I think this is a very hard choice,
but the price – we think the price is worth it.”#20
But by 1998, however, former members of the Bush administration who
orchestrated the 1991 destruction of Iraq, including Donald Rumsfeld,
Paul Wolfowitz, Richard Perle, and Elliott Abrams, wrote an open letter
to President Clinton explaining the sanctions weren’t working
well enough. The letter states that they are “convinced that current
American policy toward Iraq is not succeeding,” not because too
many innocent children were dying with no effect upon Saddam, but because,
“we can no longer depend on our partners in the Gulf War coalition
to continue to uphold the sanctions or to punish Saddam when he blocks
or evades UN inspections. Our ability to ensure Saddam Hussein is not
producing weapons of mass destruction, therefore, has substantially
diminished.” It was important that Saddam not acquire these weapons
because, “the safety of American troops in the region, of our
friends and allies like Israel and the moderate Arab states, and a significant
portion of the world’s supply of oil will all be put at hazard.”
They go on to ask President Clinton to implement a strategy for “removing
Saddam’s regime from power” that will “require a full
complement of diplomatic, political and military efforts.”#21
†On July 29, 2001 Rice was interviewed by CNN's John King. She
was asked how the United States would respond to missiles Iraq had allegedly
fired at US warplanes patrolling the no-fly zones. She didn't mince
words with her answer.
††††"Well, the president has made very
clear that he considers Saddam Hussein to be a threat to his neighbors,
a threat to security in the region, in fact, a threat to international
security more broadly," Rice said. "And he has reserved the
right to respond when that threat becomes one that he wishes no longer
to tolerate."
††††Rice added, "But I can be certain of
this, and the world can be certain of this: Saddam Hussein is on the
radar screen for the administration. The administration is working hard
with a number of our friends and allies to have a policy that is broad;
that does look at the sanctions as something that should be restructured
so that we have smart sanctions that go after the regime, not after
the Iraqi people; that does look at the role of opposition in creating
an environment and a regime in Baghdad that the people of Iraq deserve,
rather than the one that they have; and one that looks at use of military
force in a more resolute manner, and not just a manner of tit-for-tat
with him every day."
So when George W. Bush became president in 2001, those people who fought
the first Gulf War and in 1998 were advocating another war against Iraq
were returned to office. Thus a renewed assault on an already decimated
Iraq became an objective of American foreign policy before 9/11, long
before there was any talk of an Iraqi threat to the homeland, and before
anyone was paying any real attention to Osama bin Laden. With 9/11 came
the pretext and ability to mobilize public opinion for an invasion.
Even though the propaganda barrage focused on the issue of weapons of
mass destruction, this was not a threat to America itself, because,
as the recently appointed Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice explained
in late 1999, “If they [Iraq] do acquire WMD, their weapons will
be unusable because any attempt to use them will bring national obliteration.”#22
Deputy Defense Minister Paul Wolfowitz quietly admitted after the war
that it was important to invade Iraq, rather than North Korea, which
also was suspected of developing WMD’s, because of Iraq’s
massive amounts of oil. Wolfowitz stated that, “The most important
difference between North Korea and Iraq is that economically, we just
had no choice in Iraq. The country swims on a sea of oil.”#23
Despite the fact that Iraq was a weak country posing no threat to any
of its neighbors, the Bush administration and the US media jointly led
the American public to believe that a second 9/11 was imminent, courtesy
this time of Iraq. This belief provided President Bush with strong public
support for a new war on Iraq.
Before the war began, the Bush administration declared that the strategy
of “Shock and Awe” bombing would be used to assault Iraq.
“Shock and Awe: Achieving Rapid Dominance” was written by
researchers at the National Defense University in 1996. The authors
noted that with the fall of the Soviet Union, we finally enjoy the luxury
of the “dominance and superiority of American military power,
unencumbered by the danger of an external peer competitor,” thus
providing a valuable opportunity to test new strategic conceptions of
war. The goal of Shock and Awe is to apply “our resources to controlling,
affecting, and breaking the will of the adversary to resist.”
For this to be successful “psychological and intangible, as well
as physical and concrete effects beyond the destruction of enemy forces
and supporting military infrastructure, will have to be achieved (my
own emphasis)” in the hope that “the non-nuclear equivalent
of the impact that the atomic weapons dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki
had on the Japanese” will result. “This Shock and Awe may
not necessitate imposing the full destruction of either nuclear weapons
or advanced conventional technologies but must be underwritten by the
ability to do so. . . to convey the unmistakable message that unconditional
compliance is the only available recourse. It will imply more than the
direct application of force. . . This could include means of communication,
transportation, food production, water supply, and other aspects of
infrastructure.” In contrast to the concept of “Decisive
Force” employed in the first Gulf War in which “military
force would be . . . targeted primarily against the military capabilities
of an opponent,” the violence unleashed in “Shock and Awe”
would be “all encompassing” in “scope”, using
“force against force and supporting capability (my emphasis).”#24
In other words, if “Shock and Awe” bombing were to be used
in the invasion of Iraq, America would directly target Iraqi civilians
and the infrastructure necessary for their survival, as well as threaten
the use of nuclear weapons in an offensive capacity, in order to “break
the will” of the Iraqi regime and force its capitulation.
Rather than denounce the idea that America should target Iraqi civilians
on a massive scale, with the intent to recreate the “impact that
the atomic weapons dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki had on the Japanese,”
President Bush responded enthusiastically to the concept of “Shock
and Awe” when it was introduced to him by Secretary of Defense
Rumsfeld in the lead up to the war.#25 Three weeks before the invasion,
CBS Evening News reported positively about this new strategy, interviewing
the author of “Shock and Awe”, Harlan Ullman. CBS also quoted
one Pentagon official who had been briefed on the plans as saying, "There
will not be a safe place in Baghdad . . . the sheer size of this has
never been seen before, never been contemplated before.”#26
At the end of the report Dan Rather commented, “We assure you
this report contains no information that the Defense Department thinks
could help the Iraqi military,” protect its civilian population
from a repeat of the horrors of the US air force’s 1991 bombing
campaign.
Because US war planners openly advocated targeting civilians in the
bombing campaign, it is unsurprising that they were largely successful
in achieving their goals. According to a study by US and Iraqi researchers,
led by the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and published
in The Lancet, some 100,000 Iraqis had died by late 2004 as result of
the US-led invasion and occupation, primarily due to US/UK bombing.#27
This survey encompassed the period before wide scale sectarian violence
had erupted in Iraq, which is now the primary killer of Iraqi civilians.
The violence in Iraq began to evolve after US planners began constituting
a new Iraqi government and a new Iraqi Army and Police loyal to the
US and which consisted primarily of the majority Shiite sect. Sunni
Iraqi insurgents began targeting not only US forces, but the largely
Shiite Iraqi Army and Police as well because of their “collaboration”
with the foreign occupiers, while foreign Al Qaeda militants flooding
to Iraq began attacking Shiite markets and holy places, killing scores
of civilians, due to their belief that Shiites are “infidels”.
Shiite militias such as the Badr Brigade began a campaign of assassinations
of former regime members, both independently and as members of the Iraqi
police, and eventually evolved into death squads targeting Sunnis generally.
After the bombing of the Samarra Shrine in February 2004, sectarian
hatred intensified causing the other largest Shiite militia in the country,
the Mahdi Army, to participate in death squad activities against Sunni
civilians as well.
In another study conducted by the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of
Public Health and published in October 2006, researchers estimated the
number of excess Iraqi deaths since the 2003 US invasion had reached
some 600,000.#28 By January of 2007, the United Nations reported that
the number of Iraqi civilians killed in 2006 alone reached 34,000, as
a result of US and coalition military operations, sectarian killings
by Shiite death squads and bombings by Iraqi insurgents and Al Qaeda
operatives.#29
In review, the US government has killed hundreds of thousands, if not
over a million people in Iraq over the last two decades. Most of those
killed have been civilians who were deliberately targeted by the US
military through bombing and sanctions. The State Department’s
1992 Defense Planning Guidance, written by then Under Secretary of Defense
Paul Wolfowitz, outlines the basic motivations driving US foreign policy
planners since that time. It states that the US must, “preclude
any hostile power from dominating a region critical to our interests.
. . In the Middle East and Persian Gulf, we seek to foster regional
stability, deter aggression against our friends and interests in the
region, protect U.S. nationals and property, and safeguard our access
to international air and seaways and to the region’s oil.”#30
The US government has unleashed untold amounts of violence against hundreds
of thousands of innocent Iraqis over the past twenty or so years for
the sake of economic and strategic interests and in order to remain
the world’s sole superpower. In other words, the US government
routinely kills innocent children of God for the sake of getting gain.
As American Mormons, we should resist these actions of our government
which mirror the first sin recorded in Mormon scripture:
And Cain said: truly I am Mahan, the master of this great secret
that I may murder and get gain. Wherefore Cain was called Master Mahan,
and he gloried in his wickedness. And Cain went into the field, and
Cain talked with Abel, his brother. And it came to pass that while they
were in the field Cain rose up against Abel, his brother, and slew him.
And Cain gloried in that which he had done, saying: I am free; surely
the flocks of my brother falleth into my hands (Moses 5:31-33).
footnotes:
#1 White House Counts on Military Buildup to Force Saddam’s Hand.
Washington Post, August 15, 1990.
#2 Allied Air War Struck Broadly in Iraq; Officials Acknowledge Strategy
Went Beyond Purely Military Targets, Washington Post, June 23, 1991,
Sunday, Final Edition.
#3 Defense Intelligence Agency, “Iraq Water Treatment Vulnerabilities”
Jan 18, 1991. Links to this DIA document can be found at “War
Crimes, US Planners and Iraq’s Water Vulnerability: A Conversation
with Professor Thomas Nagy.” ZNet, June 03, 2003. http://zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID=3722.
#4 The Post reports, “According to unofficial estimates by the
U.S. Department of Agriculture, as of July 1, Iraq reported wheat reserves
equivalent to two months supply; a four-month supply of rice, and barely
10 days supply of corn. In each case, Iraq has some added production
of its own that could alleviate shortages. According to Department estimates,
Iraq’s dependence on foreign food is about 70 percent in years
of good rainfall, and 80 percent in bad years. White House Counts on
Military Buildup to Force Saddam’s Hand, Washington Post, August
15, 1990.
#5 White House Counts on Military Buildup to Force Saddam’s Hand.
Washington Post, August 15, 1990.
#6 Clark Richard A. Against All Enemies, p. 63.
#7 Clark Richard A. Against All Enemies, p. 64.
#8 Preceding three quotes found in: Sunday Mail, Iraqi toll: Is it 100,000?
March 24, 1991.
#9 Washington Post, June 23, 1991.
#10 Washington Post , June 23, 1991.
#11 Washington Post, June 23, 1991.
#12 This quote comes from a NEJM Editorial written by Leon Eisenberg,
and can be found at http://www.scn.org/ccpi/NEJM_editorial.html. The
study he cites can be found at: Ascherio A, Chase R, Cote T, et al.
Effect of the Gulf War on Infant and Child Mortality in Iraq. New England
Journal of Medicine, 1992;327:931-6. [Erratum, N Engl J Med 992;327:1768.].”
#13 Washington Post, June 23, 1991.
#14 Washington Post, June 23, 1991.
#15 Washington Post, June 23, 1991.
#16 Washington Post, June 23, 1991.
#17 Clark, Richard A. Against All Enemies, p. 66.
#18 An End to Evil: How to Win the War on Terror. David Frum, Richard
Perle, 2003, Random House, New York, p.16-17.
#19 A Rising Sense That Iraq's Hussein Must Go, July 7, 1991, New York
Times.
#20 60 Minutes (5/12/96). FAIR reports that “It's worth noting
that on 60 Minutes, Albright made no attempt to deny the figure given
by Stahl--a rough rendering of the preliminary estimate in a 1995 U.N.
Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) report that 567,000 Iraqi children
under the age of five had died as a result of the sanctions. . . In
early 1998, Columbia University's Richard Garfield published a dramatically
lower estimate of 106,000 to 227,000 children under five dead due to
sanctions, which was reported in many papers (e.g. New Orleans Times-Picayune,
2/15/98). Later, UNICEF came out with the first authoritative report
(8/99), based on a survey of 24,000 households, suggesting that the
total “excess” deaths of children under 5 was about 500,000.
(http://www.fair.org/extra/0111/iraq.html).
#21 Letter to President Clinton on Iraq, Project For a New American
Century. http://www.newamericancentury.org/iraqclintonletter.htm.
#22 Condoleeza Rice, “Promoting the National Interest,”
Foreign Affairs, January-February, 2000, as cited in Bush in Babylon,
Tariq Ali, p. 147. America’s enormous stockpile of nuclear, chemical,
and biological weapons serve as a deterrent to any power who might think
to attack our homeland. The Soviet Union, long our bitter enemy, never
used their nuclear weapons because it was clear to them that that any
attack against America would be met with an overwhelming nuclear response.
Even the monster Stalin understood this. If Saddam were to acquire weapons
of mass destruction, he would plainly understand that any use of these
weapons against America, including by way of some proxy terrorist organization
such as al-Qaeda, would be met with such a response as well, particularly
after the Taliban regime was swiftly punished for such a proxy attack.
If the US would destroy his country and kill tens of thousands simply
for invading Kuwait, how could he not take Rice’s threat seriously
that “national obliteration” would result if he attacked
America itself?
#23 George Wright, “Wolfowitz: Iraq War Was About Oil,”
Guardian, 4 June 2003.
#24 Ullman, Harlan K. “Shock and Awe: Achieving Rapid Dominance.”
National Defense University, 1996.
http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/library/report/1996/shock-n-awe_index.html
#25 Woodward, Bob. Plan of Attack, Simon and Schuster, 2004, p. 102.
#26 “Iraq Faces Massive U.S. Missile Barrage,” CBS News
Online, January 24th, 2003.
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2003/01/24/eveningnews/main537928.shtml
#27 “Mortality Before and After the 2003 Invasion of Iraq: Cluster
Sample Survey.” The Lancet, Volume 364, Number 9445, 30 October
2004.
#28 New York Times, October 10, 2006.
#29 New York Times, January 16, 2007.
#30 New York Times, May 24, 1992, Pentagon Drops Goal of Blocking New
Superpowers.
05/2007