Dear Bill Quigley,
Thanks for your article
“War Immemorial Day” published on CounterPunch on 26 may 2008. You write:
2003 to present Iraq. Operation Iraqi Freedom. 4082 U.S. military killed. British medical journal Lancet estimates over 90,000 civilian deaths. Iraq Body Count estimates over 84,000 civilians killed.
I’d like to bring to your attention two grave errors and kindly ask you to correct them.
The first, giant mistake is that the 2006 Lancet study estimated more than 650,000 deaths as a result of the US illegal war of aggression of Iraq. That was two years ago. [Then there was a ORB poll that estimated more than a million deaths.]
The second mistake is that the IBC figures are NOT estimates but a simple count based mostly on Western media reports.
Please, will you issue a correction as soon as possible and ask CounterPunch to publish it. Here below you find more info on this important matter.
Thank you for your time.
Best wishes,
Gabriele Zamparini
London
http://thecatsdream.com Useful resources:Iraq: the Human CostUpdated Iraq Survey Affirms Earlier Mortality EstimatesORB Update on Iraqi Casualty DataAnswers to Questions About Iraq Mortality SurveysCounting Iraqi Casualties -- and a Media ControversyWhat is the real death toll in Iraq?Iraqi deaths survey 'was robust'***
UPDATEDear Bill Quigley,
I have now seen that your article is also published on
CommonDreams.
Please, I urge you once again to issue a proper correction and to ask both CommonDreams and CounterPunch to publish it.
I also kindly ask CommonDreams and CounterPunch to issue a formal correction so to inform their readers about those GIANT mistakes. It’s really appalling to read those GIANT mistakes in progressive media outlets such as CounterPunch and CommonDreams.
Thank you all for your time
Best wishes,
Gabriele Zamparini
***
UPDATE 2: Bill Quigley's replyGabriele Zamparini:
Thank you. I will.
Bill Quigley
***
UPDATE 3: REPLY TO BILL QUIGLEYDear Bill Quigley,
Thank you for your reply.
I have just seen your article has also been published by
TruthOutI hope TruthOut too, together with CounterPunch and CommonDreams, will issue a proper, formal correction and give it the same space and relevance in their websites as the original article.
This is a very serious, giant mistake and it’s appalling that three well respected, progressive news outlets could let it reach their readerships.
I look forward to reading the correction on TruthOut, CounterPunch and CommonDreams (anywhere else?)
Thank you for your time
Best wishes,
Gabriele Zamparini
***
UPDATE 4: Bill Quigley's replyDear Gabriele Zamparini:
I have alerted the outlets. Counterpunch will make the correction this afternoon. The others are in process. This is my error and I appreciate you bringing it to my attention.
Bill Quigley
***
UPDATE 5: REPLY TO BILL QUIGLEYDear Bill Quigley,
Thank you again for your reply.
After CounterPunch, CommonDreams and TruthOut, I have now noticed that your article is on ZNet as well. It seems ZNet has not learned yet to report correctly on this important matter and it’s still allowing this kind of mistakes to reach its readers.
I wonder why this article has spread so quickly on all these left progressive media outlets. This certainly is the coincidence of the year!
Well done!!!
Kind regards,
Gabriele Zamparini
***
UPDATE 6: REPLY TO BILL QUIGLEYDear Bill Quigley,
I have just read now the correction on CommonDreams. It reads: “2003 to present Iraq. Operation Iraqi Freedom. 4082 U.S. military killed. British medical journal Lancet estimates over 655,000 civilian deaths. Iraq Body Count estimates over 84,000 civilians killed.”
I guess this correction will appear (sooner or later) on all the other prestigious left progressive media?
First of all, those left progressive media’s unlucky readers who happen to have already read your article will NEVER read that correction. Maybe those prestigious left progressive media should have given a more prominent space to this correction and be professional enough to assume their own responsibility
Also, this is NOT an acceptable correction, because:
1) you write “2003 to present” and then you continue, “British medical journal Lancet estimates over 655,000 civilian deaths”. That Lancet’s was published in 2006. Two years ago. That is NOT “present” exactly.
2) you write “Iraq Body Count estimates”. Iraq Body Count doesn’t estimate anything; as I wrote you, the IBC is a simple count.
CounterPunch and ZNet are still giving more time to their readers to be misinformed. Take it easy, as you say in the US.
TruthOut didn’t issue any correction but deleted any reference to Iraq. Considering what I wrote above and in my previous emails, maybe that was the wiser choice!
Kind regards,
Gabriele Zamparini
***
UPDATE 7: REPLY TO BILL QUIGLEYDear Bill Quigley,
Just to let you and everyone on this mailing list know the latest:
CounterPunch has finally made a good correction, which is different from (and much better than) the CommonDreams’ I previously reported. The CounterPunch correction is:
“2003 to present Iraq. Operation Iraqi Freedom. 4082 U.S. military killed. Civilian deaths? Researchers from Johns Hopkins, using the most orthodox and conservative sampling methodology, reported in the Lancet, after extensive peer review, their estimate of a post-invasion civilian death toll of about 655,000 by the end of 2006.”
Credits to CounterPunch even though all those unlucky readers who happen to have already read your article in these days on CounterPunch will never read that correction.
Two days and many e-mails later, Michael Albert’s ZNet seem to be the only left progressive media to have left your original article intact and ZNet’s readers can still read:“2003 to present Iraq. Operation Iraqi Freedom. 4082 U.S. military killed. British medical journal Lancet estimates over 90,000 civilian deaths. Iraq Body Count estimates over 84,000 civilians killed.”The Spirit of Resistance Lives... somewhere else!
Kind regards,
Gabriele Zamparini
P.S. I have just found in my e-mail box a sarcastic e-mail from ZNet’s Paul Street, one of the people included in this little mailing list. Paul authored a good article published a few days ago on ZNet. It’s unfortunate
this good article contains the following paragraph:
As veteran journalist and author Jonathan Steele notes in his important book "DEFEAT: Why America and Britain Lost Iraq" (2008), the latest reliable mortality estimates from the leading British medical journal The Lancet "suggest that more people have been killed in Iraq during the occupation than during the 32 years of Saddam [Hussein]'s rule. Even the [research group] Iraq Body Count, which uses a statistically more conservative methodology and tabulates deaths confirmed by at least two sources," Steele notes, "produces a death toll of civilians killed by violence that averages around 16,000 annually over the first four years of the occupation. The annual rate of killing exceeds Saddam's." (Steele 2006, p. 250).
What’s even more striking is that in a correspondence I had with him a few months ago, Paul agreed that IBC was playing a bad role and he assured me he wouldn’t use IBC numbers again. Private vices and public virtues?
***
READ THE UPDATES HERE