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US killings crosses over half a million people: Left Islamic Countries Devastating

507,000 people were killed in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iraq in the wake of 9/11 attacks

US killings cross over half a million people in Islamic Countries, 507,000 people were killed in Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Iraq in the wake of the 9/11 attacks.

Thousands of people in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Pakistan have been killed due to the so-called “ war on terror” launched by the United States in the wake of the September 11, 2001 attack, according to a new study.

The report, which was published on Saturday by the Brown University’s Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs, put the death risk between.
The risk includes civilians, fortified fighters, original police and security forces, as well as US and confederated colors.

The report states that civilians have been killed in Iraq; Afghanistan; and in Pakistan. US military were killed in Iraq and Afghanistan in the same period.

Iraq needs $90bn to rebuild after 15 times war
The paper, still, conceded that the number of people killed is “ undercount” due to limitations in reporting and “ great query in any count of killing in war”.

“ We may never know the total direct death risk in these wars,” wrote Nera Crawford, the author of the report named “ Mortal Cost of the thePost-9/ 11 Wars Lethality and the Need for Translucency”.

“ For illustration, knockouts of thousands of civilians may have failed in regaining Mosul and other metropolises from ISIS ( also known as ISIL) but their bodies have probably not been recovered.”

‘War remains violent’
People who were literally killed as a result of war, similar as through complaints or bad structure, were also not included in the report.

In a statement, Brown University said the new risk “ is further than increase over the last count, issued just two times ago in August 2016”.
“ Though the war on terror is frequently overlooked by the American public, press and lawgivers, the increased body count signals that, far from dwindling, this war remains violent.”

As an illustration, the United States war in Afghanistan, which has been the country’s longest military irruption for 17 times, has lessened in intensity in recent times, but the number of civilians killed in 2018 has been one of the war’s loftiest.

read and watch more on the effects of the wars on Iraq

read more on why Mosques in France were ordered shut

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