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Americans underestimate Iraqi
death toll
Washington -
Americans are keenly aware of how many U.S. forces have lost their
lives in Iraq, according to a new AP-Ipsos poll.
But they woefully underestimate the
number of Iraqi civilians who have been killed.
When the poll was conducted earlier
this month, a little more than 3,100 U.S. troops had been killed.
The midpoint estimate among those polled was right on target, at
about 3,000.
Far from a vague statistic, the
death toll is painfully real for many Americans. Seventeen percent
in the poll know someone who has been killed or wounded in Iraq. And
among adults under 35, those closest to the ages of those deployed,
27 percent know someone who has been killed or wounded.
For Daniel Herman, a lawyer in New
Castle, Pa., a co-worker's nephew is the human face of the dead.
"This is a fairly rural area," he
said. "When somebody dies, ... you hear about it. It makes it very
concrete to you."
The number of Iraqis killed,
however, is much harder to pin down, and that uncertainty is perhaps
reflected in Americans' tendency to lowball the Iraqi death toll by
tens of thousands.
Iraqi civilian deaths are estimated
at more than 54,000 and could be much higher; some unofficial
estimates range into the hundreds of thousands. The U.N. Assistance
Mission for Iraq reports more than 34,000 deaths in 2006 alone.
Among those polled for the AP
survey, however, the median estimate of Iraqi deaths was 9,890. The
median is the point at which half the estimates were higher and half
lower.
Christopher Gelpi, a Duke
University political scientist who tracks public opinion on war
casualties, said a better understanding of the Iraqi death toll
probably wouldn't change already negative public attitudes toward
the war much. People in democracies generally don't shy away from
inflicting civilian casualties, he said, and they may be even more
tolerant of them in situations such as Iraq, where many of the
civilian deaths are caused by other Iraqis.
"You have to look at who's doing
the killing," said Neal Crawford, a restaurant manager in Suttons
Bay, Mich., who guessed that about 10,000 Iraqis had been killed.
"If these people are dying because a roadside bomb goes off or if
there's an insurgent attack in a marketplace, it's an unfortunate
circumstance of war — people die."
Gelpi
said that while Americans may not view Iraqi deaths through the same
prism as American losses, they may use the Iraqi death toll to gauge
progress, or lack thereof, on the U.S. effort to promote a stable,
secure democracy in Iraq.
To many, he said, "the fact that so
many are being killed is an indication that we're not succeeding."
Whatever their understanding of the
respective death tolls, three-quarters of those polled said the
numbers of both Americans and Iraqis who have been killed are
"unacceptable." Two-thirds said they tend to feel upset when a
soldier dies, while the rest say such deaths are unfortunate but
part of what war is about.
Sometimes it's hard for people to
sort out their conflicting emotions.
"I don't know if I'm numb to it or
not," said 86-year-old Robert Lipold of Las Vegas. "It's something
you see in the paper every day there. And how do you feel when in
the back of your mind it's unnecessary?"
Given a range of possible words to
describe their feelings about the overall situation in Iraq, people
were most likely to identify with "worried," selected by 81 percent
of those surveyed.
Other descriptive words selected by
respondents:
_Compassionate: 74 percent.
_Angry: 62 percent.
_Tired: 61 percent.
_Hopeful: 51 percent.
_Proud: 38 percent.
_Numb: 27 percent.
Women were more likely than men to
feel worried, compassionate, angry and tired; men were more likely
than women to feel proud, a finding consistent with traditional
differences in attitudes toward war between the sexes.
For women, said Gelpi, "there is an
emotional response to casualties that men don't show. ... It could
be some sort of socialization that men get about the military or
combat as being honorable that women don't get."
Charlotte Pirch, a lawyer from
Fountain Valley, Calif., said she's "always appalled and just very
upset at hearing about more casualties, whether it's U.S. troops or
troops from another country."
Pirch
said two of her nieces are married to men who served in Iraq and she
doesn't live far from Camp Pendleton, which has sent many U.S.
troops to Iraq. But she added, "Whether I knew someone personally or
not, I would still feel it as a citizen of our country."
Perhaps surprisingly, the poll
found little difference in attitudes toward the war between those
who did and did not know someone who had been killed or wounded.
There was a difference, however, in their opinions on whether
opponents are right to criticize the war.
About half of those who know
someone who has been killed or wounded felt it is right to criticize
the war, compared with two-thirds of those who don't have a personal
connection.
The AP-Ipsos poll of 1,002 adults,
conducted Feb. 12-15, had a 3 percentage point margin of error. -- Associated
Press
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