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Bush Vows the U.S. Will Remain in Iraq, Dismisses Report on Deaths in Iraq


President Bush has vowed that the United States will remain in Iraq, saying a premature withdrawal would embolden the terrorists.

At a news conference at the White House on Wednesday, Mr. Bush acknowledged recent violence in Iraq, including the killing of the brother of Iraq's Sunni Arab vice president, who was shot dead in his home earlier in the week.

The president also dismissed a study published today that estimated some 655-thousand Iraqis have died as a result of the war.

He said he does not consider the report credible, and that the methodology used is "pretty well discredited."

The study in the British journal, The Lancet, says about 600-thousand of the 655-thousand Iraqis died from violence, mostly gunfire. Researchers also found a small increase in deaths from disease and other causes.

The figure is far higher than other estimates. President Bush estimated in December that about 30-thousand people have died as a result of the war.

When asked if he still stood by his estimate, Mr. Bush said he stands by the figure that "a lot" of innocent people have died in the conflict.

Today in Geneva, the top United Nations humanitarian aid official, Jan Egeland, said the violence in Iraq is going unchecked, claiming about 100 lives per day.

The study in The Lancet was conducted by Iraqi and U.S. researchers who interviewed residents of more than 18-hundred randomly selected households at 47 sites in Iraq. They compared the mortality rates to pre-war estimates.

In 2004, the same group published an estimate of 100-thousand deaths in the first 18 months after the U.S-led invasion of Iraq.
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