2,118 Civilians Killed in 2008, Report Finds
Posted February 17, 2009
Today, the United Nations released a report detailing the civilian death toll in Afghanistan in 2008. According to the report, 2,118 civilians were killed in 2008 – 828 by the American-led coalition forces. Most of those were, unsurprisingly, killed in the various air strikes and raids against Afghan villages.
While getting exact numbers of deaths in Afghanistan is virtually impossible given the chaotic situation on the ground, particularly in the restive south, the report once again points to the absurdity of last month’s NATO report, which claimed only 973 civilians overall killed and only 97 by international forces.
NATO and the United States generally deny reports of civilian killings and only rarely concede to them – many times the question of whether people killed were civilians or militants is left disputed. Some human rights groups have suggested the actual civilian toll in 2008 may have been nearly 3,000.
Related Stories
- February 9, 2009 — Poll Shows Afghan Populace Losing Faith in Govt, NATO
- February 8, 2009 — Gen. Craddock: Afghan Drug War to Escalate in ‘Next Several Days’
- February 6, 2009 — Official: NATO Kills Seven Civilians in Afghanistan
compiled by Jason Ditz [email the author

Deaths of US Troops Exceed 5,000 in Wars
July 22, 2009Andrea Stone | Truthout.org, Tuesday 22 July 2009
Four Americans were killed by a roadside bomb in eastern Afghanistan on Monday, U.S. military spokesman Lt. Robert Carr said. That brings the number of U.S. servicemembers killed so far this month to at least 30. The previous deadliest month was June 2008, when 28 died, the Pentagon said.
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Tags:Afghanistan, America, death toll in Afghanistan, Iraq, U.S. troops killed, Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
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