More - Data on Killings Totals
It's no secret that the death tolls in the Israel-Palestine
conflict are lopsided, with Palestinians far more likely to be killed than Israelis. But just how lopsided is driven home by
looking at the month-to-month fatality statistics, which the Israeli human
rights organization B'Tselem has been tracking since
September 2000. Those numbers also tell some important stories about the
conflict, how it's changed, and maybe where it's going.
You'll notice right away that the overwhelming majority of the
deaths are Palestinian, and have been for the almost 14 years since B'Tselem
began tracking. Overall, the group has recorded 8,166 conflict-related deaths,
of which 7,065 are Palestinian and 1,101 Israeli. That means 87 percent of
deaths have been Palestinian and only 13 percent Israeli. Put another way, for
every 15 people killed in the conflict, 13 are Palestinian and two are Israeli.
(Statistics for the past two months are from United Nations Office for the Coordinator of Humanitarian Affairs.)
That number is even more staggering when you consider that there
are about twice as many Israelis as there are Palestinians. This means, very
roughly, that a Palestinian person has been 15 times more likely to be killed
by the conflict than an Israeli person. Of course the conflict impacts
Palestinians and Israelis far beyond just conflict deaths, but these statistics
help show how utterly disproportionate the conflict has
become in its toll.
The disparity has widened dramatically over time. Since January
2005, when the conflict began to change dramatically, it has killed 4,006
people, of whom 168 have been Israeli and 3,838 Palestinian. That means that,
since January 2005, only four percent of those killed have been Israeli, and 96
percent Palestinian. Since January 2005, in other words, the conflict has
killed 23 Palestinians for every one Israeli it claims.
Still, even though Israelis are killed at a far lower rate than
are Palestinians, that does not make Israeli deaths any less real or traumatic.
This chart shows just the 1,101 Israeli deaths
in the conflict since September 2000. Of those, 744 were civilians and 357
security forces, meaning that an Israeli killed in the conflict is much more
likely to be a civilian than uniformed — a legacy of the bus bombings and other
terrorist attacks frequent during the early 2000s. But the most striking thing
about this chart may be how dramatically the rate of Israeli deaths has
declined since the early 2000s, with many months passing with no deaths at all.
Here are a few bigger-picture lessons from these two charts.
B'Tselem began
tracking these numbers when the Second Intifada, or second mass Palestinian
uprising against the Israeli occupation, began in September 2000. And you can
see that reflected in the numbers of deaths of Israelis as well as
Palestinians.
The Second Intifada
included riots, large-scale clashes, bus bombings and other acts of terrorism
against Israelis, Israeli targeted killings against Palestinians, and perhaps
most costly of all large-scale Israeli military assaults. This is when Israeli
deaths hit their peak, with 283 killed in a five-month run from February
through June of 2002. Even then, though, Palestinian deaths were much higher,
with 659 killed over that same period. This is the closest that Israeli and
Palestinian deaths have gotten to symmetrical, and still more than twice as
many Palestinians were killed than Israelis.
That is when Israel,
fed up with the violence of the Second Intifada, responded in part by
dramatically increasing the size and number of walls separating Israeli from
Palestinian territory. Israel also withdrew its military and all settlers from
Gaza, which is the smaller of the two Palestinian territories.
Both of these actions
did a lot to remove Israelis from harm's way, which you can see reflected in
the dramatic — and sustained — reduction in Israeli deaths. But they did not
end the conflict, especially not for Palestinians, who continued to be killed
in large numbers even after the Second Intifada felt like it had ended for most
Israelis.
These two Israeli
changes — installing more walls and withdrawing from Gaza — have also done
their share to perpetuate the conflict. They drastically deepened the physical
and metaphorical barriers between Israelis and Palestinians, further raising
the pain of occupation for Palestinians and making it easier for Israelis to
accept the conflict as status quo, and thus less likely to elect governments
that will take risks for a long-term peace deal.
After the withdrawal
from Gaza, the terrorist group Hamas took power there and has held it since,
using the territory as a base for regular rocket attacks against Israel. While
those rocket attacks do not in themselves cause nearly as many deaths as the
violence of the Second Intifada, they are part of the conflict between Israel
and Gaza-based militant Palestinian groups that occasionally flares up to cause
massive numbers of Palestinian deaths, as is happening this week.
Since 2005, the
conflict has settled into a new pattern: fewer Palestinian deaths during
"calm" months with occasional spikes into catastrophic numbers of
Palestinians killed.
These spikes, of which
the chart shows four since 2005, are all times when Israeli forces attacked
Gaza, where Israel was targeting Hamas and other militant groups but also ended
up killing large numbers of Palestinians civilians. In mid-2006, form June
through November, Israeli forces invaded Gaza as part of Operation Summer
Rains, which was sparked by Palestinian rocket fire into Israel and by the kidnapping
of Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit, who was released five years later.
2008 and early 2009, Israel again invaded Gaza as part of
Operation Cast Lead, which caused only 13 Israeli deaths but ended with well
over 1,000 Palestinians killed and devastated the Gaza Strip. Those two months
were by far the deadliest for Palestinians since B'Tselem began tracking in
2000.
Israel launched extended bombing campaigns in Gaza in late 2012
and again this month, both of which have killed dozens of Palestinians. While Israeli strikes are targeting Hamas and other militant
groups that are firing rockets into Israel, a local UN
office estimated on Friday that 77 percent of people killed in Gaza up
to that point were civilians, including 30 children. A separate UN agency
estimated on Sunday that 70 percent of the killed were
civilians, including 27 children.
You can see the pattern of the last several years clearly on the
top chart: the conflict remains at a relatively low level until, every couple
of years, it flares up with heavy Israeli strikes on Gaza that also cost a
large number of Palestinian lives. This status quo, on net, clearly causes a
large number of Palestinian lives. But it kills very few Israelis, which is a
big part of why Israeli voters and leaders have appeared willing to accept it.
This Israeli strategy is sometimes described as "cutting the grass." In this thinking, Israel
never really solves the conflict or even tries; it tolerates a level of
violence from Gaza-based militant groups, but every few years bombs and maybe
invades Gaza to weaken militants there and destroy their weapons – to cut the
grass. It treats the Israel-Palestine conflict, at least as it pertains to
Gaza, as something to be managed rather than solved.
It is important to stress that this strategy is not one that
ever produces peace or that is designed to lead to a solution. It accepts a low
level of Israeli deaths from rocket fire, and occasionally dozens or hundreds
of Palestinian deaths from air strikes, as status quo.
Correction: This post initially reported
erroneous fatality statistics. I had misread B'Tselem's data tables in a way
that significantly under-counted Israeli deaths, as well as some Palestinian
deaths. The charts and statistics in this post have been corrected to reflect
the accurate count. I regret the error and thank Philip Klein of the Washington
Examiner for pointing it out to me.
https://www.vox.com/2014/7/14/5898581/chart-israel-palestine-conflict-deaths - note: 2014 article covering 2000-2014
Fatalities from rocket and mortar attacks in Israel from
the Gaza Strip, 2001–present (up-to-date
as of August 29, 2014)
Date of
attack
|
Location
|
Weapon
|
Name
|
Age
|
2004.06.28
|
Sderot
|
Qassam
|
Mordechai Yosephov
|
49
|
Afik Ohion Zehavi
|
4
|
|||
2004.09.29
|
Sderot
|
Qassam
|
Yuval Abebeh
|
4
|
Dorit (Masarat) Benisian
|
2
|
|||
2005.01.15
|
Sderot
|
Qassam
|
Ayala-Haya Abukasis
|
17
|
2005.07.15
|
Moshav Nativ Ha‘asara
|
Qassam
|
Dana Gelkowitz
|
22
|
2006.11.15
|
Sderot
|
Qassam
|
Faina Slutzker
|
57
|
2006.11.21
|
Sderot
|
Qassam
|
Yaakov Yaakobov
|
43
|
2007.05.21
|
Sderot
|
Qassam
|
Shirel Friedman
|
32
|
2007.05.27
|
Sderot
|
Qassam
|
Oshri Oz
|
36
|
2008.02.27
|
Sderot
|
Qassam
|
Roni Yihye
|
47
|
2008.05.09
|
Kibbutz Kfar Aza
|
mortar
|
Jimmy Kedoshim
|
48
|
2008.05.12
|
Moshav Yesha
|
Qassam
|
Shuli Katz
|
70
|
2008.06.05
|
Kibbutz Nir-Oz
|
mortar
|
Amnon Rosenberg
|
51
|
2008.12.27
|
Netivot
|
Qassam
|
Beber Vaknin
|
58
|
2008.12.29
|
IDF base near Nahal Oz
|
mortar
|
38
|
|
2008.12.29
|
Ashdod
|
Grad
|
Irit Sheetrit
|
39
|
2008.12.29
|
Ashkelon
|
Grad
|
Hani al Mahdi*
|
27
|
2010.03.18
|
Moshav Nativ Ha‘asara
|
Qassam
|
Manee Singueanphon*
|
30
|
2011.08.20
|
Be’er sheva
|
Grad
|
Yossi Shushan
|
38
|
2011.10.29
|
Ashkelon
|
Grad
|
Moshe Ami
|
56
|
2012.11.15
|
Kiryat Malachi
|
Grad
|
Yitzchak Amsalem
|
24
|
Mira Sharf
|
25
|
|||
Aharon Smadja
|
49
|
|||
2012.11.20
|
Eshkol Regional Council
|
mortar
|
33
|
|
2012.11.20
|
Eshkol Regional Council
|
mortar
|
Yosef Nachman Partok†
|
18
|
2012.11.21
|
Eshkol Regional Council
|
mortar?
|
Boris Yarmolnik†
|
28
|
2014.07.15
|
Erez Crossing
|
mortar
|
Dror Khenin†
|
37
|
2014.07.19
|
village near Dimona
|
rocket
|
Ouda Lafi al-Waj*
|
32
|
2014.07.23
|
Ashkelon Coast RC
|
mortar
|
Narakorn Kittiyangkul*
|
36
|
2014.07.27?
|
Sdot Negev RC
|
mortar
|
Barak Refael Degorker†
|
27
|
2014.07.28
|
Eshkol RC
|
mortar
|
Eliav Kahlon†
|
22
|
Meidan Maymon Biton†
|
20
|
|||
Niran Cohen†
|
20
|
|||
Adi Briga†
|
23
|
|||
2014.07.31
|
Eshkol RC
|
mortar
|
Daniel Marsh†
|
22
|
Omri Tai†
|
22
|
|||
Shai Kushner†
|
20
|
|||
Noam Rosenthal†
|
20
|
|||
Liran Adir†
|
31
|
|||
2014.08.22
|
Sha‘ar HaNegev RC
|
mortar
|
Daniel Tregerman
|
4
|
2014.08.22
|
Gan Yavne
|
Grad
|
Netanel Maman†
|
22
|
2014.08.26
|
Kibbutz Nirim
|
mortar
|
Ze’evik Etzion
|
55
|
Shahar Melamed
|
43
|
|||
Total fatalities in the history of rocket and mortar
attacks from Gaza into Israel: 44
Civilians: 30 (including 2 killed at military
posts)
Soldiers: 14
Rocket fatalities only: 23
Total fatality-producing strikes: 32 (19 rocket, 13
mortar)
Total rocket and mortar fatalities incurred in
Israel during major Israeli “anti-rocket” military offensives: 27
|
||||
Operation “Cast Lead”: December 27, 2008–January 18, 2009
|
||||
Operation “Pillar of
Cloud”: November 14,
2012–November 21, 2012
|
||||
Operation “Protective
Edge”: July 8, 2014–August 26,
2014
|
||||
Additional
fatalities from previously unexploded ordnance: 2
|
||||
2006.03.28
|
Nahal Oz
|
Qassam‡
|
Salam Ziadin*
|
?
|
Khalid Ziadin*
|
16
|
|||
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