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Troop death rate highest since Vietnam War

Drew Brown — Knight Ridder Newspapers

Issue date: 4/19/04 Section: News
Members of Muqtada Sadr´s militia, Al Mahdi army, armed with AK 47s and RPGs, stand guard at the southwest entrance to the Imam Ali Holy Shrine Saturday in case U.S. forces try to enter the holy city of Najaf which is mostly controlled by Sadr´s militia in Najaf, Iraq. A few miles away American forces are preparing their fighting position.
Media Credit: Knight Ridder Newspapers
Members of Muqtada Sadr´s militia, Al Mahdi army, armed with AK 47s and RPGs, stand guard at the southwest entrance to the Imam Ali Holy Shrine Saturday in case U.S. forces try to enter the holy city of Najaf which is mostly controlled by Sadr´s militia in Najaf, Iraq. A few miles away American forces are preparing their fighting position.

WASHINGTON - With fighting in Iraq now at its worst, the number of U.S. troops killed by enemy fire has reached the highest level since the Vietnam War.

The first part of April has been the bloodiest period so far for U.S. troops in Iraq. There have been 98 deaths by hostile fire so far this month, more than in the opening two weeks of the invasion, when 82 Americans were killed in action.

"This has been some pretty intense fighting," said David Segal, director of the University of Maryland's Center for Research on Military Organization. "We're looking at what happened during the major battles of Vietnam."

The last time U.S. troops experienced a two-week loss such as this one in Iraq was October 1971, two years before U.S. ground involvement ended in Vietnam.

There are 135,000 U.S troops in Iraq. Nearly 700 American troops have died since the beginning of the war. As of Sunday, 503 had been reported killed in action. At least 3,630 more have been wounded.

The Vietnam War started with a slower death rate. The United States had been involved in Vietnam for six years before total fatalities surpassed 500 in 1965, the year President Lyndon B. Johnson ordered a massive buildup of forces. There were 20,000 troops in Vietnam by the end of 1964. There were more than 200,000 a year later.

By the end of 1966, U.S. combat deaths in Vietnam had reached 3,910. By 1968, the peak of U.S. involvement, there were more than 500,000 troops in the country. During the same two-week period of April that year, 752 U.S. soldiers died, according to National Archives records.

U.S. officials say that comparisons with Vietnam are invalid and reject the idea that Iraq has become a quagmire.
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