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The Mounting Costs of the Iraq War

The Iraq Quagmire

Erik Leaver and Jenny Shin | March 4, 2008

Editor: Saif Rahman

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Foreign Policy In Focus

Editor's note: Since 2004, IPS has been tracking the costs of the Iraq War in human and financial costs to the United States, Iraq, and the rest of the world. This latest fact sheet is designed to help bring a full understanding of the devastation of the war. The PDF link for this article provides the following information in an easy to read format designed for duplication and popular education.


U.S. military killed in Iraq: 3,973
Number of U.S. troops wounded in combat since the war began: 29,203
Iraqi Security Force deaths: 7,924
Iraqi civilians killed: Estimates range from 81,632-1,120,000

Internally displaced refugees in Iraq: 3.4 million
Iraqi refugees living abroad: 2.2-2.4 million
Iraqi refugees admitted to the U.S.: 3,222

Number of U.S. soldiers in Iraq: 155,000
Number of "Coalition of the Willing" soldiers in Iraq:
     February 2008: 9,895
     September 2006: 18,000
     November 2004: 25,595

Army soldiers in Iraq who have served two or more tours: 74%
Number of Private Military Contractors in Iraq: 180,000
Number of Private Military Contractors criminally prosecuted by the U.S. government for violence or abuse in Iraq: 1
Number of contract workers killed: 917

What the Iraq war has created, according to the U.S. National Intelligence Council: "A training and recruitment ground (for terrorists), and an opportunity for terrorists to enhance their technical skills."

Effect on al Qaeda of the Iraq War, according to International Institute for Strategic Studies: "Accelerated recruitment"

The bill so far: $526 billion
     Cost per day: $275 million
     Cost per household: $4,100
The estimated long-term bill: $3 trillion

What $526 billion could have paid for in the U.S. in one year:
     Children with health care: 223 million or
     Scholarships for university students: 86 million or
     Head Start places for children: 72 million

Cost of 22 days in Iraq could safeguard our nation's ports from attack for ten years.
Cost of 18 hours in Iraq could secure U.S. chemical plants for five years.

Iraqi Unemployment level: 25-40%
     *U.S. unemployment during the Great Depression: 25%
70% of the Iraqi population is without access to clean water.
80% is without sanitation.
90% of Iraq's 180 hospitals lack basic medical and surgical supplies.

79% of Iraqis oppose the presence of Coalition Forces.
78% of Iraqis believe things are going badly in Iraq overall.
64% of Americans oppose the war in Iraq.

What the "Declaration of Principles" has set according to Defense Secretary Robert Gates:
     "A mutually agreed arrangement whereby we have a long and enduring presence."

Erik Leaver is the policy outreach director for Foreign Policy In Focus and a research fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies. Jenny Shin is an intern at the Institute for Policy Studies.

 

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Published by Foreign Policy In Focus (FPIF), a project of the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS, online at www.ips-dc.org). Copyright © 2009, Institute for Policy Studies.

Recommended citation:
Erik Leaver and Jenny Shin, "The Iraq Quagmire: The Mounting Costs of the Iraq War," (Washington, DC: Foreign Policy In Focus, March 4, 2008).

Web location:
http://fpif.org/fpiftxt/5036

Production Information:
Author(s): Erik Leaver and Jenny Shin
Editor(s): Saif Rahman
Production: Erik Leaver

Latest Comments & Conversation Area
Editor's Note: FPIF.org editors read and approve each comment. Comments are checked for content only; spelling and grammar errors are not corrected and comments that include vulgar language or libelous content are rejected.
 
Name Aaron Malcolm Date: Mar 04, 2008
It's unbelievable as to how supporters of this bullsh*t war and occupation qualify the so-called "surge" as a victory in Iraq. In other words, a decrease in deaths and violence equals "success" to them, but yet people are still dying every day over there, not to mention that there's no telling where the escalation between the Turks and Iraqi Kurds might lead, and we will not be surprised to see U.S warplanes bomb Iran sooner or later. No wonder Under Secretary of State Nicholas Burns decided to leave in April 2008.
Name BK Date: Mar 07, 2008
It is not the question of the costs, but it is the matter that needs to be studied more and more to see the motives behind who is involved and who is profiting from it, yet it is the American people who pay the costs of this inhuman war that is waged on Iraqi people by the Bush administration. 43cents of every dollars as Tax is paid to continue war, yet if this war would just stop, but there is bigger plan ahead, US and British cooperation was not only about Iraq but rather Iraq invasion was about militarizing - occupying the entire Middle East from Mediterranean sea to the end of Persian gulf and further south to the African Horn country, of course that would not be possible without Israel being involved, which the last year Lebanon invasion by Israel was part of the plan to conquer Lebanon and continue to the Syrian border, yet IDF was defeated, further, and if you look at the area map you will sea that Sudan and Somalia been the main target of US bombardment and that there are US navy presence in the red sea. This has been done for one reason and one reason only, for Anglo American and its elite class to steal the people’s (Oil) wealth in that region of the world and re-colonials what they think is belongs to Exxon-Mobile. Look JD Rockefeller made $200million dollars off of the Second World War, as it is now they making money out of every Iraqi that are killed by the US Militarism regime and its presence in Middle East.
Name Brian Conley Date: Mar 07, 2008
Hi, I run http://www.aliveinbaghdad.org . I'm wonder where you found the 25-40% unemployment stat. By our own research, the Iraqi office responsible for this claimed it was at 20% in December 2007. I've seen others claim it is 60-70%. Any advice would be much appreciated. Here's where we found our statistic:
http://www.menafn.com/qn_news_story_s.asp?StoryId=1093177117
Name joseph lingenfelder Date: May 30, 2008
my comment is that if we look at all the statistics and all the facts we will see that most people oppose this war because of the amount of manpower and funds that this war has taken on all sides. It is prudent that no one truly knows what the other is fighting for anymore and the reason that that is is that we all have our own opinions and don't see what the other is fighting about because we are blinded by past succseses or follies. we need to try to get the people together and truly TALK to one another and not hear what we want to hear or what we don't want to hear and talk to each other and see how they each see this war that so far has only led to grief and subjugation of diferent people and people as a whole.
 
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