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WAR MACHINE: U.S. Casualties in Iraq Top 200 For April & May

by ROBERT BURNS Tuesday, Jun. 01, 2004 at 4:06 PM

American troops in Iraq died in May at a rate of more than two per day, pushing the combined death count for April and May beyond 200, according to Pentagon figures.

U.S. Casualties in Iraq Top 200, Rising

Monday May 31, 2004 12:31 AM

By ROBERT BURNS

AP Military Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - American troops in Iraq died in May at a rate of more than two per day, pushing the combined death count for April and May beyond 200, according to Pentagon figures.

For the National Guard and Reserve, whose part-time soldiers make up at least one-third of the 135,000 American troops in Iraq, the trend in casualties during May was especially troubling.

At least 22 citizen soldiers died, nearly one-third of all U.S. losses in May. As a percentage of the month's death toll, that is about double what it had been in most previous months of the war. It also shows that the Guard and Reserve are bearing an increasing combat load.

Three states - Arkansas, North Carolina and Washington - now have an Army National Guard combat brigade in Iraq. In the next rotation of troops that will begin late this summer, there will be at least three others, and probably a fourth, plus a National Guard division headquarters.

The most persistent killer, more than a year after President Bush declared major combat over, is the homemade roadside bomb. The military calls it an improvised explosive device. This month, they have killed least 19 soldiers, seven of them National Guardsmen.

``Our biggest menace now is the improvised explosive device,'' Maj. Gen. John Sattler, director of operations for the U.S. Central Command, said in a telephone interview with Pentagon reporters Friday.

He said multiple agencies of the U.S. government are searching for technological solutions, including electronic jammers that can stop the detonation of hidden bombs.

``The laws of physics conspire to keep these things hidden once they're emplaced, so unless you figure out through other means where they got put down, you're in trouble,'' says Michael O'Hanlon, a defense analyst at the Brookings Institution, a Washington think tank.

Months ago the Army sent a team of experts to Iraq to solve the problem, but to little apparent avail.

This kind of bomb took the life of the youngest female soldier to die in Iraq so far - Pfc. Leslie D. Jackson, 18, of Richmond, Va. She was killed in Baghdad on May 20 when her military vehicle was hit.

Others have been killed by snipers and suicide bombers, as well as mortars, rocket-propelled grenades and other weapons. Accidents, including two electrocutions, also have taken a toll.

At least 69 American troops died in May, according to the Pentagon's published tally. That figure does not include three Marines who died in action Saturday in western Iraq.

Their hometowns reach across America. Maple Valley, Wash., Ayden, N.C., and Lisbon, Maine. Chicago, New Orleans and Miami. California and Texas. Vermont and Delaware. Mississippi and Missouri.

May was deadlier than most previous months, but far less so than April, when the death toll was 136. That was by far the highest for any month since U.S. forces invaded in March 2003. The bloody fight for the city of Fallujah raged throughout April but has calmed down in the past few weeks.

In total, the Iraq conflict has taken the lives of more than 800 American troops so far, and last week the Pentagon reported that the number wounded in action is approaching 4,700.

The military says it continues to make progress in stabilizing Iraq, but the steadily rising death toll has become a political burden for a White House that also is focused on re-election.

Especially troubling, O'Hanlon says, is the continued reluctance of ordinary Iraqis to throw their support behind the American effort.

The Marine Corps in March stopped reporting the circumstances of its casualties in Iraq, so the actual number of deaths by the homemade bombs this month is likely higher than the 19 reported by the Army.

Among the 22 citizen soldiers killed in May was Staff Sgt. William D. Chaney, of the Illinois Army National Guard. At age 59, he was the oldest soldier to die in Iraq since the invasion began.

Chaney, of Schaumburg, Ill., died May 18 at a U.S. military hospital in Germany of complications following surgery for a noncombat related condition that he developed while in Iraq.

National Guardsmen often are older than their active-duty counterparts, and May's death toll reflects that. A 50-year-old Army Reserve soldier from Shreveport, La., died May 14; a 44-year-old Reserve soldier from Owensboro, Ky., was killed by a suicide car bomber that same day.

Two Vermont National Guard members were killed in a mortar attack May 25. They were the first Guardsmen from that state to be killed in action since at least the Korean War, half a century ago.

A Navy Reserve unit, the Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 14, based in Jacksonville, Fla., suffered extensive losses in May. Five of its men were killed and 28 were wounded in a mortar attack on a Marine base near the city of Ramadi in western Iraq on May 2. Two days earlier, two other members of that unit were killed when their vehicle convoy was hit by a homemade bomb.

(SUBs 12th graf bgng At least... to correct May deaths to 69 sted 59.)

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soldier death will continue

by abc Wednesday, Jun. 02, 2004 at 2:29 AM

soldier death will continue in Iraq until the "great pullout" ... whenever that is.

Report this post as:

partial solution

by Derrick Samson Wednesday, Jun. 02, 2004 at 6:19 AM

We need to drop "small" hydrogen bombs along the Iraq/Syria and Iraq/Iran borders

Would-be insurgents who would dare cross the borders need to know the fate that awaits them in Hell and beyond.

Report this post as:

OneEyedMan

by KPC Thursday, Jun. 03, 2004 at 6:43 PM
KPC

...oh, yeah...THAT's a good suggestion...

...fuckin' frycook....

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who's this ass gasket, 'kpc'???

by Derrick Samson Thursday, Jun. 03, 2004 at 8:53 PM

Who the fuck is "kpc," self-proclaimed King Turd of Shit Hill?

Two word insults is about all to expect from the dumbass party.



Report this post as:

OneEyedMan

by KPC Thursday, Jun. 03, 2004 at 10:32 PM
KPC

...who needs two words, I can dismiss you with one...

..."republican"....

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Republicans Forever

by Derrick Samson Friday, Jun. 04, 2004 at 1:54 AM

Ho ho.

Get acquinted with the Museum of Natural History.

That's where scale models of extinct demoshits, socialists and communists (all 3 basically the same) will be in 10 years or less.

Report this post as:

OneEyedMan

by KPC Friday, Jun. 04, 2004 at 3:18 PM
KPC

...oh yes, and your rants about 'hydrogen bombs" and "communists" are so....well...contemporary...

...fuckin' coprolite....

Report this post as:

KPC

by Derrick Samson Monday, Jun. 14, 2004 at 10:03 PM

Thanks for thoroughly handing me my ass like you've done countless times before.

I'll shut my cake hole now.

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