Sharp Drop Seen in US Deaths in Iraq
 The news is so good even the AP can't ignore it. | BAGHDAD (AP) October is on course to record the second consecutive decline in U.S. military and Iraqi civilian deaths and Americans commanders say they know why: the U.S. troop increase and an Iraqi groundswell against al-Qaida and Shiite militia extremists.
Maj. Gen. Rick Lynch points to what the military calls "Concerned Citizens" both Shiites and Sunnis who have joined the American fight. He says he's signed up 20,000 of them in the past four months. "I've never been more optimistic than I am right now with the progress we've made in Iraq. The only people who are going to win this counterinsurgency project are the people of Iraq. We've said that all along. And now they're coming forward in masses," Lynch said in a recent interview at a U.S. base deep in hostile territory south of Baghdad. Outgoing artillery thundered as he spoke.
As of Tuesday, the Pentagon reported 28 U.S. military deaths in October. That's an average of about 1.2 deaths a day. The toll on U.S troops hasn't been this low since March 2006, when 31 soldiers died an average of one death a day. In September, 65 U.S. soldiers died in Iraq.
Posted by: Steve White 2007-10-24 |