Iraq civilian, U.S. military tolls at new low in Oct
04:36 PM EDT
By Andrew Marshall
BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Civilian deaths from violence in Iraq fell again in October to their lowest level this year, government figures showed on Wednesday, bolstering the U.S. military's assertion that a troop surge is reducing bloodshed.
U.S. military fatalities also showed a significant drop in October -- so far 36 have been reported for the month, the lowest since March 2006, and well below 65 deaths in September.
Figures from Iraq's health, interior and defense ministries recorded 758 civilians killed in violence in October, along with 117 policemen and 13 Iraqi soldiers.
In September, 884 civilian deaths were recorded, and 62 policemen and 16 Iraqi soldiers were killed.
The September and October tolls represent a sharp drop from monthly figures earlier in the year. The highest civilian toll this year was 1,971 in January, and the monthly toll stayed well above 1,000 until September's dramatic decline.
U.S. generals say the figures show that the strategy of pouring 30,000 extra troops into Iraq this year to secure Baghdad and other troubled areas, and of moving U.S. troops out of large bases into smaller combat outposts where they live and fight alongside Iraqis, is having a significant impact.
They say Iraqi security forces are also increasingly adept at tackling insurgent groups and rogue militias.
The Iraqi government figures showed 1,038 civilians were wounded in violence in October -- higher than the 884 wounded in September but still significantly below 2007's monthly average.
Lieutenant-General Raymond Odierno, the No. 2 U.S. general in Iraq, said last week that insurgent attacks had been on a steady downward trend since June, with roadside bomb blasts in particular sharply down in the last four months.
In several areas of Iraq, including the western province of Anbar that was long dominated by radical insurgents, groups once hostile to the U.S. military have turned against al Qaeda militants, angered by their indiscriminate killings of civilians and attempts to impose harsh Islamic laws.
The Iraqi data showed 330 insurgents killed in October and 1,427 captured, down from 366 killed and 1,514 captured in September.
U.S. opponents of the continued military presence in Iraq say American troops are caught in the middle of a domestic sectarian conflict with no resolution in sight.
Bush has said the surge strategy needs to be given time to work, and has told Congress that he expects 20,000 to 30,000 troops could be withdrawn by July 2008 as security improves.
Wednesday, October 31, 2007
GOOD News in Iraq
Off of Reuters' Website... GOOD news that's not getting much publicity
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1 comment:
It is good to finally see some good news come out of Iraq isn't it? H how or why we (USA & Australia) got involved in the first place is irelvent now. The thing now is to succesfuly finish the Job. No war is easy or without cost. Nor are most of them short. Yes there was the 6 day war and I think a 7 week one also involving Israel, but nearly all wars are long World War 1 went for 4 years & WW2 for6 or so. The thing now is to keep going and finish the job and then get out. But not before it is properly finished, otherwise it will only flare up again..
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