And yet in their latest press release (September 3, 2007), under the
title, ’How plausible is 600,000 violent Iraqi deaths?’, IBC devote
five pages to wide-ranging criticism of the 2006 Lancet study which
estimated 655,000 excess deaths in Iraq. IBC’s conclusion:
“Our
own view is that the current death toll "could" be around twice the
numbers recorded by IBC and the various official sources in Iraq. We do
not think it could possibly be 10 times higher.”
In similar vein, the Toronto Star quoted IBC co-founder John Sloboda as saying:
"The death toll could be twice our number, but it could not possibly be
10 times higher." (Haroon Siddiqui, ‘How many civilians have died?’
Toronto Star, September 20, 2007. )
This last comment was reported less than a week after the publication of ORB’s poll revealing 1.2 million Iraqi deaths.
Two questions arise: Why is it important for IBC - providing an
“irrefutable baseline” based on data collection - to challenge the
methodology and conclusions of epidemiological studies published in the
Lancet which go far beyond data collection and which do not in any way
challenge their baseline as a "cautious minimum"?
Secondly, while IBC’s self-described task does indeed require only
“care and literacy”, does not the task of challenging peer-reviewed
science published by some of the world’s leading epidemiologists
require very much more? Does it not, in fact “require statistical
analysis or extrapolations,” and much else besides?
In a 2006 addition to their website, IBC wowed visitors with scientific jargon:
"Our data is very rich, because it provides a large subset of what is happening.
"It
has high spatiotemporal specificity. Post-event interviews are always
hampered by the fact that people tend to move on, and may not remain in
the area or even in the country. Our data is recorded as close to the
time and place of death as possible, and so has 'forensic' elements."
It seems that IBC have used their credibility as data collectors to
‘cross sell’ their credibility as commentators on peer-reviewed
epidemiology to the media community. But this second task is unrelated
to their task as data collectors, and is an area in which, to our
knowledge, none of the co-authors of their press releases have any
research record or publication history in any relevant scientific
discipline.
In a 2006 BBC interview, John Sloboda said of the 2004 Lancet study:
“Some critics of the Lancet study have said it's like a drunk throwing
a dart at a dartboard. It's going to go somewhere, but who knows if
that number is the bulls eye.
“Unfortunately
many many people have decided to accept that that 98,000 figure is the
truth - or the best approximation to the truth that we have.”
Sloboda was here endorsing a claim based on a failure to comprehend
even the basic meaning of the Lancet study’s range of figures - the
“drunk throwing a dart at a dartboard” analogy was and is absurd. No
qualified epidemiologist would countenance making such a comment.
Unsurprisingly, most journalists reporting on international affairs
appear unable to distinguish between the task of “reading press
reports” on the one hand, and engaging in "statistical analysis or
extrapolations", on the other. Reporters naturally assume that, given
its “high spatiotemporal specificity”, IBC’s credibility is on a par
with the world’s leading experts in the field published in the world’s
leading scientific journals and subject to an exacting system of peer
review.
Certainly IBC do nothing to discourage, and everything to encourage,
such a view. Wouldn’t it be more reasonable for IBC to point out in
commenting on the Lancet studies to highly influential media that they
are in fact "not" especially qualified to comment on the science of
epidemiology?
The Problem Of Relying On The Journalistic Record
IBC also move far beyond data collection in this latest addition to the site:
“Those who suggest that the IBC data-base is likely to contain only a
tiny minority of actual deaths generally argue three things. First,
they say that IBC only records deaths in areas where Western
journalists are present; second they propose that there have been at
least seven credible studies which suggest up to ten times as many
deaths as we have recorded; and third they assert that an alternate
media world exists containing a professional Arab-language press which
continually reports far more deaths than the sources we monitor in
English.
“We
have dealt with the first two claims in detail on the public record and
will be happy to answer questions about them in the discussion. IBC in
Context (Feb 2006)”
IBC omit to mention the most obvious and telling criticism: that the
credibility of their database as an approximate guide to levels of
violence in Iraq - i.e., "The death toll could be twice our number, but
it could not possibly be 10 times higher" - is undermined by the fact
that conditions in Iraq are so lethal that journalists are unable to
discover many violent deaths of civilians.
Consider that a study of deaths in Guatemala from 1960 to 1996 by
Patrick Ball et al at the University of California, Berkeley (1999)
found that numbers of murders reported by the media in fact decreased
as violence increased. Ball described the “problem of relying on the
journalistic record” in evaluating numbers killed:
“When the level of violence increased dramatically in the late 1970s
and early 1980s, numbers of reported violations in the press stayed
very low. In 1981, one of the worst years of state violence, the
numbers fall towards zero. The press reported almost none of the rural
violence.” (Patrick Ball, Paul Kobrak, and Herbert F. Spirer, ‘State
Violence in Guatemala, 1960-1996: A Quantitative Reflection’, 1999) .
Ball added:
“Throughout the 1980 to 1983 period newspapers documented only a
fraction of the killings and disappearances committed by the State. The
maximum monthly value on the graph [see link above] is only 60 for a
period when monthly extra-judicial murders regularly totaled in the
thousands.”
Ball explained that "the press stopped reporting the violence beginning
in September 1980. Perhaps not coincidentally, the database lists seven
murders of journalists in July and August of that year".
The significance is indicated in a Reporters Sans Frontieres (RSF)
report (September 7, 2007), which described how the number of
journalists and media workers killed in Iraq since the start of the
2003 invasion had reached 200. According to RSF, 73 per cent of
journalists killed had been directly targeted, a figure which was "much
higher than in previous wars". RSF also reported that more journalists
had been taken hostage in Iraq than anywhere else in the world. A total
of 84 journalists and media workers had been kidnapped in the
previous four years.
Lancet study co-authors Les Roberts and Gilbert Burnham wrote recently:
We contacted the author of the study, Ziad Obermeyer, for details.
Demonstrating a level of scientific caution that is absent from some of
IBC‘s bold pronouncements, Obermeyer responded that because his
manuscript was progressing through the peer review process he could not
provide anything for "formal citation".
He added:
“It is safe to say, however, that our estimates of violent war deaths,
based on nationally representative surveys, are substantially higher
than those commonly cited for most of the 13 countries we study.”
(Email to Media Lens, September 24, 2007)
Roberts and Burnham continued:
“City officials in the Iraqi city of Najaf were recently quoted on
Middle East Online stating that 40,000 unidentified bodies have been
buried in that city since the start of the conflict. When speaking to
the Rotarians in a speech covered on C-SPAN on September 5th, H.E.
Samir Sumaida’ie, the Iraqi Ambassador to the US, stated that there
were 500,000 new widows in Iraq. The Baker-Hamilton Commission
similarly found that the Pentagon under-counted violent incidents by a
factor of 10.” (Roberts and Burnham op. cit)
IBC's methodology was devised by Marc Herold, a professor of economics
at the University of New Hampshire. Herold has tracked deaths in
Afghanistan since the US-led invasion of 2001. It was Herold's Afghan
Victim Memorial Project that inspired John Sloboda to set up IBC.
Herold's “most conservative estimate” of Afghan civilian deaths
resulting from American/NATO operations is between 5,700 and 6,500.
But, he cautions, this is “probably a vast underestimate”. (Haroon
Siddiqui, 'Counting the casualties in Iraq and Afghanistan,’
Toronto Star, September 23, 2007.)
There is no reason to believe that the application of the same
methodology in Iraq is generating very different results. But IBC has
never, to our knowledge, accepted that their own count is "probably a
vast underestimate" of the total death toll.
In the past, IBC’s response to the suggestion that violence prevents
journalists from capturing many deaths has been, in effect, 'Prove it!'
Well, the bureau chief of one of three Western media agencies providing
a third of IBC’s data from Iraq sent this email to a colleague last
year (the latter asked us to preserve the sender’s anonymity):
“iraq body count is i think a very misleading exercise. We know they
must have been undercounting for at least the first two years because
we know that we did not report anything like all the deaths we were
aware of... we are also well aware that we are not aware of many deaths
on any given day.” (Email sent October 25, 2006)
Despite IBC’s claims, nowhere in their discussion do they deal with the
problem that journalistic reporting of violent deaths can decrease as
violence increases, particularly when that includes violence against
journalists, as is very much the case in Iraq.
More to the point, as data collectors, IBC are not in a position to
comment authoritatively on the impact of violence on the capacity of
journalists to report accurately from Iraq. As data collectors, they
have no more insight, no deeper understanding, than anyone else.
The reasonable response to the question of political impacts on their
database is not for IBC to authoritatively suggest that they “have
dealt with” the problem of lack of journalistic coverage - to
conclusively declare: “The death toll could be twice our number, but it
could not possibly be 10 times higher” - but to openly acknowledge that
their task is limited to the monitoring of media reports.
For leading mainstream journalists, and for IBC themselves, to present
IBC as an informed and credible source on political realities on the
ground in Iraq is highly inappropriate.
A good example of this distortion was provided on September 7 by
Michael Gordon of the New York Times. Gordon offered positive spin on
the ‘progress’ of the 'surge':
“The most comprehensive and up-to-date military statistics show that
American forces have made some headway toward a crucial goal of
protecting the Iraqi population.” (Gordon, ‘Assessing the “Surge” -
Hints of Progress, and Questions, in Iraq Data,’ New York Times,
September 8, 2007)
In assessing evidence for this humanitarian “headway”, Gordon turned to IBC:
“Iraq Body Count, a British-based nongovernmental group that monitors
civilian deaths, notes that the number of civilians who were killed by
shootings, executions and bombs has declined from January through July.”
He quoted IBC:
“'Levels of violence reached an all-time high in the last six months of
2006... Only in comparison to that could the first half of 2007 be
regarded as an improvement.'”
The last caveat was unimportant, the word supporters of the occupation were looking for was “improvement”.
But there is a problem with IBC’s evidence and with Gordon’s analysis
of its significance. In fact, IBC have not at all found that “the
number of civilians who were killed by shootings, executions and bombs
has declined”. The website has found fewer "reports" of deaths of
civilians killed by shootings, executions and bombs in "information
gathering and publishing agencies, principally the
commercial news media who provide web access to their reports".
While a significant proportion of the deaths recorded or corroborated
by IBC come from “cumulative totals reported by official Iraqi sources,
in particular the Medico-Legal Institutes (morgues) and, for
corroboration purposes, the Ministry of Health”, IBC describes the
commercial news media as their “main sources”. (Ibid)
And Les Roberts has commented:
"Media and government reports catch only the tip of the iceberg." (Siddiqui, op. cit;)
For IBC to emphasise that “the first half of 2007 [could] be regarded
as an improvement” on the basis of their data collection is therefore
misleading. Indeed the whole basis of IBC’s comment was misleading:
“Levels of violence reached an all-time high in the last six months of 2006.”
In fact, levels of media "reporting" of civilian deaths was at an
all-time high in the last six months of 2006 - that is not the same
thing. As a consequence, and as the material cited above from Patrick
Ball and RSF makes clear, IBC are in a position to comment "only" on
numbers of media reports of deaths, not on the inferred significance of
those numbers for political realities on the ground.
The Failure To Challenge Media Distortions
What is so disappointing is that while IBC are willing to stray
radically beyond merely "reading press reports" with "care and
literacy" to challenge scientific studies that do not in any way
challenge their "irrefutable baseline figure", they are apparently not
willing to challenge media reports that in effect do challenge that
figure. The New York Times report above was a good example. Another
appeared in the Financial Times on September 10:
“The war has already cost the lives of 3,760 US troops, and wounded
28,000 more. Iraq Body Count, a group that monitors Iraqi deaths,
estimates that 70,000 Iraqis have been killed. It says there has been a
‘modest improvement’ in security compared with the bloody second half
of 2006....” (Demetri Sevastopulo, ‘Echoes of Westmoreland and
Vietnam,’ Financial Times, September 10, 2007)
But IBC is "not" “a group that monitors Iraqi deaths”; it is a group
that monitors media reports of Iraqi deaths. And IBC does not monitor
“Iraqi deaths”; it monitors media reports of Iraqi "civilian" deaths as
a result of violence. IBC does not monitor reports of war-related
deaths due to disease, lack of food, water and medicine, and so on. IBC
also does not collect reports of Iraqi military deaths.
Because IBC’s “irrefutable baseline” figure refers only to violent
deaths of civilians reported by the media, the Financial Times in
effect challenged that baseline by asserting that 70,000 Iraqis - i.e.,
civilians and military - had died. Readers might well have construed
that some of these “Iraqi deaths” must have been military deaths, for
example, and therefore will have come away from the article believing
that many less than 70,000 civilians had died from violence.
The Financial Times could hardly be a more prestigious, influential and
high-profile media outlet. And this kind of distortion has been
repeated innumerable times, globally, since 2003. Notice, again, the
complete inappropriateness of quoting IBC as an authoritative source
reporting “a ‘modest improvement’ in security” on the basis of its data
collection. As the Guatemala study above indicates, the drop in media
reporting could be interpreted as indicating a "worsening" of security,
not least for journalists, leading to a drop in reporting of violent
deaths.
Whereas IBC have responded vigorously, indeed tirelessly, in responding
to the 2004 and 2006 Lancet studies (and to our criticism), to our
knowledge they have all but ignored these actual challenges to their
baseline figure - a figure which seeks to establish a “cautious
minimum” for violent deaths of Iraqi civilians "alone", not for "Iraqi
casualties" in toto, as the Financial Times report suggests.
Indeed, far from exposing these abuses of their work, under ‘
Press and media uses of IBC’
, IBC provide not a single word of criticism of media use of their
work. Instead, one of the examples they choose to highlight is an
Independent article from July 2005. The first sentence of the article
reads:
"Almost 25,000 Iraqi civilians have been killed during the two years of
war and insurgency that began with the US-led invasion in March 2003.
More than a third have died as a result of action by allied forces."
(Terry Kirby and Elizabeth Davies, ‘Iraq conflict claims 34 civilian
lives each day as “anarchy” beckons,’ The Independent, July 20, 2005.)
It is striking that IBC link to a high-profile media report that so
badly misrepresents its figures. As so often, this opening sentence
gave the impression that IBC are recording the total number of civilian
deaths, rather than merely recording deaths from violence as reported
by the media. The extreme gravity of this distortion in downplaying the
true extent of Iraqi casualties to the British public is clear enough,
given, for example, Patrick Ball’s work.
Elsewhere, IBC write:
“A large number of press and media reports have cited our figures,
discussed and assessed our work. Nearly all mentions have been in the
context of drawing attention to the human cost of the war.” (
John Sloboda, February 17, 2006.)
Again, this is not mere data collection; it is political analysis of
media performance. Having ourselves studied media reporting on Iraq
closely over the last four years, we arrive at a very different
conclusion: media reports have often cited IBC’s figures in the context
of "burying" the human cost of war.
As numerous studies over many decades have shown, it is quite simply
the structural role of the corporate media to defend established power
by minimising, as far as possible, public perception of the costs to
civilians of US-UK state violence. This role has not suddenly changed
in regard to Iraq. On the contrary, media performance on Iraq has been
a text book example of a corporate propaganda system acting to protect
allied elite interests.
Finally, the danger of moving beyond data collection is emphasised in
this comment on IBC’s website in response to media reports of the
“surge”:
This was also highly politicised analysis. IBC’s framing of the issue exactly matches that found in the pro-war Observer:
“Despite the surge, violence remains roughly at the same levels.” (‘Iraq benchmarks,’ The Observer, September 2, 2007)
Imagine what Western journalists would have made of a Soviet
organisation observing that a particular period of time had been "the
most deadly" for civilians in Afghanistan in the 1980s “despite” a
massive surge in Soviet military activity.
And yet this is currently the standard line in mainstream reporting,
part of a wider attempt to present the occupation as a well-intentioned
effort to achieve peace and democracy, rather than conquest and
control.
To their credit, IBC have made an improvement to their website. Their
“counter”, which previously recorded “Minimum” and “Maximum” deaths in
Iraq, has been changed. Viewed alongside the name Iraq Body Count,
visitors were likely to assume that the “Maximum” category referred to
the maximum possible number of civilian deaths in Iraq - the full body
count - rather than the maximum number of deaths recorded in media
reports. The counter now reads:
“Documented civilian deaths from violence 74,432 – 81,120”
IBC comment:
“The change to a simple unlabeled range is intended to help avoid
misinterpretation or misrepresentation of these numbers as (for
example) the ‘maximum possible’ death toll, or IBC’s ‘estimate’ of it.”
This is a welcome change. However, the very name of the website remains
misleading. IBC is, in truth, an Iraq Reported Body Count - nothing
more.
SUGGESTED ACTION
The goal of Media Lens is to promote rationality, compassion and
respect for others. If you decide to write to journalists, we strongly
urge you to maintain a polite, non-aggressive and non-abusive tone.
Write to Iraq Body Count
Email: comment@iraqbodycount.org
Raise the issues covered in this alert with the following journalists:
Write to Katherine Butler, foreign editor of the Independent:
Email: k.butler@independent.co.uk
Write to Peter Beaumont, foreign affairs editor at the Observer:
Email: peter.beaumont@observer.co.uk
Write to Ian Black, Middle East editor at the Guardian
Email: ian.black@guardian.co.uk
Write to Paul Reynolds at BBC Online:
Email: Paul.Reynolds3@bbc.co.uk
Please send a copy of your emails to us
Email: editor@medialens.org
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