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US history riddled with massacres, genocide

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US history riddled with massacres, genocide
History records US genocide against Native Americans, Africans, massacres in Southeast Asia, Middle East
Ovunc Kutlu |02.06.2021

thumbs_b_c_d2474e2ea23e1b37384952c73eee159b.jpg



ANKARA

US President Joe Biden's controversial recognition of 1915 events between Armenians and Turks as genocide brings to light massacres in American history in the last 500 years.

Biden called the events of 1915 an "Armenian genocide" on April 24, breaking American presidents' long-held tradition of refraining from using the term.

But during the course of American history, the US and its European ancestors have been involved in numerous massacres and carried out genocides against indigenous peoples.

Genocide is an act committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group, according to the Geneva Convention.

With that in mind, the conquest of the Americas in 1492, European colonization led to the systematic eradication of indigenous peoples on the continent.

US-HISTORY-RIDDLED-WITH-MASSACRED-GENOCIDE.jpg



Native American genocide

The 13 American colonies' population grew from about 2,000 to 2.4 million between 1625 and 1775 while displacing Native Americans from eastern North America.

After the colonies declared independence in 1776 from Great Britain and formed the US, the settlers started to move west, clashing with and eradicating the Apache, Cherokee, Cheyenne, Chinook, Navajo and Sioux tribes. Some of the names today are sadly used for American warfare helicopters and ubiquitous sport utility vehicles.

The national holiday, Thanksgiving, celebrated in November, is traced to the 1620s when European settlers invited Native Americans to a feast. The settlers later killed the population and gave thanks to God for allowing them to slaughter the "savages."

The surviving descendants of Native American tribes live in poverty on federally recognized Indian reservations across the US.

Almost 100 million indigenous people in the Western Hemisphere have been killed or died prematurely because of the Europeans and their descendants in five centuries, according to David E. Stannard in his book, American Holocaust: The Conquest of the New World.

Around 12 million indigenous people died within present US geographical boundaries between 1492 and 1900, according to Russell Thornton in American Indian Holocaust and Survival: A Population History since 1492.


Genocides against Africans and slavery

Despite having unalienable rights -- life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness – as enshrined in the American Declaration of Independence, not all in the new colonies were considered equal.

The colonies had a system of slavery, which European settlers carried as a practice into the Americas from the Old World, despite English Protestants praising themselves as Puritans.

A conservative estimate of 35 million men, women and children were brought from Africa to the New World between the 16th and 19th centuries.

Around 12.5 million of those brought to North America were used as free labor in fields and worked under grueling conditions, according to the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade Database.

The systematic repression of Africans continues to the present day in the US government application of laws, health and education.



Early US wars

A century before gaining civil rights and liberties, Blacks had to fight in the white man's wars in the US military.

More than 200,000 Blacks joined Union forces in the American Civil War, while an unaccounted number of free and slave Blacks were used for manual labor in the Confederacy. The war that began in 1861 and lasted until 1865 left 750,000 soldiers dead with an undetermined number of civilians.

Despite overthrowing its colonial ruler, Great Britain, the US pursued colonial interests in Southeast Asia during the late 19th century.

Around 20,000 Filipino combatants and as many as 200,000 civilians died from violence, famine, and disease during the Philippine–American War between 1899-1902, according to the State Department's Office of the Historian.

On the domestic front in early 20th century, the Tulsa race massacre in 1921 saw white residents attacking Black population and burning their businesses and homes.

Almost 300 Black people were killed as a result, and more than 800 were injured in the massacre that left over 10,000 Black people homeless.

Biden said Tuesday it was no riot, but instead a hate-fueled "massacre," adding "As soon as it happened there was a clear effort to erase it from our collective memory, from the news and everyday conversations."



Atomic bomb and Cold War coups

The US, along with allies in the UK and France, won World War II with the Soviet Union against Nazi Germany. But it was the end of the war that marked the American massacre against Imperial Japan in the Pacific and the advent of the atomic bomb.

Japanese casualties were around 110,000 in the battle for Okinawa, the largest and bloodiest battle of the war.

To end it all, the US dropped two atomic bombs on Japan in 1945 that killed an estimated 140,000 people in Hiroshima and 74,000 in Nagasaki, according to the global civil society coalition International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons.

The US emerged as one of two remaining superpowers in global politics after the war and extended its scope to South America, Middle East, Western Europe and Far Asia.

The first proxy war in the Cold War era came in Korea from 1950-53, with more than 930,000 Koreans and Chinese forces dead. On the civilian side, more than 1,550,000 North Koreans died, while 990,000 South Koreans were killed, bringing the death toll to nearly 3.5 million.

To exert control on Iranian oil resources, the US and the UK orchestrated an Iranian coup in 1953 to overthrow democratically elected Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh and strengthened the monarchical rule of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. The coup killed 300, while an estimated 10,000 were executed in years to follow.

The US treated Central and South American countries as its back yard during the Cold War to steer governments away from socialism and communism.

A Guatemalan coup in 1954 deposed democratically-elected Guatemalan President Jacobo Arbenz with the support of the US and installed the military dictatorship of Carlos Castillo Armas. Guatemala fell into a civil war for the next three decades, with 200,000 people killed.

The 1973 Chilean coup that deposed the Popular Unity government of President Salvador Allende saw Gen. Augusto Pinochet seize power with the support of the US. A truth and reconciliation report in 1991 found that more than 2,000 were killed.

The US sold more than $120 million in military equipment to Argentina in 1977 and 1978 alone as part of Operation Condor, which caused an estimated death toll of at least 60,000 people.



Vietnam War

Arguably the deadliest war in US history came in Vietnam when Washington wanted to contain the spread of communism in Southeast Asia, but the conflict lasted two decades, which also spilled into Cambodia and Laos.

The number of Vietnamese civilians dead is estimated as high as 2 million, with another 1.8 million killed during the fighting. About 18.2 million gallons of Agent Orange was sprayed from American fighter planes from 1961 to 1971. The Vietnamese government claimed 400,000 people were killed from the chemical and 500,000 children were born with congenital disabilities.

While the Cambodian Civil War killed 300,000, the Laotian Civil War caused more than 60,000 dead. That brought the massacre's toll to almost 4.2 million.


Iraq, Afghanistan

After Asia, the US turned its attention to the Middle East from the 1990s with the Gulf War. Washington's presence in the region intensified in the aftermath of the Sept. 11 terror attacks in the US and changed the whole landscape in the Middle East.

The Gulf War caused around 5,000 civilian deaths, but it was the subsequent wars that saw casualties rise exponentially.

From the beginning of the US invasion of Iraq in 2003, through its insurgency and civil war, more than 1 million are estimated to have been killed.

Around 240,000 have died in the US war zone in Afghanistan and Pakistan since 2001.

As of April 2021, more than 71,000 Afghan and Pakistani civilians are estimated to have lost their lives as a direct result of the war, according to Brown University.

 
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If the BLACKS are looking for revenge they could target the WHITE females for what the WHITES did to BLACK females


The US genocide against native Americans and the continued injustice today - Global Times

You know Blacks in America despite their reservation are doing a lot fine than their counterparts in Africa, and they don't hate Whites because where I live (Deep South) I have seen many Black people with White Girls. In fact, Black girls I met on work often complain that Black guys make them pregnant and then leave them for a White girl.
@KAL-EL
 
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You know Blacks in America despite their reservation are doing a lot fine than their counterparts in Africa, and they don't hate Whites because where I live (Deep South) I have seen many Black people with White Girls. In fact, Black girls I met on work often complain that Black guys make them pregnant and then leave them for a White girl.
@KAL-EL

He's obviously not British because even with not much of a history of slavery in the UK the situation for those black in Britain is not much different than those in the US. They are treated just as poorly.

 
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He's obviously not British because even with not much of a history of slavery in the UK the situation for those black in Britain is not much different than those in the US. They are treated just as poorly.


From the outside it surely does bad, I had the same issues before coming to America, from the news Channel and organizations like BLM overblowing it and under-playing the criminal factor behind some FACTS. but seriously a lot of Black people are doing if not better but as equal as whites especially in small towns, it's just many of them (young) try to take shortcuts in life to become rich, which result in them in getting arrested or killed.
 
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From the outside it surely does bad, I had the same issues before coming to America, from the news Channel and organizations like BLM overblowing it and under-playing the criminal factor behind some FACTS. but seriously a lot of Black people are doing if not better but as equal as whites especially in small towns, it's just many of them (young) try to take shortcuts in life to become rich, which result in them in getting arrested or killed.

I'm not going to quickly point a finger because while it is certainly known that a certain percentage is guilty (there's always some who don't care about their education no matter what their background is) there are others who truly tried or were trying to be law abiding citizens but unfortunately grew up poor and in a school system/environment full of people from the first group which adversely affected/influenced their future causing it to spiral negative instead of positive.
 
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They Paid for Indian Scalps

Howard Turnage's Sept. 28 letter called Courtland Milloy's assertion that the colonial government in America offered bounties for Indian scalps a "myth." But the documentation is there for all to see.

For example, in his 1756 Declaration of War against the Lenni Lenape, Pennsylvania Gov. Robert Hunter Morris said, "For the scalp of every male Indian enemy above the age of 12 years, produced as evidence of their being killed, the sum of 130 pieces of eight . . . for the scalp of every Indian woman produced as evidence of their being killed, the sum of 50 pieces of eight."

Gov. Morris wasn't alone in his legislative eagerness to encourage scalping and annihilation of local Native Americans. In 1723 the Massachusetts colony paid 100 pounds sterling for the scalps of men older than 12 and 50 pounds for those of women and children. In 1755, the bounty still existed, though then-Gov. William Shirley had reduced it to 40 pounds for men and 20 pounds for women. Many more examples exist.

There is a historically negative significance to the term "redskin," the beginnings of which can be seen in the colonial government's desire to eradicate a continent of people in order to make room for another.

Whether or not Mr. Turnage's "simplest and most likely correct explanation" of its first usage as a reference to "skin coloration" is correct, it was turned into a racial epithet used in literature and in real life. As a sign of respect, it should not be used to name a team or to refer to a people.

 
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US history riddled with massacres, genocide
History records US genocide against Native Americans, Africans, massacres in Southeast Asia, Middle East
Ovunc Kutlu |02.06.2021

thumbs_b_c_d2474e2ea23e1b37384952c73eee159b.jpg



ANKARA

US President Joe Biden's controversial recognition of 1915 events between Armenians and Turks as genocide brings to light massacres in American history in the last 500 years.

Biden called the events of 1915 an "Armenian genocide" on April 24, breaking American presidents' long-held tradition of refraining from using the term.

But during the course of American history, the US and its European ancestors have been involved in numerous massacres and carried out genocides against indigenous peoples.

Genocide is an act committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group, according to the Geneva Convention.

With that in mind, the conquest of the Americas in 1492, European colonization led to the systematic eradication of indigenous peoples on the continent.

US-HISTORY-RIDDLED-WITH-MASSACRED-GENOCIDE.jpg



Native American genocide

The 13 American colonies' population grew from about 2,000 to 2.4 million between 1625 and 1775 while displacing Native Americans from eastern North America.

After the colonies declared independence in 1776 from Great Britain and formed the US, the settlers started to move west, clashing with and eradicating the Apache, Cherokee, Cheyenne, Chinook, Navajo and Sioux tribes. Some of the names today are sadly used for American warfare helicopters and ubiquitous sport utility vehicles.

The national holiday, Thanksgiving, celebrated in November, is traced to the 1620s when European settlers invited Native Americans to a feast. The settlers later killed the population and gave thanks to God for allowing them to slaughter the "savages."

The surviving descendants of Native American tribes live in poverty on federally recognized Indian reservations across the US.

Almost 100 million indigenous people in the Western Hemisphere have been killed or died prematurely because of the Europeans and their descendants in five centuries, according to David E. Stannard in his book, American Holocaust: The Conquest of the New World.

Around 12 million indigenous people died within present US geographical boundaries between 1492 and 1900, according to Russell Thornton in American Indian Holocaust and Survival: A Population History since 1492.


Genocides against Africans and slavery

Despite having unalienable rights -- life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness – as enshrined in the American Declaration of Independence, not all in the new colonies were considered equal.

The colonies had a system of slavery, which European settlers carried as a practice into the Americas from the Old World, despite English Protestants praising themselves as Puritans.

A conservative estimate of 35 million men, women and children were brought from Africa to the New World between the 16th and 19th centuries.

Around 12.5 million of those brought to North America were used as free labor in fields and worked under grueling conditions, according to the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade Database.

The systematic repression of Africans continues to the present day in the US government application of laws, health and education.



Early US wars

A century before gaining civil rights and liberties, Blacks had to fight in the white man's wars in the US military.

More than 200,000 Blacks joined Union forces in the American Civil War, while an unaccounted number of free and slave Blacks were used for manual labor in the Confederacy. The war that began in 1861 and lasted until 1865 left 750,000 soldiers dead with an undetermined number of civilians.

Despite overthrowing its colonial ruler, Great Britain, the US pursued colonial interests in Southeast Asia during the late 19th century.

Around 20,000 Filipino combatants and as many as 200,000 civilians died from violence, famine, and disease during the Philippine–American War between 1899-1902, according to the State Department's Office of the Historian.

On the domestic front in early 20th century, the Tulsa race massacre in 1921 saw white residents attacking Black population and burning their businesses and homes.

Almost 300 Black people were killed as a result, and more than 800 were injured in the massacre that left over 10,000 Black people homeless.

Biden said Tuesday it was no riot, but instead a hate-fueled "massacre," adding "As soon as it happened there was a clear effort to erase it from our collective memory, from the news and everyday conversations."



Atomic bomb and Cold War coups

The US, along with allies in the UK and France, won World War II with the Soviet Union against Nazi Germany. But it was the end of the war that marked the American massacre against Imperial Japan in the Pacific and the advent of the atomic bomb.

Japanese casualties were around 110,000 in the battle for Okinawa, the largest and bloodiest battle of the war.

To end it all, the US dropped two atomic bombs on Japan in 1945 that killed an estimated 140,000 people in Hiroshima and 74,000 in Nagasaki, according to the global civil society coalition International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons.

The US emerged as one of two remaining superpowers in global politics after the war and extended its scope to South America, Middle East, Western Europe and Far Asia.

The first proxy war in the Cold War era came in Korea from 1950-53, with more than 930,000 Koreans and Chinese forces dead. On the civilian side, more than 1,550,000 North Koreans died, while 990,000 South Koreans were killed, bringing the death toll to nearly 3.5 million.

To exert control on Iranian oil resources, the US and the UK orchestrated an Iranian coup in 1953 to overthrow democratically elected Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh and strengthened the monarchical rule of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. The coup killed 300, while an estimated 10,000 were executed in years to follow.

The US treated Central and South American countries as its back yard during the Cold War to steer governments away from socialism and communism.

A Guatemalan coup in 1954 deposed democratically-elected Guatemalan President Jacobo Arbenz with the support of the US and installed the military dictatorship of Carlos Castillo Armas. Guatemala fell into a civil war for the next three decades, with 200,000 people killed.

The 1973 Chilean coup that deposed the Popular Unity government of President Salvador Allende saw Gen. Augusto Pinochet seize power with the support of the US. A truth and reconciliation report in 1991 found that more than 2,000 were killed.

The US sold more than $120 million in military equipment to Argentina in 1977 and 1978 alone as part of Operation Condor, which caused an estimated death toll of at least 60,000 people.



Vietnam War

Arguably the deadliest war in US history came in Vietnam when Washington wanted to contain the spread of communism in Southeast Asia, but the conflict lasted two decades, which also spilled into Cambodia and Laos.

The number of Vietnamese civilians dead is estimated as high as 2 million, with another 1.8 million killed during the fighting. About 18.2 million gallons of Agent Orange was sprayed from American fighter planes from 1961 to 1971. The Vietnamese government claimed 400,000 people were killed from the chemical and 500,000 children were born with congenital disabilities.

While the Cambodian Civil War killed 300,000, the Laotian Civil War caused more than 60,000 dead. That brought the massacre's toll to almost 4.2 million.


Iraq, Afghanistan

After Asia, the US turned its attention to the Middle East from the 1990s with the Gulf War. Washington's presence in the region intensified in the aftermath of the Sept. 11 terror attacks in the US and changed the whole landscape in the Middle East.

The Gulf War caused around 5,000 civilian deaths, but it was the subsequent wars that saw casualties rise exponentially.

From the beginning of the US invasion of Iraq in 2003, through its insurgency and civil war, more than 1 million are estimated to have been killed.

Around 240,000 have died in the US war zone in Afghanistan and Pakistan since 2001.

As of April 2021, more than 71,000 Afghan and Pakistani civilians are estimated to have lost their lives as a direct result of the war, according to Brown University.

Obviously this is true.

Those rednecks in USA also concede they whipped the blacks and treated the Native Americans no better than animals.

Everyone knows that and it is common knowledge.
 
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This is coming from a Chinese poster who cries when I post about things that happened in the 1990's as "always living in the past"

Here he is posting from the 1700's.

They Paid for Indian Scalps

For example, in his 1756 Declaration of War against the Lenni Lenape, Pennsylvania Gov. Robert Hunter Morris said, "For the scalp of every male Indian enemy above the age of 12 years, produced as evidence of their being killed, the sum of 130 pieces of eight . . . for the scalp of every Indian woman produced as evidence of their being killed, the sum of 50 pieces of eight."

Gov. Morris wasn't alone in his legislative eagerness to encourage scalping and annihilation of local Native Americans. In 1723 the Massachusetts colony paid 100 pounds sterling for the scalps of men older than 12 and 50 pounds for those of women and children. In 1755, the bounty still existed, though then-Gov. William Shirley had reduced it to 40 pounds for men and 20 pounds for women. Many more examples exist.

There is a historically negative significance to the term "redskin," the beginnings of which can be seen in the colonial government's desire to eradicate a continent of people in order to make room for another.

Whether or not Mr. Turnage's "simplest and most likely correct explanation" of its first usage as a reference to "skin coloration" is correct, it was turned into a racial epithet used in literature and in real life. As a sign of respect, it should not be used to name a team or to refer to a people.


Nice, but the US was a colony of Britain before 1776 just like Hong Kong was before 1997. The Governors were appointed by the British king to implement British laws.

So unless you also want to blame the CCP for any of the British stuff in Hong Kong then there is no use blaming us.
 
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Yes, the US is the only country that engaged in genocide and massacres. Not only that all genocides and massacres were committed by white persons on brown persons. :coffee:
 
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Yes, the US is the only country that engaged in genocide and massacres. Not only that all genocides and massacres were committed by white persons on brown persons. :coffee:
India is there too at the top with the US don't worry.
 
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UK is the founding father of genocides and you are their best student.

I'm pretty sure we can say the Spaniards beat them to it in the 1500's...but why should 80Milllion people south of Mexico be notable by the Chinese I guess.
 
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US history riddled with massacres, genocide
History records US genocide against Native Americans, Africans, massacres in Southeast Asia, Middle East
Ovunc Kutlu |02.06.2021

thumbs_b_c_d2474e2ea23e1b37384952c73eee159b.jpg



ANKARA

US President Joe Biden's controversial recognition of 1915 events between Armenians and Turks as genocide brings to light massacres in American history in the last 500 years.

Biden called the events of 1915 an "Armenian genocide" on April 24, breaking American presidents' long-held tradition of refraining from using the term.

But during the course of American history, the US and its European ancestors have been involved in numerous massacres and carried out genocides against indigenous peoples.

Genocide is an act committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group, according to the Geneva Convention.

With that in mind, the conquest of the Americas in 1492, European colonization led to the systematic eradication of indigenous peoples on the continent.

US-HISTORY-RIDDLED-WITH-MASSACRED-GENOCIDE.jpg



Native American genocide

The 13 American colonies' population grew from about 2,000 to 2.4 million between 1625 and 1775 while displacing Native Americans from eastern North America.

After the colonies declared independence in 1776 from Great Britain and formed the US, the settlers started to move west, clashing with and eradicating the Apache, Cherokee, Cheyenne, Chinook, Navajo and Sioux tribes. Some of the names today are sadly used for American warfare helicopters and ubiquitous sport utility vehicles.

The national holiday, Thanksgiving, celebrated in November, is traced to the 1620s when European settlers invited Native Americans to a feast. The settlers later killed the population and gave thanks to God for allowing them to slaughter the "savages."

The surviving descendants of Native American tribes live in poverty on federally recognized Indian reservations across the US.

Almost 100 million indigenous people in the Western Hemisphere have been killed or died prematurely because of the Europeans and their descendants in five centuries, according to David E. Stannard in his book, American Holocaust: The Conquest of the New World.

Around 12 million indigenous people died within present US geographical boundaries between 1492 and 1900, according to Russell Thornton in American Indian Holocaust and Survival: A Population History since 1492.


Genocides against Africans and slavery

Despite having unalienable rights -- life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness – as enshrined in the American Declaration of Independence, not all in the new colonies were considered equal.

The colonies had a system of slavery, which European settlers carried as a practice into the Americas from the Old World, despite English Protestants praising themselves as Puritans.

A conservative estimate of 35 million men, women and children were brought from Africa to the New World between the 16th and 19th centuries.

Around 12.5 million of those brought to North America were used as free labor in fields and worked under grueling conditions, according to the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade Database.

The systematic repression of Africans continues to the present day in the US government application of laws, health and education.



Early US wars

A century before gaining civil rights and liberties, Blacks had to fight in the white man's wars in the US military.

More than 200,000 Blacks joined Union forces in the American Civil War, while an unaccounted number of free and slave Blacks were used for manual labor in the Confederacy. The war that began in 1861 and lasted until 1865 left 750,000 soldiers dead with an undetermined number of civilians.

Despite overthrowing its colonial ruler, Great Britain, the US pursued colonial interests in Southeast Asia during the late 19th century.

Around 20,000 Filipino combatants and as many as 200,000 civilians died from violence, famine, and disease during the Philippine–American War between 1899-1902, according to the State Department's Office of the Historian.

On the domestic front in early 20th century, the Tulsa race massacre in 1921 saw white residents attacking Black population and burning their businesses and homes.

Almost 300 Black people were killed as a result, and more than 800 were injured in the massacre that left over 10,000 Black people homeless.

Biden said Tuesday it was no riot, but instead a hate-fueled "massacre," adding "As soon as it happened there was a clear effort to erase it from our collective memory, from the news and everyday conversations."



Atomic bomb and Cold War coups

The US, along with allies in the UK and France, won World War II with the Soviet Union against Nazi Germany. But it was the end of the war that marked the American massacre against Imperial Japan in the Pacific and the advent of the atomic bomb.

Japanese casualties were around 110,000 in the battle for Okinawa, the largest and bloodiest battle of the war.

To end it all, the US dropped two atomic bombs on Japan in 1945 that killed an estimated 140,000 people in Hiroshima and 74,000 in Nagasaki, according to the global civil society coalition International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons.

The US emerged as one of two remaining superpowers in global politics after the war and extended its scope to South America, Middle East, Western Europe and Far Asia.

The first proxy war in the Cold War era came in Korea from 1950-53, with more than 930,000 Koreans and Chinese forces dead. On the civilian side, more than 1,550,000 North Koreans died, while 990,000 South Koreans were killed, bringing the death toll to nearly 3.5 million.

To exert control on Iranian oil resources, the US and the UK orchestrated an Iranian coup in 1953 to overthrow democratically elected Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh and strengthened the monarchical rule of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. The coup killed 300, while an estimated 10,000 were executed in years to follow.

The US treated Central and South American countries as its back yard during the Cold War to steer governments away from socialism and communism.

A Guatemalan coup in 1954 deposed democratically-elected Guatemalan President Jacobo Arbenz with the support of the US and installed the military dictatorship of Carlos Castillo Armas. Guatemala fell into a civil war for the next three decades, with 200,000 people killed.

The 1973 Chilean coup that deposed the Popular Unity government of President Salvador Allende saw Gen. Augusto Pinochet seize power with the support of the US. A truth and reconciliation report in 1991 found that more than 2,000 were killed.

The US sold more than $120 million in military equipment to Argentina in 1977 and 1978 alone as part of Operation Condor, which caused an estimated death toll of at least 60,000 people.



Vietnam War

Arguably the deadliest war in US history came in Vietnam when Washington wanted to contain the spread of communism in Southeast Asia, but the conflict lasted two decades, which also spilled into Cambodia and Laos.

The number of Vietnamese civilians dead is estimated as high as 2 million, with another 1.8 million killed during the fighting. About 18.2 million gallons of Agent Orange was sprayed from American fighter planes from 1961 to 1971. The Vietnamese government claimed 400,000 people were killed from the chemical and 500,000 children were born with congenital disabilities.

While the Cambodian Civil War killed 300,000, the Laotian Civil War caused more than 60,000 dead. That brought the massacre's toll to almost 4.2 million.


Iraq, Afghanistan

After Asia, the US turned its attention to the Middle East from the 1990s with the Gulf War. Washington's presence in the region intensified in the aftermath of the Sept. 11 terror attacks in the US and changed the whole landscape in the Middle East.

The Gulf War caused around 5,000 civilian deaths, but it was the subsequent wars that saw casualties rise exponentially.

From the beginning of the US invasion of Iraq in 2003, through its insurgency and civil war, more than 1 million are estimated to have been killed.

Around 240,000 have died in the US war zone in Afghanistan and Pakistan since 2001.

As of April 2021, more than 71,000 Afghan and Pakistani civilians are estimated to have lost their lives as a direct result of the war, according to Brown University.



it tend to happen with them alot..

when u start thinking you are superior to the other in any particular ie color, creed etc it always easier justify and conduct massive crimes against another .

Hinduchuitya cheer leaders ?.. hope u are listening..
 
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