[images and
captions added by this website] Tuesday, January 18, 2005
Toll
of British wounded in Iraq war reaches
800 By Michael Evans, Defence
Editor THEY are the forgotten victims
of the Iraq conflict -- the hundreds of soldiers
maimed or wounded in the invasion and its 20-month
aftermath. David
Irving comments: MR SANCTIMONIOUS BLAIR, the serial
killer (but Not in Our Name), has so far
refused to acknowledge the number of
civilians and non-combatants that his
illegal attack on Iraq has killed. This is the sixth war he
has launched in his period of office. He
has launched more wars than Adolf
Hitler and Ghengis Khan
combined. Now there is this fresh
statistic -- the British maimed and
crippled he has created. He has not
mentioned them before, and this revelation
will come as a profound embarrassment. We repeat: we have
wondered before how he and Geoffrey
Hoon, below, his "defence"
minister, can sleep at night. WE understand that before it all began
Blair asked Hoon how much the attack on
Iraq would cost. Hoon replied, five
billion -- he did not bother to say
dollars or pounds, because, Hey, who
cares. "Ah, but the cost in
lives and limbs," sighed one Cabinet
minister. "They're included in the
five billion," smirked Hoon.* * With apologies
to Anatole France (April 16, 1844 -
October 12, 1924); pen name of French
author Jacques Anatole François
Thibault (my thanks to reader Anthony St.
of London for this latter
information) | The number of British troops flown home with
serious injuries is now nearly 800, The Times can
reveal. The Ministry of Defence has previously
disclosed only the death toll and the Government
has done nothing to draw attention to the wounded,
many of whom were hurt during acts of exceptional
courage. The Freedom of Information Act is now
obliging it to be more open.Geoff Hoon, the Defence Secretary, has
made one visit, 21 months ago, to the Birmingham
hospital where they are treated. Neither Tony
Blair nor any other senior minister has visited
the wounded in the British hospital, although they
have seen injured soldiers at a military hospital
in Basra. Most of the wounded and
their relatives contacted by The Times
were unwilling to talk, because they had been
instructed to remain silent by the MoD, because
they were awaiting compensation or because they
had rejoined the Forces. But Gordon Stacey, whose son Kevin
required emergency brain surgery after his tank was
hit by a bomb in Basra last August, said that he
felt disgusted by Mr Blair's perceived lack of
interest in the war wounded. "After Kevin was injured it was the beginning of
the Olympics and I saw Tony Blair walking around in
a T-shirt, shaking hands and smiling and I felt
disgusted. Here we were with our boy injured and
there was Tony Blair swanning around getting as
much publicity as possible from just being at the
Olympics," he said. A Royal Marine said he was disappointed that no
government figure had expressed interest in his
plight. Asked whether he had been contacted by any
member of the Government, Marine Justin
Smith, who was seriously wounded during the
invasion of Iraq, said: "I didn't get anything at
all, though it would have been nice." The MoD's figures show that 790 personnel have
come back from Iraq after being injured in hostile
attacks, accidents or other incidents. It could not
give any further breakdown. The British Limbless Ex-Servicemen's Association
said that nine soldiers had had limbs amputated,
and two had lost both legs. Two have lost an
eye. The total is more than ten times the number of
deaths -- 73 -- since the military campaign began
in February 2003 and would be higher were it not
for improved armour and equipment. It reflects the
rising number of attacks in the supposedly safer
southern sector of Iraq. Most
have taken place since combat operations officially
ended on May 1, 2003. The injured are taken to the Royal Centre for
Defence Medicine at Selly Oak Hospital, Birmingham.
The MoD refused to let The Times visit
there, saying that it wanted to protect the injured
from the media. In the US, President Bush, Donald
Rumsfeld, the Defence Secretary, and other
senior figures have visited the Walter Reid Army
Medical Centre in Washington. Journalists can also
visit. The number of US troops wounded in Iraq is
10,372, with 1,375 killed. Some British regiments, such as the 1st
Battalion The Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment
and The Black Watch, have suffered particularly
high numbers of injuries. The 1st Battalion The Princess of Wales's Royal
Regiment, based at Tidworth, Surrey, suffered fifty
casualties in its six-month tour last year, two of
them fatal. Many were serious woundings from
rocket-propelled grenade attacks by insurgents. When The Black Watch was deployed 20 miles south
of Baghdad for 30 days in November and December
last year, five soldiers were killed, four from
hostile enemy action. Another 29 soldiers were
injured. Two lost both legs. After treatment at Selly Oak, soldiers who have
lost legs and arms receive rehabilitation at an MoD
centre at Headley Court, Surrey. Most are expected
to remain in the Armed Forces in non-infantry
roles. - SERVICE
RECORD
- 73 dead
- 790 injured
- Approximately 55,000 troops have served
in Iraq
- 9,000 troops are there now
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