Monday, November 22, 2004
The Costs of War
(17 Nov 2004, UPI)
That is nearly a 50 percent increase above the $4 billion-a-month benchmark the Pentagon has used to estimate the cost of the war so far.
The Army alone is spending $4.7 million a month while the Air Force is spending $800 million a month transporting soldiers and flying combat missions.
The Marine Corps is spending $300 million a month, the four service chiefs told the House Armed Services Committee Wednesday.
Since
2003, the Pentagon has received some $160 billion for the wars
in
Children Pay Cost of
Malnutrition Nearly Double What It Was Before Invasion
By Karl Vick (21 Nov 2004, Washington Post)
After
the rate of acute malnutrition among children younger than 5 steadily
declined to 4 percent two years ago, it shot up to 7.7 percent
this year, according to a study conducted by
See
also, the New Yorker's collection of articles on the war in
- The War in Iraq (New Yorker)