| . | ||||||||||||||||||||||
|
January 25, 2006
PAVED WITH GOOD INTENTIONS - IRAQ BODY COUNT - PART 1On the rare occasions when the issue of civilian casualties is discussed in the mainstream media three words are invariably mentioned: Iraq Body Count (IBC). IBC describes itself as a project which maintains "the world's only independent and comprehensive public database of media-reported civilian deaths in Iraq that have resulted from the 2003 military intervention by the USA and its allies". (www.iraqbodycount.net/background.htm) IBC is often described as an "anti-war" website - the home page shows an ominous photograph of a Stealth bomber dropping a stick of bombs. The words above the picture were spoken by General Tommy Franks: "We don't do body counts". Below, we find US General Mark Kimmitt's advice to Iraqis who see TV images of innocent civilians killed by coalition troops: "Change the channel." This does indeed suggest an intense critical focus on suffering caused by British and US forces. IBC is important, not least because it is often cited as a source in high-profile British and American media. Writing in the Independent, Washington editor Rupert Cornwell observed that IBC is "regarded as the most authoritative independent source on Iraqi casualties". (Rupert Cornwell, 'Debate rages over number of civilians killed in conflict,' The Independent, August 17, 2005) The IBC website reports:
The list of media mentions recorded at the site continues for some 30 pages. IBC is also important because its figures for civilian deaths in Iraq have been used by the British and American governments, and by the media, to attack or dismiss higher estimates in other studies. An editorial in the Washington Times, for example, noted that the October 2004 Lancet report estimated 100,000 excess civilian deaths, adding:
Political editor John Rentoul wrote in the Independent on Sunday: "even Iraq Body Count, an anti-war campaign, puts the total attributable to coalition forces at under 10,000, rather than the figure with an extra zero that is the common misconception of anti-war propaganda". (Rentoul, 'Islam, blood and grievance,' The Independent on Sunday, July 24, 2005) In October, 2004, the Guardian reported the British government's response to the Lancet report:
Certain To Be An Underestimate - The Self-Correcting MediaIBC is clear that there are inherent problems with its methodology. In response to the Lancet study, IBC pointed out:
But this humility is not consistently expressed. IBC's website also makes
quite grand claims: "if journalism is the first draft of history, then
this dossier may claim to be an early historical analysis of the military
intervention's known human costs". (http://reports.iraqbodycount.org/a_dossier_of So what are the sources behind the database informing this "early
historical analysis"? IBC reveals that these are "predominantly
Western", with the "most prevalent" being "the major
newswires and US and UK newspapers". (http://reports.iraqbodycount.org/ In its report 'A dossier of civilian casualties 2003-2005', IBC noted that just three press agencies - Associated Press, Agence France Presse, and Reuters - provided one-third of all stories. Reliance on Western media is not deemed a problem, however, because they "are unlikely to suppress conservative estimates which can act as a corrective to inflated claims". The report added:
This is a remarkable explanation for such a serious omission, particularly in light of the immense media attention afforded to the IBC figures. The website adds:
This is an admirable focus on the need for verification. However, as discussed, "the international media network" is heavily dominated by Western media in the IBC database - the idea that these media are "self-correcting" is flatly contradicted by media reporting on every conflict involving Western interests since 1945. Indeed, the notion that Western media exercise "professional rigour" is absurd. Noam Chomsky has explained the reality:
As we have discussed in previous alerts, from its inception at the start of the 20th century, "professional" journalism has been inherently and massively biased in favour of powerful vested interests. It is exactly these interests that have so much at stake when civilians are being killed abroad. It is in exactly this situation that the mainstream media become wilfully blind, wilfully naïve, and in fact function as a propaganda system for state-corporate power. Not only is IBC's surveillance-based total for Iraqi civilian deaths one of the most widely cited by journalists, it is also the lowest. Les Roberts, lead author of the Lancet report, told us last year:
Whereas the Lancet report estimated around 100,000 civilian deaths in October 2004, IBC reported 17,000 at that time. The Lancet authors found:
Indeed 84 per cent of the violent deaths were reported to have been caused by the actions of 'coalition' forces and 95 per cent of those deaths were due to airstrikes and artillery. By contrast, fully one year later, the Daily Telegraph reported that IBC had evidence that 26,000 to 30,000 Iraqi civilians had died since the war started in March 2003:
In response, IBC pointed out, "it is likely that many if not most civilian casualties will go unreported by the media... our own total is certain to be an underestimate of the true position, because of gaps in reporting or recording". (Iraq Body Count, Quick FAQ and Press Release, 7th November 2004, www.iraqbodycount.net/press/archive.php) But as we will see, the problem is not merely that there are "gaps in reporting", but that there are gaps of a particular kind. Senior figures from Jack Straw to George Bush have been quick to point the public in the direction of IBC and its figures. The Guardian reported last December:
Remarkably, Harding seemed to believe that Bush might not have based his figures on IBC's. IBC responded to a related error in Harding's article:
Harding's claim that "up to 30,892 Iraqis have died" was simply false. But it is a claim regularly repeated across the media. Thus the Financial Times:
In December the Independent on Sunday made fleeting mention of Iraqi casualties in its review of 2005:
This was clearly a reference to the IBC total - for +civilians+, not all Iraqis. But anyway, as we have seen, the IBC figure is selective in its sources, is the lowest estimate of eight serious studies, and relies on "professional rigour" in the Western media that does not exist. As we will also see, realities on the ground in Iraq cast real doubt on the value of IBC's methodology and numbers. Part 2 will follow shortly... Write to Media Lens: |
![]()
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
| © copyright 2010 Media Lens | site built by OmWeb |