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Estimates of deaths in first war still in dispute Sunday, February 16, 2003 By Jack Kelly, Post-Gazette National Security Writer With a second Persian Gulf War drawing near, Beth Daponte's telephone has
been ringing off the hook with journalists from around the country asking about
her estimates of Iraqi casualties in the first one.
Now a research professor at Carnegie Mellon University, Daponte was a
29-year-old demographer at the Commerce Department in 1992, responsible for
keeping track of developments in the Middle East, when she estimated that
158,000 Iraqis -- 86,194 men, 39,612 women and 32,195 children -- had perished
in the war and its aftermath. The U.S. suffered 148 combat deaths and 145 non-battle deaths during the Gulf
War and the buildup to it.
Daponte's original estimate was leaked and made public at a press conference
by William Arkin of Greenpeace, the activist environmental organization. The
Pentagon said it wasn't possible to estimate Iraqi civilian casualties, and was
unhappy that anyone else in the government attempted to do so.
Daponte's boss quickly informed her in writing that she would be dismissed
for releasing "false information." The Commerce Department backed off
after the American Civil Liberties Union offered to defend Daponte's free-speech
rights and supplied her with attorneys. But she was given no more significant
work to do, and left a few months later for Carnegie Mellon.
Even though she doesn't enjoy reliving it, the controversy has worked out
well for Daponte. Thanks to the publicity it generated, she is now considered
the nation's leading authority on non-battle deaths in Iraq. At Carnegie Mellon,
Daponte studies the demographic effects of food assistance programs, and the
undercount of minorities in the last U.S. census.
In a subsequent 1993 study funded by Greenpeace, Daponte updated and publicly
presented her analysis of the Gulf War, raising the total Iraqi death count to
205,000. She estimated that 56,000 Iraqi soldiers and 3,500 civilians were
killed during the war, and that another 35,000 died as Saddam Hussein crushed
Kurdish and Shiite rebellions that rose up after the United States stopped
fighting. The largest number of deaths -- 111,000 -- Daponte attributed to
"postwar adverse health effects."
Most of Daponte's estimates of Iraqi casualties are higher than those of
other researchers. But National Defense University Prof. Judith Yaphe, a former
CIA analyst, thinks DaPonte underestimated the number killed in the Kurdish and
Shiite rebellions. Yaphe thinks at least 60,000 died in those uprisings, perhaps
as many as 80,000 to 100,000.
Daponte took her figure for combat deaths during the war from Arkin, a former
Army intelligence officer. His estimate was in line with an early Defense
Intelligence Agency estimate of 50,000 to 100,000 Iraqi battlefield deaths, but
substantially higher than the current consensus among military experts of 10,000
to 20,000 Iraqi soldiers and 1,000 to 2,000 civilians killed.
Estimates by experts at the National Defense University in Washington, D.C.,
at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London, and by an air
power survey headed by Johns Hopkins University Prof. Eliot Cohen put the number
of Iraqi soldiers killed at 20,000 to 25,000, and the number of civilian deaths
at 1,000 to 3,000. The Iraqi government claims 2,278 civilians were killed
during the war.
This puts Daponte's 1993 estimate at about double the current consensus on
battlefield deaths, but close to the consensus range for civilian deaths.
Two scholars think actual Iraqi battlefield deaths were much lower. In a 1993
paper, former DIA analyst John Heidenrich estimated that only about 1,500 Iraqi
soldiers, and fewer than 1,000 civilians were killed during the war. Working
independently, John Mueller, a political science professor at Ohio State
University, came to a similar conclusion.
Heidenrich and Mueller based their conclusions on the low number of Iraqi
bodies found by American forces (577), the low number of wounded Iraqis captured
by Allied forces (2,000), and extrapolation from the maximum crew size of Iraqi
tanks and armored personnel carriers destroyed during the war.
DaPonte estimated indirect casualties by calculating the difference between
the number of "expected" deaths among various demographic groups |