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War & Peace In Iraq

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  • War & Peace In Iraq

    The Face of War

    These photos were taken by US military personnel in Fallujah on November 19, 2004. They were taken in order to identify the dead, as well as used to track where the bodies were later buried in Fallujah.

    Of hundreds of photos taken for identification of the dead, I selected these in order to show the face of war. Due to most media outlets in the west continuing to not show the daily horrific images in Iraq-of wounded and dead soldiers, civilians and fighters, I decided to put these on my site.

    I did so because I believe it is important for people to see what war looks like.

    All of these photos taken by the military are of men. An interesting thing, in light of the fact that the Iraqi Red Crescent has announced that conservatively, 60% of the casualties in Fallujah, which are expected to be well over 2,000 people, are women, children, elderly and unarmed civilians.

    I warn you in advance that these are extremely graphic images.

  • #2
    aah khoda...

    akhe chera....??
    >> Doroste ke inja bozorg shodam man vali khone IRANI to raghame <<

    Az in ghafas, az in zamin mikham beram paar bekesham,
    baraye in hame diavar yek goshei daar bekesham

    Comment


    • #3
      Well this is war. Just because we don't see it doesn't mean there are no atrocities being commited. War is old men talking and young men dying.

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by ProudPersian
        Well this is war. Just because we don't see it doesn't mean there are no atrocities being commited. War is old men talking and young men dying.

        Comment


        • #6
          War In Iraq (Iran training Iraqis to use munitions)

          produced by GlobalFreePress.com

          Music by James Blunt

          Lyrics to 'No Bravery'

          About The war in Iraq !


          Watch it here :

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          • #7
            saddd

            Comment


            • #8
              vaghean adam vaghti en chizaro mibine tamame moohaye badanesh sikh mishe.
              omidvaram ke har che zoodtar vaziyate Iraq dorost beshe, chon faghat mardome bi gonah daran en vasat koshte mishan







              God made Coke,
              God made Pepsi,
              God made Persian girls so DAMN SEXY!!!

              ~Zende Bad Iran Va Irani~

              Comment


              • #9
                mersy
                is truth
                hop never happen to iran
                always bravery , and no sadness
                thanks to RED WINE



                MAHSA














                [/CENTER]

                Comment


                • #10
                  red wine jon to ya mano mikhandoni ya ashkamo dar miari .
                  merc khaste nabashi

                  Comment


                  • #11

                    SAD
                    URL=http://imageshack.us][IMG]http://img96.imageshack.us/img96/7044/mytapesh3vg.gif[/IMG
                    Tapesh.Com and Kami joon BRINGS You the BEST

                    Comment


                    • #12
                      the ugly face of war

                      Comment


                      • #13

                        Comment


                        • #14
                          namanaaaaaaaaaaa?????



                          MAHSA














                          [/CENTER]

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                          • #15
                            'Huge rise' in Iraqi death tolls

                            An estimated 655,000 Iraqis have died since 2003 who might still be alive but for the US-led invasion, according to a survey by a US university.
                            The research compares mortality rates before and after the invasion from 47 randomly chosen areas in Iraq.

                            The figure is considerably higher than estimates by official sources or the number of deaths reported in the media.

                            It is vigorously disputed by supporters of the war in Iraq, including US President George W Bush.

                            John Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health (JHBSPH) estimate that the mortality rates have more than doubled since the invasion to overthrow Saddam Hussein, causing an average of 500 deaths a day.

                            I stand by the figure that a lot of innocent people have lost their life... and that troubles me, and it grieves me

                            President George W Bush
                            In the past, Mr Bush has put the civilian death toll in Iraq at 30,000, and hours after details of the latest research were published he dismissed JHBSPH's methodology as "pretty well discredited".

                            The John Hopkins researchers argue their statistical approach is more reliable than counting dead bodies, given the obstacles preventing more comprehensive fieldwork in the violent and insecure conditions of Iraq.

                            "I stand by the figure that a lot of innocent people have lost their life... and that troubles me, and it grieves me," Mr Bush told reporters at the White House.

                            "Six-hundred thousand or whatever they guessed at is just... it's not credible," Mr Bush said.

                            Sharp rise

                            The researchers spoke to nearly 1,850 families, comprising more than 12,800 people in dozens of 40-household clusters around the country.


                            Anti-US insurgents launch daily attacks with civilian casualties
                            Of the 629 deaths they recorded among these families since early 2002, 13% took place in the 14 months before the invasion and 87% in the 40 months afterwards.

                            Such a trend repeated nationwide would indicate a rise in annual death rates from 5.5 per 1,000 to 13.3 per 1,000 - meaning the deaths of some 2.5% of Iraq's 25 million citizens in the last three-and-a-half years.

                            The researchers say that in nearly 80% of the individual cases, family members produced death certificates to support their answers.

                            Reliable data is very hard to obtain in Iraq, where anti-US insurgents and sectarian death squads pose a grave danger to civilian researchers.

                            The survey updates earlier research using the same "cluster" technique which indicated that 100,000 Iraqis had died between the invasion and April 2004 - a figure that was also dismissed by many supporters of the US-led coalition.

                            'Survivor bias'

                            While critics point to the discrepancy between this and other independent surveys (such as Iraq Body Count's figure of 44-49,000 civilian deaths, based on media reports), the Bloomberg School team says its method may actually underestimate the true figure.

                            "Families, especially in households with combatants killed, could have hidden deaths. Under-reporting of infant deaths is a widespread concern in surveys of this type," the authors say.

                            "Entire households could have been killed, leading to survivor bias."

                            The survey suggests that most of the extra deaths - 601,000 - would have been the result of violence, mostly gunfire, and suggests that 31% could be attributable to action by US-led coalition forces.

                            The survey is to be published in a UK medical journal, the Lancet, on Thursday.

                            In an accompanying comment, the Lancet's Richard Horton acknowledges that the 2004 survey provoked controversy, but emphasises that the 2006 follow-up has been recommended by "four expert peers... with relatively minor revisions".

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