Originally posted by: Rainsford
Originally posted by: Riprorin
If I recall correctly, about 7,000 Marines died on the island of Iwo Jima alone over a span of less than a month.
I think that about 1,300 soldies have died in the war in Iraq over about two year.
Of course, every loss of life is tragic, but it helps to have a bit of historical perspective.
Indeed, although historical perspectives don't always work because times and situations change. That is true of almost all surface comparisons, actually. 10 times as many people died in 2001 from car accidents compared to terrorism, yet terrorism was given the spotlight. In that case, it was because we were used to deaths from auto accidents, and the tragedy of 9/11, although far less impressive from a numerial standpoint, was unexpected and shocking.
Same goes for Iwo Jima vs Iraq, Iwo Jima was in the context of WWII, an event that cost many, many lives. Iraq is the greatest loss of US soldiers since Vietnam, so it stands out where Iwo Jima didn't. It's all about context, deaths are more than stats.
As to the article linked in the OP, Iraq is a complex situation, and any attempt to simplify it into a good or bad summary should be suspect. Especially when the source and justification is one story about one unit written by a biased news organization.