In September of 2005, Paul Craig Roberts, former Assistant Secretary of the Treasury under President Reagan, produced a set of calculations trying to establish how many American bullets it takes to kill one insurgent.
The official estimated number of insurgents in Iraq has been 20,000. According to reports of the Government Accounting Office (GAO), by September the U.S. military had used up 1.8 billion rounds of small caliber ammunition in Iraq.
That means “U.S. troops have fired 90,000 rounds at each insurgent,” states Roberts matter-of-factly. “Very few have been hit. . . If 2,000 insurgents have been killed, each death required 900,000 rounds of ammunition.”
In this Wild West-style shootout, U.S. government-owned and domestic commercial ammunition plants combined haven’t been able to keep up with production. A shortage of ammunition forced the Bush administration last year to buy ammo from foreign producers, such as Israeli Military Industries, no doubt for premium prices.
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