Some half a million Iraqis perished during the eight years of conflict that followed the U.S.-led invasion and in 2003, according to a new study. The war that brought down Saddam Hussein’s government may officially be over, but a full picture of the suffering created by the fighting has yet to emerge.
A study published Tuesday in the journal PLOS Medicine surveyed 2,000 randomly selected households in Iraq. It found that nearly two thirds of deaths that occurred because of the conflict were violent, and that approximately 40% could be tied to the breakdown of basic services caused by the destruction of the country.
The researchers who conducted the survey found a grim picture of life and death between 2003 and 2011. At the height of the war in 2006, Iraqi men were three times as likely to die as they were before the war, and women were at a 70% higher risk of death.









