Český a slovenský zahraniční časopis  
     
 

Prosinec 2007


Další rána válečným štváčům...

Ross Hedvíček

...ale, to se nám přece nehodí do krámu, že soudruzi?

Předkládám další důkaz, že na tomto blogu se dozvíte věci, které se v českých novinách nedočtete. Jsem pravidelně obesílán protiamerickou propagandou v režii Dariuse Nosretiho z Česka - ovšem, z tohoto asi bude mít škytavku. Je to zpráva americké vlády, původní znění uvádím, je to v angličtině. Nějaký úředník právě vyzkoumal, že v letech MÍRU v osmdesátých letech zemřelo více aktivních příslušníků amerických ozbrojených sil než za poslední dva roky války v Iráku a Afganistanu. Statistika levičákům nepřeje. Podle těchto údajů, 2380 aktivních vojáků, kteří zemřeli v roce 1981, 1524 zemřelo při dopravních nehodách, 145 spáchalo sebevraždu, 457 zemřelo následkem nemoci a 241 následkem zranění, které si sami způsobili. Srovnejte to prosím s 1942 aktivních vojáků zemřelých v roce 2005: Z tohoto počtu 632 zemřelo při autonehodách, 739 pod palbou nepřítele, 49 sebevraždou, 281 následkem nemoci, 150 následkem zranění, které si sami způsobili, u zbytku není příčina smrti uvedena.

Government Report: More Military Deaths in Some Years of Peace Than War

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

More active members of the military died during two years of peacetime in the early 1980s than died during a two-year period of war in Iraq and Afghanistan, according to a government report.

The Congressional Research Service, which compiled war casualty statistics from the Revolutionary War to present day conflicts, reported that 4,699 members of the U.S. military died in 1981 and '82 ¬ a period when the U.S. had only limited troop deployments to conflicts in the Mideast. That number of deaths is nearly 700 fewer than the 3,800 deaths during 2005 and '06, when the U.S. was fully committed to large-scale military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The CRS, which is the public policy research arm of Congress, issued its findings in the June report "American War and Military Operations Casualties: Lists and Statistics."

FOXNews.com, in re-examining the findings, found that - surprising as it may be - there were more active duty deaths in some years of peacetime than there were in some years of wartime.

Military analysts say the current decrease in military casualties, even during a time of war, is due to a campaign by the Armed Forces to reduce accidents and improve medical care on the battlefield.

"It's safer to be in the military because your accidental death rate has gone down; it's safer to be in the military because if you get wounded, you'll probably survive," said John Pike, director of GlobalSecurity.org. "Getting killed on the battlefield is one way that people in the military wind up dying, but it's not the main way."

According to the raw figures, of the 2,380 members of the military who died during active duty in 1981, 1,524 were killed in accidents, 145 by homicide, 457 by illness and 241 from self-inflicted wounds. That compares with the 1,942 killed in 2005; of that number, 632 died from accidents, 739 from hostile action, 49 from homicide, 281 from illness, 150 from self-inflicted wounds and 72 whose causes of death were still pending. Eleven deaths in ’81 and 19 deaths in ’05 were classified as “undetermined.”

"Let's not somehow pretend or try to convey the false impression that being at war is being safer than being at peace, of course not," said Michael O'Hanlon, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institute.

"If we stopped these wars we would cut back our annual military fatalities by close to a thousand people, and that's just simple arithmetic."

The numbers, which outline active-duty deaths from 1980 to 2006, show a steady decline in accidents. Experts attribute that decline to campaigns to curb off-duty partying and drunk driving, as well as offering better training before putting troops in hazardous situations. There also are fewer active military members today; the total number of active servicemen and women decreased from a 1986 high of 2.18 million troops to the 2006 level of 1.38 million.

Doug Johnson, a professor of national security affairs at the U.S. Army War College in Carlisle, Pa., said that initial treatment and airlifts during the so-called "golden hour" after a soldier is wounded have significantly increased troop survival rates. "You don't hear the classic war movie cry for 'Medics, medics,' because everybody's a medic to a certain extent," he said.

The death-to-wounded ratio has also improved, the study found. Nearly 8 people are wounded for every one who dies in Operation Iraqi Freedom versus the 1 death to 1.7 wound ratio found during World War II. And the combined totals for illness, homicide, accident and suicide trump troop casualty numbers, Pike said. "Previously in a war, if you were wounded, you were in big trouble," Pike said. "And now if you're wounded, you're probably going to make it."

But Johnson said it's important to look beyond the raw data. "The thing that distresses me about it, is it's raw numbers. And while that's interesting, it doesn't reflect percentages, which might be more instructive," he said.



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