Tuesday, May 24, 2022

Trump was by far the most vicious to humanity and beyond the wildest dreams of bomb makers: In 2017, Trump dropped 179 bombs per day, a total of 60,208. He beat Obama’s 2016 record by 13,050-Pentagon Airpower Summary

 .

2017 total: 60,208, Source: Airpower Summary.

Obama’s 2016 best of 47,158 was a distant second to Trump….US average over 20 years was 46 per day....Trump’s 2017 avg. was 179 per day. Obama’s 2016 average was 131 per day.

Jan. 2022, Those in power kept us in the dark about an endless US bombardment--but now we finally have the data, Alternet, Medea Benjamin, Nicolas J.S. Davies

The Pentagon has finally published its first Airpower Summary since President Biden took office nearly a year ago. These monthly reports have been published since 2007 to document the number of bombs and missiles dropped by U.S.-led air forces in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria since 2004.

But President Trump stopped publishing them after February 2020, shrouding continued U.S. bombing in secrecy.

Over the past 20 years, as documented in the table below, U.S. and allied air forces have dropped over 337,000 bombs and missiles on other countries. That is an

average of 46 strikes per day for 20 years.

This endless bombardment has not only been deadly and devastating for its victims but is broadly recognized as seriously undermining international peace and security and diminishing America’s standing in the world.

The U.S. government and political establishment have been

remarkably successful at keeping the American public

in the dark about the horrific consequences

of these long-term campaigns of mass destruction,

allowing them to maintain the illusion of U.S. militarism as a force for good in the world in their domestic political rhetoric.

Now, even in the face of the Taliban takeover in Afghanistan, they are doubling down on their success at selling this counterfactual narrative to the American public

to reignite their old Cold War with Russia and China,

dramatically and predictably increasing the risk of nuclear war.

The new Airpower Summary data reveal that [since Feb. 2020] the United States has dropped another

3,246 bombs and missiles on Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria

(2,068 under Trump [Feb. 2020-mid Jan. 2021] and

1,178 under Biden [mid Jan. 2021-Dec. 2021])

since February 2020.

The good news is that U.S. bombing of those 3 countries

has significantly decreased from the over

12,000 bombs and missiles it dropped on them in 2019.

In fact, since the withdrawal of U.S. occupation forces from Afghanistan in August, the U.S. military has officially conducted no air strikes there, and only dropped 13 bombs or missiles on Iraq and Syria – although this does not preclude additional unreported strikes by forces under CIA command or control.

Presidents Trump and Biden both deserve credit for recognizing that endless bombing and occupation could not deliver victory in Afghanistan. The speed with which the U.S.-installed government fell to the Taliban

once the U.S. withdrawal was underway

confirmed how 20 years of hostile military occupation, aerial bombardment and

support for corrupt governments

ultimately served only to drive the war-weary people of Afghanistan back to Taliban rule.

Biden’s callous decision to follow 20 years of colonial occupation and aerial bombardment in Afghanistan

with the same kind of brutal economic siege warfare

the United States has inflicted on Cuba, Iran, North Korea and Venezuela can only further discredit America in the eyes of the world.

There has been no accountability for these 20 years of senseless destruction. Even with the publication of Airpower Summaries, the ugly reality of U.S. bombing wars

and the mass casualties they inflict

remain largely hidden from the American people.

How many of the 3,246 attacks documented in the Airpower Summary since February 2020 were you aware of before reading this article? You probably heard about the drone strike that killed 10 Afghan civilians in Kabul in August 2021. But what about the other 3,245 bombs and missiles?

Whom did they kill or maim, and whose homes did they destroy?

The December 2021 New York Times exposé of the consequences of U.S. airstrikes, the result of a five-year investigation,was

stunning not only for the high civilian casualties and

military lies it exposed,

but also because it revealed

just how little investigative reporting the U.S. media have done

on these two decades of war.

In America’s industrialized, remote-control air wars, even the U.S. military personnel most directly and intimately involved

are shielded from human contact with the people whose lives they are destroying,

while for most of the American public,

it is as if these hundreds of thousands of deadly explosions

never even happened.

The lack of public awareness of U.S. airstrikes is not the result of a lack of concern for

the mass destruction our government commits in our names.

In the rare cases we find out about, like the murderous drone strike in Kabul in August, the public wants to know what happened and strongly supports U.S. accountability for civilian deaths.

So public ignorance of 99% of U.S. air strikes and their consequences is not the result of public apathy, but of

deliberate decisions by the U.S. military, politicians of both parties and corporate media

to keep the public in the dark.

The largely unremarked 21-month-long suppression of monthly Airpower Summaries is only the latest example of this.

Now that the new Airpower Summary has filled in the previously hidden figures for 2020-21, here is the most complete data available on 20 years of deadly and destructive U.S. and allied air strikes.

The failure of the U.S. government, politicians and corporate media to honestly inform and educate the American public about the

systematic mass destruction wreaked by our country’s armed forces

has allowed this carnage to continue largely

unremarked and unchecked for 20 years.

It has also left us precariously vulnerable to

the revival of an anachronistic, Manichean

Cold War narrative that risks even greater catastrophe.

In this topsy-turvy, “through the looking glass” narrative,

the country actually bombing cities to rubble and waging wars that kill millions

of people,

presents itself as

a well-intentioned force for good in the world.

Then it paints countries

like China, Russia and Iran, which have

understandably strengthened their defenses

to deter the United States from attacking them,

as threats to the American people and to world peace.

The high-level talks beginning on January 10th [2022] in Geneva between the United States and Russia are a critical opportunity, maybe even a last chance, to rein in the escalation of the current Cold War before this breakdown in East-West relations becomes irreversible or devolves into a military conflict.

If we are to emerge from this morass of militarism and avoid the risk of an apocalyptic war with Russia or China,

the U.S. public [who pay all the bills] must challenge

the counterfactual Cold War narrative that

U.S. military and civilian leaders are peddling

to justify their ever-increasing investments in nuclear weapons and the U.S. war machine.”

……………

Added: Same list of bombs but with links for some individual years/numbers:

“Numbers of bombs and missiles dropped on other countries by the United States and its allies since 2001:”


Iraq (& Syria*) Afghanistan Yemen Other Countries**
2001 214 17,500

2002 252 6,500 1
2003 29,200


2004 285 86
1 (Pk)
2005 404 176
3 (Pk)
2006 310 2,644
7,002 (Le,Pk)
2007 1,708 5,198
9 (Pk,S)
2008 1,075 5,215
40 (Pk,S)
2009 126 4,184 3 5,554 (Pk,Pl)
2010 8 5,126 2 128 (Pk)
2011 4 5,411 13 7,763 (Li,Pk,S)
2012
4,083 41 54 (Li, Pk,S)
2013
2,758 22 32 (Li,Pk,S)
2014 6,292* 2,365 20 5,058 (Li,Pl,Pk,S)
2015 28,696* 947 14,191 28 (Li,Pk,S)
2016 30,743* 1,337 14,549 529 (Li,Pk,S)
2017 39,577* 4,361 15,969 301 (Li,Pk,S)
2018 8,713* 7,362 9,746 84 (Li,Pk,S)
2019 4,729* 7,423 3,045 65 (Li,S)
2020 1,188* 1,631 7,622 54 (S)
2021 554* 801 4,428 1,512 (Pl,S)





Total 154, 078* 85,108 69,652 28,217

Grand Total = 337,055 bombs and missiles.

(continuing): **Other Countries: Lebanon, Libya, Pakistan, Palestine, Somalia.

These figures are based on U.S.Airpower Summaries for Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria; the Bureau of Investigative Journalism’s count ofdrone strikes in Pakistan, Somalia and Yemen; the Yemen Data Project‘s count of bombs and missiles dropped on Yemen (only through September 2021); the New America Foundation’s database of foreign air strikes in Libya; and other sources.

There are several categories of air strikes that are not included in this table, meaning that the true numbers of weapons unleashed are certainly higher.

These include:

Helicopter strikes: Military Times published an article in February 2017 titled, “The U.S. military’s stats on deadly air strikes are wrong. Thousands have gone unreported.” The largest pool of air strikes not included in U.S. Airpower Summaries are strikes by attack helicopters. The U.S. Army told the authors its helicopters had conducted 456 otherwise unreported air strikes in Afghanistan in 2016. The authors explained that the non-reporting of helicopter strikes has been consistent throughout the post-9/11 wars, and they still did not know how many missiles were fired in those 456 attacks in Afghanistan in the one year they investigated.

AC-130 gunships:The U.S. military did not destroy the Doctors Without Borders hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan, in 2015 with bombs or missiles, but with a Lockheed-Boeing AC-130 gunship. These machines of mass destruction, usually manned by U.S. Air Force special operations forces, are designed to circle a target on the ground, pouring howitzer shells and cannon fire into it until it is completely destroyed.

The U.S. has used AC-130s in

Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, and Syria.

Strafing runs: U.S. Airpower Summaries for 2004-2007 included a note that their tally of “strikes with munitions dropped… does not include 20mm and 30mm cannon or rockets.” But the 30mm cannons on A-10 Warthogs and other ground attack planes are powerful weapons, originally designed to destroy Soviet tanks. A-10s can fire 65 depleted uranium shells per second to blanket an area with deadly and indiscriminate fire. But that does not appear to count as a “weapons release” in U.S. Airpower Summaries.

Counter-insurgency” and “counter-terrorism” operations in other parts of the world: The United States formed a military coalition with 11 West African countries in 2005,

and has built a drone base in Niger,

but we have not found any systematic accounting of U.S. and allied air strikes in that region, or in the Philippines, Latin America or elsewhere.”

…………………………….

“Medea Benjamin is cofounder of CODEPINK for Peace, and author of several books, including Inside Iran: The Real History and Politics of the Islamic Republic of Iran.

Nicolas J. S. Davies is an independent journalist, a researcher with CODEPINK and the author of Blood on Our Hands: The American Invasion and Destruction of Iraq.”

………………………………………

 

No comments: