Anthropoid
Posts: 3107
Joined: 2/22/2005 From: Secret Underground Lair Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: TulliusDetritus When I was in school I was told the American casualties (dead people) was between 300k and 400k. So if the same soldier is wounded 4 times during the war this makes "4 casualties"? I prefer the old statistics, the ones I learned in school. Here is the wiki page for World War II Casualties. According to this for U.S. 1939 Pop 131,028,000 Sum Milit Deaths 416,800 Sum Civ Deaths 1,700 Total Deaths 418,500 As % of 1939 Pop 0.32% I know some folks are skeptical of Wikipedia, but evidently Nature (highly esteemed peer-review scientific journal) recently published an article in which the stated that Wiki is better (more accurate, more thorough, more inclusive, more detailed) than Encyclopedia Brittanica, at least for natural sciences. I suspect the same is true for many fields, history, and military history in particular. Now granted, figures get updated based on uncovered materials, and updated estimates all the time, and that figure does not include wounded, and may not include MIA/never accounted fors. I suppose with wounded and MIA included as "casualties, the number could well get up above 1m Following the link at the bottom of that wiki page to World War II: Combatants and Casualties (1937 - 1945) (which arguably might just represent the same bias as is on the wiki page itself) we get slightly different numbers on U.S. Pop, and casualties broken into dead+MIA and wounded. US Pop 129m US Dead + MIA 300k US Wounded 300k Total "Casualties" 600k That must have been what I noticed the other day. I'd be curious to check out your sources too TimTom! As somewhat of an epidemiologists, the disparities in different numbers from different sources always amazes me. The other thing that amazes me is how the relative value of life seems to have changed. I'll admit that, during the peak of the conflict in Iraq, the world media frequently annoyed me with how they portrayed daily events and casualty rates among Coalition personnel as being disastrously high and the mission as being hopeless. Total Coalition casualties last time I looked (a year or so ago) was somewhere close to 4K. Now that things have quieted down, I reckon it will never get to 5K. I contrast that with certain events or battles in WWII. The sinking of Junyo Maru for example on Sept 18, 1944; a Friendly Fire incident no-less, in which 5,620 were killed! Not just in "one day" but in the matter of an hour or less! As I said before, the numbers in WWII boggle the mind, and it is perhaps somewhat inappropriate to find irritation when our media keeps us aware of how contemporary events are resulting in deaths. After all, even one death is a tragedy and if it can be avoided, prevented it should be. But arguably, facing a growing threat earlier in its development and accepting relatively casualties that are of debatable 'necessity' may in the historical perspective be far preferable to delaying conflict. That seems to me to be precisely what happened in WWII: for years the allies appeased the Nazis and the Japanese and in the longrun the cost was far greater. Anyway, there I go again getting _way_ off topic . . .
< Message edited by Anthropoid -- 4/28/2009 7:25:05 PM >
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