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IRAQ WARS
In Iraq war, a revolution in battlefield medicine
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Dec 11, 2011

Iraq PM sets off for US ahead of pullout
Baghdad (AFP) Dec 11, 2011 - Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki headed to Washington on Sunday, for the first time as the leader of a country virtually empty of foreign troops as the US withdrawal from Iraq nears its final days.

Maliki is to hold wide-ranging talks with US President Barack Obama during his two-day visit, which comes less than a month before the complete withdrawal of US troops from Iraq and more than eight years after the launch of the US-led invasion that ousted Saddam Hussein.

"This will be the first visit where he is going as the chief of a country empty of foreign troops that can count totally on itself," Ali Mussawi, media advisor to Maliki, told AFP.

"We will discuss all the fields of collaboration ... and open a new phase of relations between Baghdad and Washington, which used to be dominated by military affairs."

Maliki was accompanied by Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari, acting Defence Minister Saadun al-Dulaimi, Transport Minister Khayrullah Hassan Babakir, Trade Minister Hadi al-Ameri, and National Security Adviser Falah al-Fayadh.

Also on the trip are National Investment Commission chief Sami al-Araji, and Maliki's chief adviser and former oil minister Thamer al-Ghadban.

The Iraqi premier is to hold talks with Obama, Vice President Joe Biden, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and US lawmakers, on issues including security, energy, education and justice.

"The two leaders will hold talks on the removal of US military forces from Iraq, and our efforts to start a new chapter in the comprehensive strategic partnership between the United States and Iraq," said White House spokesman Jay Carney.

"The president honours the sacrifices and achievements of all those who have served in Iraq, and of the Iraqi people, to reach this moment full of promise for an enduring US-Iraq friendship, as we end America's war in Iraq."

Baghdad and Washington are expected to maintain close ties after the military withdrawal, when the focus will shift to the work of the 16,000-strong US mission in Iraq.

The US-Iraq relationship, "long defined by the imperative of security alone, is now giving way to a new, more normal partnership between sovereign nations seeking to build a future together," US Vice President Joe Biden said on a visit to Iraq this month.

Around 6,000 US military personnel remain in Iraq on four bases, down from peaks of nearly 170,000 troops on 505 bases in 2007 and 2008. All the troops must leave by the end of the month.

They leave behind an Iraqi security force with more than 900,000 troops, which US and Iraqi officials assess is capable of maintaining internal security but cannot defend the country's borders, airspace or maritime territory.

The US will maintain 157 uniformed soldiers and up to 763 civilian contractors who help train Iraqi forces under the authority of the sprawling US embassy in Baghdad.

Sunday's trip marks Maliki's third visit to the US as Iraq's premier.

He first visited in July 2006, when Iraq was in the midst of a sectarian bloodbath that left tens of thousands dead, and then in July 2009, shortly after American forces withdrew from Iraq's urban centres.

Violence has declined markedly from its peak, but remains common -- 187 people were killed in attacks in November, and several major bombings have also been carried out this month.


The Iraq war ushered in dramatic advances in battlefield medicine, with the effects of homemade bombs leading the US military to radically change how it treats wounded soldiers.

Underpinning the new approach is a golden rule for American medics: to save a life, stop the bleeding first.

Out of the terrible carnage in Iraq, where 3,480 US soldiers were killed in combat and nearly 32,000 wounded in eight years of war that are now drawing to a close, doctors and medics learned how to treat injuries that had proved fatal in previous conflicts.

Close to 70 percent of the wounds came from homemade bombs that left critical burns, severed limbs and damaged lungs.

While body armor and newly-designed vehicles tried to counter the risk of improvised explosive devices (IEDs), the military changed its approach to treating those injured by the bombs.

As a result, American soldiers wounded in Iraq had a better chance of survival than in any previous US war, with more than 90 percent coming home compared to about 76 percent in the Vietnam conflict.

The biggest change came from a low-tech solution -- tourniquets -- which for nearly a hundred years had been dismissed as a device that could too easily cut off circulation and lead to amputations.

"When I was a medic, tourniquets were seen as the last resort," said Lieutenant Colonel Robert Mabry, who as a Green Beret treated wounded soldiers in the battle of Mogadishu in 1993.

In previous conflicts, American medics did not even carry tourniquets but would have to improvise using whatever was at hand, including sticks. "Good luck finding a stick in Iraq or Afghanistan," Mabry said.

Now American medics, and soldiers, carry a tourniquet that has been specially designed and tested. The new medical kit reflects the view of army doctors that in an emergency, stemming massive bleeding is more urgent than maintaining the flow of oxygen.

"You've got four minutes to get someone oxygen so their brain doesn't start to die. But you really only have a few pumps of the heart before they've lost so much blood they're not going to be able to live," said Colonel Patricia Hastings, a doctor who edited a new textbook for medics and served as director of combat medical training.

According to a medical study carried out in Iraq, 862 tourniquets were applied to 459 wounds. About 87 percent of the troops survived their wounds, and not one suffered an amputation as a result of the tourniquet.

After looking at research on combat injuries in Vietnam, a small network of doctors and former medics concluded that the military's approach was shaped too much by civilian emergency medicine instead of the realities of the battlefield.

"An ambush is different than an automobile accident. The injury patterns are different and also the hazards are different," said Mabry, who has played a key role in rewriting the rules for casualty care.

Apart from tourniquets, medics now carry gauze impregnated with clotting agents, big needles and catheters used to release air from chest wounds, and special tubes to create emergency airways through the throat or nose. US medics also undergo much more extensive training compared to previous eras, with 16 weeks of instruction.

And even in the deserts of Iraq, medics now focus on keeping a wounded warrior warm, as hypothermia poses a serious threat for a patient that has lost large amounts of blood.

"Who would think you'd get cold in Iraq when it's 120 degrees?" Hastings said, adding that "keeping the patient warm is much more critical than we ever knew before."

But injecting intravenous fluid, long deemed vital by civilian paramedics and an iconic image from the Vietnam conflict, is no longer a top priority.

"I carried six liters of fluid in the field. Now medics are going on prolonged operations with a liter or liter and a half," said Mabry, director of the emergency medical services and disaster medicine fellowship program at San Antonio Military Medical Center.

For injured soldiers who have stopped bleeding and are not in shock, there is no need for an IV, and in some cases, an intravenous fluid can do harm in a fragile patient that has lost a lot of blood, doctors said.

At field hospitals in Iraq, army physicians also employed new techniques and devices while improving how medical air evacuations were organized -- lessons that have been applied to the war in Afghanistan.

The next challenge for combat casualty care are wounds to the belly, chest or neck that cannot be contained by a tourniquet, said Hastings, medical command liaison to the Department of Homeland Security.

"The thing we still haven't figured out is what do you do about non-compressable hemorrage," she said.

"That's the next big advance we're trying to get to."

Related Links
Iraq: The first technology war of the 21st century




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The astronomic costs of the Iraq war
Washington (AFP) Dec 11, 2011 - From the tens of thousands killed and wounded to the hundreds of billions of dollars spent in eight years of conflict, the cost of the Iraq war is astronomic and still growing.

+Human cost

Since the US invasion in March 2003, at least 126,000 Iraqi civilians were killed in the war, according to Boston University professor Neta Crawford. In addition, another 20,000 Iraqi soldiers and police were killed, along with more than 19,000 insurgents. British group IraqBodyCount.org puts the number of documented Iraqi civilian deaths from violence at 104,035 to 113,680.

For the US-led coalition, the Pentagon says the United States lost 4,408 troops, of which 3,480 died in combat. This figure is by far the highest of an invading coalition country. Britain was next, with 179 troops killed, according to the Defense Ministry. Nearly 32,000 American troops were also wounded.

In November, 187 Iraqis were killed by violence, including 112 civilians, 42 policemen and 33 soldiers. This figure compares to 2,087 people killed in January 2007, among them 1,992 civilians, 55 policemen and 40 soldiers. By comparison, 2,045 people were killed in the first 10 months of 2011. These are all according to figures released monthly by the Iraqi ministries of health, interior and defense.

And the United Nations estimates that 1.75 million Iraqis were made refugees by the war, forced to flee to neighboring countries or to displace their families to other parts of the country.

+Troops deployed

At the start of Operation Iraqi Freedom, about 150,000 US troops were stationed in Iraq, supported by 120,000 forces operating outside of the country. Roughly 40,000 British troops were deployed as well during the course of the war.

The US troop presence reached 165,000 at the end of 2006 before President George W. Bush decided on a "surge" of 30,000 reinforcements in a bid to counter spiraling violence.

In September 2010, the US combat mission officially ended and 50,000 American troops remained on the ground to advise and train Iraqi forces as part of the newly dubbed "Operation New Dawn." The last of those US troops are due to depart Iraq before the end of the month.

+Financial cost

The Pentagon has spent nearly $770 billion since 2003 on operations in Iraq. Categorized as overseas contingency operations, the sum is treated separately from the main defense budget, which has also included some funds for the Iraq war.

In contrast, the World Bank estimates that Iraq's GDP fell by 41 percent in 2003.

The Iraq war and reconstruction is also projected to have cost US taxpayers $256 million per day from 2003 to 2012, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

Any accounting of the war's price tag also has to include billions in US civilian aid to Iraq, as well as the cost of care provided to wounded soldiers and veterans.

US government statistics do not distinguish between veterans who served in Iraq or Afghanistan, as a large number of the 1.25 million veterans were deployed to both wars.

By the end of 2010, the United States had already spent nearly $32 billion on medical treatment for wounded troops and payments for disability pensions, a benefit veterans receive for life.

The future cost of medical care and pensions for veterans will grow exponentially in coming decades. Linda Bilmes, professor at Harvard University, estimates that pensions through 2055 for veterans will reach $346 billion to $469 billion, mainly due to health care costs.

+Other losses

Around 60 percent of the Iraqi National Archives, equivalent to tens of millions of documents, went missing, were damaged or were destroyed as a result of water leaks and a fire at a storage center in the aftermath of the 2003 invasion, according to INA director Saad Iskander.



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IRAQ WARS
US cuts loose from Iraq war still hampered by its legacy
Washington (AFP) Dec 11, 2011
The United States has cut loose from its long war in Iraq aiming to meet other challenges, particularly in Asia, but is still hampered by the war's legacy and the continuing conflict in Afghanistan. With Washington pulling out the last of its troops from Iraq, which numbered 170,000 at their peak in 2007, US officials need no longer worry about combat deaths there and may have a freer hand i ... read more


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