Notes
1 Neta C. Crawford, “United States Budgetary Costs and Obligations of Post-9/11 Wars through FY2020: $6.4 Trillion,” Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs, (November 13, 2019), available online at: https://watson.brown.edu/costsofwar/files/cow/imce/papers/2019/US%20Budgetary%20Costs%20of%20Wars%20November%202019.pdf.
1 “U.S. War Costs, Casualties, and Personnel Levels Since 9/11,” Congressional Research Service, (April 18, 2019), available online at: https://fas.org/sgp/crs/natsec/IF11182.pdf.
3 This is, of course, to say nothing about the price paid by the “other” side. Note, for example, MIT’s “Iraq: The Human Cost” for a holistic accounting: https://web.mit.edu/humancostiraq/index.html.
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Edwin Daniel Jacob
Edwin Daniel Jacob is a Lecturer in the Faculty of Leadership and Interdisciplinary Studies at Arizona State University. His most recent work—American Security and the Global War on Terror—was published with Routledge’s Emerging Technologies, Ethics, and International Affairs series in 2020.