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The Iraq War's Tragic Legacy
As of February of 2010, approximately $700 billion had been spent in the war. This figure is based on current expenditure rates from figures from the Congressional Research Service (CRS), and estimates by the Nobel Prize economist Joseph Stiglitz and Linda Bilmes from Harvard University.
According to Stiglitz and Bilmes, the total cost of the Iraq war will probably exceed three trillion dollars in a moderate scenario. As Stiglitz has stated, "This number represents the cost only to the U.S. It does not reflect the enormous cost to the rest of the world, or to Iraq."
A major contributor to the war's final cost is the medical care and disability benefits provided to veterans. Since medical consequences don't become immediately apparent, in addition to present costs, claims are likely to be filed for years after the end of the war.
It is estimated that 20 percent of survivors have suffered major head or spinal injuries, 18 percent have suffered serious wounds and an additional six percent are amputees. More than 7,000 veterans with severe brain, spinal and other injuries will require very expensive round-the-clock care. Presently, government medical facilities in the U.S. are overwhelmed by the needs of soldiers who served in Iraq.
In addition to the economic costs described are the high number of suicides among the veterans, the mental health impact of those that survived and the costs to the families' economies and well being. These costs also do not include the waste of resources or the cost to the Iraq treasury of theft and corruption both by Iraqi officials and by U.S. contractors.
As Iraqi civilian casualties continue to mount -a reflection of internecine conflicts exacerbated by the U.S. occupation, the effects on Iraqi children are staggering. More than half a million children have been traumatized by the war, according to UNICEF. "Iraqi children, already casualties of a quarter of a century of conflict and deprivation, are being caught up in a rapidly worsening humanitarian tragedy," warned that organization in 2007.
28 percent of children suffer from some degree of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), according to Dr. Haithi Al Sady, Dean of the Psychological Research Center at Baghdad University. How could they not, when they still are being affected by daily explosions, killings, abductions and turmoil in Iraq's main cities?
More than 2 million children have been displaced from their homes as a result of the war. Children and their families have become refugees in neighboring countries. The sudden influx of hundreds of thousands of refugees has overburdened the recipient countries' health and social services. In addition, the "brain drain" of doctors and other professionals forced to leave the country has had a negative impact in the quality of services in Iraq.
"Iraqis are suffering from a growing lack of food, shelter, water and sanitation, health care, education and employment," according to a 2007 report compiled by OXFAM and the NGO Coordination Committee in Iraq (NCCI). The continuing violence since then has only made matters worse.
Hundreds of thousands of civilian deaths, a ravaged infrastructure, a non-functioning and corrupt government and a society terrorized by unending violence is the sad result of a greedy war, in flagrant violation of international norms and treaties. To call the Iraq war a "Pyrrhic victory" is an understatement.
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13 Comments so far
Show AllA war that even when it is "over" keeps on giving.
If this keeps up, Saddam will eventually be elevated to sainthood - and his reign remembered as 'the good old days' when Iraq was a modern secular country - the envy of the middle east, especially in regards to healthcare and education, not to mention women's rights - with very few deaths and 'terrorism' limited to CIA intrusions. Nice going, USA - you turned a tin-pot despot into a 'hero' of that nation. And destroyed the US while doing it...
Saddam is already there if you count the mercenaries in Iraq that the corporate media doesn't want to talk about. There were always more contractors than troops since the war turned occupation started.
With an 'all-volunteer army' they are ALL mercenaries. Just the ones in uniform get paid less...
Armybrat is telling it like it is. Members of the military are not "heroes," they are hired killers, no matter how pressured they felt to join. What did they think they were getting into--a little social club that meets to have a few beers every Saturday night? If enlistees don't understand that the bottom line is you kill people, they're too dumb to be handed a weapon.
Historians will write about what occurred that took us to war and what took place during the tragety. The issue is that the historians will probably be more liers that will make it appear that the US is noble and righteous. Lies will be written to support our misdeeds.
No. The victors write the history - and the US is just another third-world failed state (and it will be so noted in history). Asia is becoming dominant again - and will probably be writing the history (and judging by the US' previous behavior in Asia, I wouldn't bet on any pretty stories about the US) and will slant it in their favor.
There will, no doubt, be "official" histories written by, say, an editor at Time magazine or the Atlantic that will claim American benevolence and call the invasion and occupation of Iraq a great triumph. But there will be more histories, many more, that will be unflinchingly accurate and call the United States government and military mass murderers and imperialists. And even if that didn't happen, there will be at least one soldier who will author a great novel about Iraq and another about Afghanistan, even if they have to be published overseas.
That's only in the near-term. I was taking a longer look in the context of 'history' - even now, looking back at the Nazi's reign of terror is myopic.
i'm not sure this can qualify as "tragedy". A war made entirely of lies, yes. Stupid, certainly. and inexcusable. and immoral.
all of this applies as well, and even more so, to Afghanistan.
It is indeed a 'tragedy' - and of catastrophic proportions - to the peoples of Iraq and Afghanistan. Stupid? I doubt if the MIC contractors look at it that way...
Finally, an honest article about this horrendous war (which has been an occupation of Iraq and a laying waste to the entire country), instead of the handwringing exercises that have been published here over the last couple of days.
State-sponsored terrorism really is god-awful, isn't it? That's why such heinous atrocities were deemed the worst of war crimes at Nuremburg...