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3 February 2005.

See also Eyeballing the Iraq Kill and Maim Zone.

1,488 US Military Dead During Iraq War: http://cryptome.org/mil-dead-iqw.htm

See also DoD tally: http://www.defenselink.mil/news/casualty.pdf


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An Iraqi man gets help from a U.S. Army medic after he was shot in the face by an insurgent near a polling station in Mosul, Iraq on election day, Sunday, Jan. 30, 2005. He was rushed to a local hospital and is expected to survive. (AP Photo/Jim MacMillan)

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Safia Taleb al-Suhail, an Iraqi women's rights activist, holds up her ink-stained finger to show that she voted in Sunday's election in Iraq, as she is applauded by first lady Laura Bush, right, and other special guests attending President Bush's State of the Union speech at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Wednesday, Feb. 2, 2005. (AP Photo/Luke Frazza, Pool)

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US Army Sgt. Victor Barrera cries during Pfc. Jesus Fonseca's funeral services, Tuesday, Feb. 1 2005, in Degollado, some 410 kilometers (255 miles) northwest of Mexico City. Jesus Fonseca, 19, of Marietta, Ga., died in a car bombing in Iraq along with two other soldiers. (AP Photo/Guillermo Arias) **EFE OUT**

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Members of Congress display inked fingers in support for the recent Iraq elections,on Capitol Hill Wednesday, Feb.2, 2005 during President Bush's State of the Union address Wednesday. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

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This undated family photo shows Marine Capt. Paul Christopher Alaniz kissing his one-month-old daughter, Yvette, in Dumas, Texas, before deploying for his first overseas tour more than one year ago. Alaniz was killed Wednesday, Jan. 26, 2005, when the helicopter he was piloting crashed in Iraq. (AP Photo/Family photo via Amarillo Globe-News)

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In this photo provided by the Serrano family via the Dallas Morning News, shown is Lance Cpl. Nazario Serrano, date and location unknown. Serrano, 20, of Irving, Texas., died Jan. 30, 2005, as a result of hostile action in Al Anbar Province, Iraq. He was assigned to the Combat Service Group Battalion 1, Combat Service Support Group 11, 1st Force Service Support Group, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Pendleton, Calif. (AP Photo/The Serrano Family via the Dallas Morning News)

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** FILE ** Staff Sgt. Joseph Stevens, 26, of Sacramento Calif., shown in a family photo, was among five people who died Jan. 24, 2005, in Iraq when a vehicle overturned. Stevens was killed when the Bradley Fighting Vehicle he was riding in overturned northeast of Baghdad, according to the Department of Defense. (AP Photo/Family photo via Sacramento Bee)

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**FILE**This photo provided by Kathryn Yolkin shows Spc. Viktar V. Yolkin of Spring Branch, Texas, on May 29, 2001, who died Jan. 24, 2005, in Mohammed Sacran, Iraq, when the vehicle he was riding in overturned. (AP Photo/Courtesy of Family, File)

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This undated photo released Monday, Jan. 31, 2005, by the U.S. Army Special Operations Command Public Affairs Office at Fort Bragg, N.C., shows Sgt. 1st Class Mickey E. Zaun, 27, of Brooklyn Park, Minn. Zaun, a chemical operations specialist assigned to Headquarters and Headquarters Company, U.S. Army Special Operations Command at Fort Bragg, died Jan. 28, 2005, of injuries he sustained during a non-hostile collision between two armored vehicles near Mosul, Iraq. (AP Photo/U.S. Army Special Operations Command Public Affairs Office)

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Lance Cpl. Harry Swain IV, 21, shown in this undated family photo, due to come home next week on leave from Iraq was killed on Monday, Jan. 31, 2005, his father said. Swain, who was serving his second tour of duty in Iraq, was a machine gunner with the 1st Battalion, 2nd Marines. He had signed up the day after the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. (AP Photo/family photo via the The Press of Atlantic City)

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**FILE**This undated family photo shows Lance Cpl. Saeed Jafarkhani-Torshizi Jr. of Fort Worth, Texas, who was among the 31 military personnel killed in a helicopter crash Wednesday, Jan. 26, 2005, in Iraq. (AP Photo/WTAE-TV in Pittsburgh/File)

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The body of U.S. Army Sgt. Javier Marin Jr. is carried by an Army Honor Guard to a hearse after arriving at McAllen Miller International Airport Monday, Jan. 31, 2005, in McAllen, Texas. Marin was killed on Jan 24 while serving in Iraq. (AP Photo/The Monitor, Nathan Lambrecht)

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A visitor is consoled as she cries at the Pacific Marine Memorial where flowers have been placed in memory of the Hawaii-based Marines killed in last week's helicopter crash in Iraq, Sunday, Jan. 30, 2005, at Marine Corp Base Hawaii in Kaneohe, Hawaii. (AP Photo/Lucy Pemoni)

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** FILE ** This U.S. Army photo of Pfc. James H. Miller IV was provided by the Miller famliy. Miller, shown in a in 2001 photo, was killed in Iraq, Sunday, Jan. 30, 2005, guarding a polling place, the soldier's father said Monday. Pfc Miller trained as a medic. (AP Photo/U.S. Army photo via Miller family)

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Marine Sgt. Andrew K. Farrar Jr. is shown in an undated photo provided by his family. Farrar died Friday, Jan. 28, 2005, on his 31st birthday while on patrol in Iraq, his father said Sunday. The Weymouth native, scheduled to return home to his wife and two young sons in three weeks, was electrocuted when he ran into a high-voltage wire on patrol in Anbar province in western Iraq, said Andrew Farrar Sr. (AP Photo/Family Photo via The Boston Globe)

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In this undated photo released by the Kimble family, Houston native Staff Sgt. Dexter Kimble, 30, is shown. Kimble died in late January 2005 in Iraq, when the helicopter he was riding in crashed, according to officials. Kimble was one of 31 service members who died as a result of the crash. Kimble lived with his wife, Dewana, and their four children in Marietta, Calif. He was a helicopter mechanic on his second tour in Iraq. He had been with the Marines for 13 years. (AP Photo/The Kimble family)

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Sitting next to Rita Lockridge, Rhonda Winfield, right, speaks Tuesday, Feb. 1, 2005, about the death of her son, Marine Lance Cpl. Jason Charles Redifer, in Stuarts Draft, Va. Redifer, was killed by an improvised explosive device Monday, Jan. 31, 2005, while serving in Iraq. (AP Photo/The News Leader, Mike Tripp)

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A framed photograph of Lance Cpl. Jason Redifer sits on a bookshelf in his family home in Stuarts Draft, Va., Tuesday, Feb. 1, 2005. Redifer, 19, was killed by an improvised explosive device Monday night while serving in Iraq. (AP Photo/The News Leader, Mike Tripp)

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** THIS PICTURE CENSORED AT SOURCE ** This is a picture released by a British Court Martial, Tuesday, Jan, 18, 2005 in Osnabrueck, Germany allegedly showing Lance corporal Mark Cooley driving a fork lift truck with an Iraqi detainee bound to it as used in the Court Martial in Osnabruck, Germany where three British soldiers from the Royal Regiment of Fusiliers are facing charges that they mistreated Iraqis. Corporal Daniel Kenyon, 33, and Lance Corporals Mark Cooley, 25, and Lance Corporal Darren Larkin, 30, are accused of abusing the men at a humanitarian aid camp known as the Bread Basket, near Basra, Iraq, in May, 2003. (AP Photo/British Court Martial/ho) ** FACE BLOCKED BY BRITISH MILITARY CENSORSHIP **

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Sgt. Javal Davis leaves the courthouse with his son, Zaniel, following a day of sentencing hearings in Fort Hood, Texas, Wednesday, Feb. 2, 2005. Davis has pleaded guilty to battery and two other charges in connection with the prisoner abuse scandal at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. Davis' hearing will continue Thursday. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

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Capt. Erik Fessenden of the New Hampshire National Guard's 1st Battalion, 172nd Field Artillery hugs his niece Sydney Fressenden on Wednesday, Feb. 2, 2005, in Manchester, N.H. The 170-member unit returned after serving nearly a year in Iraq as military police. Members spent a few days at Fort Dix, N.J., before returning home. (AP Photo/Jim Cole)

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A U.S. Marine cries during the memorial service for 31 killed U.S. servicemen at Camp Korean Village, near Ar Rutbah, western Iraq, Wednesday, Feb. 2, 2005. Thirty Marines and one sailor died on Jan. 26, 2005 when their helicopter crashed near Rutbah while conducting security operations. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)

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Iraqi women peer into the street as members of the U.S. Army 1st Battalion 161st Regiment Washington State National Guard information operations team talk with local residents of southern Baghdad, Iraq Wednesday, Feb. 2, 2005. (AP Photo/John Moore)

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Mourners gather for the burial service of Iraqi police officer Abdul Ameer Kadhum in Najaf, Iraq Wednesday, Feb. 2, 2005. The police officer was killed when he jumped on a suicide bomber in order to protect voters outside a polling station on Sunday. (AP Photo/Alaa al-Marjani)

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Scouts from the U.S. Army 1st Battalion 161st Regiment Washington State National Guard wait to be towed after they sank into an open sewer in the street while patroling an impoverished neighborhood in southern Baghdad, Iraq Wednesday, Feb. 2, 2005. (AP Photo/John Moore)

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U.S. Army 1st Battalion, 24th Infantry Regiment soldiers read magazines inside their Stryker combat vehicle after a mission in Mosul, Iraq Wednesday, Feb. 2, 2005. With elections complete, the U.S. Army is handing over control of several security outposts to the Iraqi troops in Mosul. (AP Photo/Jim MacMillan)

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U.S. Army 1st Battalion, 24th Infantry Regiment soldiers secure the perimeter while Iraqi soldiers move supplies into an outpost in Mosul, Iraq Wednesday, Feb. 2, 2005. With elections complete, the U.S. Army is handing over control of several security outposts to the Iraqi troops in Mosul. (AP Photo/Jim MacMillan)

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Iraqi soldiers patrol in Mosul, Iraq Wednesday, Feb. 2, 2005. With elections complete, the U.S. Army is handing over control of several security outposts to the Iraqi troops in Mosul. (AP Photo/Jim MacMillan)

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In this picture released by Greenhouse Pictures, Staff Sergeant Chris Corcione with the U.S. 82nd Airborne is seen in Fallujah, Iraq, 2004. Greenhouse Pictures are the producers of the movie "Occupation: Dreamland" which made its debut at the Film Festival in Rotterdam. The film gives a raw and revealing portrait of a squadron of confused American soldiers stationed outside Fallujah, Iraq, amid escalating resistance to the U.S. occupation. After a weekend course in documentary film-making, Salam Pax took to the streets of war-ravaged Iraq. His first movie, "Baghdad Blogger _ Video Reports from Iraq," reveals an emotional cocktail of resentment over the U.S. occupation and joy at the removal of Saddam Hussein. It is among several movies, including Iraq's first feature-length drama since Saddam's fall and a raw documentary on American troops fighting insurgents, to emerge from Iraq's chaos being showcased at the International Film Festival in Rotterdam, one of the world's largest gatherings for independent filmmakers. (AP Photo/Greenhouse Pictures)

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More than 1,400 pairs of boots representing U.S. military personnel killed in Iraq sit on the floor at the Statehouse Convention Center, Tuesday, Feb. 1, 2005, in Little Rock, Ark. The exhibit placed by the American Friends Service Committee runs through Tursday, Feb. 3. (AP Photo/Kathy Hinson)

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This image released by the Rotterdam Film Festival, Tuesday, Feb. 1, 2005 shows a still image from the film "Underexposure" by Oday Rasheed. The first feature film out of Iraq since the fall of Saddam Hussein in March 2003 was shot on Kodak film recovered from the old Ministry of Culture building. Rasheed's movie follows the day-to-day lives of Iraqis amid war and unheaval. (AP Photo/ International Film Festival Rotterdam)

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Darrell Anderson, shown holding a U.S.army ID card in Toronto, Jan.28, 2005, spent seven months in combat in Baghdad, deserted the U.S. Army and fled to Canada after deciding he couldn't return to Iraq. (CP PHOTO/Toronto Sun/Greg Henkenhaf)

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A U.S. Army 1st Battalion, 24th Infantry Regiment soldier peers from his armored vehicle in search of an insurgent sniper who shot and seriously wounded an Iraqi soldier in Mosul, Iraq Tuesday, Feb. 1, 2005. Iraq reopened its borders Tuesday and commercial flights took off from Baghdad International Airport as authorities eased security restrictions imposed to protect last weekend's elections. (AP Photo/Jim MacMillan)

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U.S. Army 1st Battalion, 24th Infantry Regiment soldiers take cover while searching for an insurgent sniper who shot and seriously wounded an Iraqi soldier in Mosul, Iraq Tuesday, Feb. 1, 2005. Iraq reopened its borders Tuesday and commercial flights took off from Baghdad International Airport as authorities eased security restrictions imposed to protect last weekend's elections. (AP Photo/Jim MacMillan)

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A British soldier from the Royal Artillery is on patrol in the oil fields of Rumalia, southern Iraq, Tuesday Feb. 1, 2005. (AP Photo/ Andrew Parsons, Pool)

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Activists protest against the Bush administration and the war in Iraq during the closing rally of the World Social Forum in Porto Alegre, Brazil, Monday, Jan. 31, 2005. (AP Photo/Victor R. Caivano) **EFE OUT**

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An Iraqi woman walks past Iraqi and U.S. Army soldiers during a raid on insurgent targets in Mosul, Iraq Monday, Jan. 31, 2005, one day after national elections. Jubilant Iraqis sifted through ballots Monday, tallying the results of a vote that millions hoped would restore democracy for the first time in a half-century and lead to the departure of 150,000 American troops. (AP Photo/Jim MacMillan)

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Iraqis watch an Iraqi soldier, left, and U.S. Army soldier, right, during a raid on insurgent targets in Mosul, Iraq Monday, Jan. 31, 2005, one day after national elections. Jubilant Iraqis sifted through ballots Monday, tallying the results of a vote that millions hoped would restore democracy for the first time in a half-century and lead to the departure of 150,000 American troops. (AP Photo/Jim MacMillan)

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A picture released by the Italian Army Sunday, Jan. 30, 2005, shows Italian soldiers at a check point on a bridge outside Nasiriyah, Iraq. Iraq stood on the verge of its first free election in a half-century Saturday, its borders and bridges locked down, its hopes on the line. The government urged Iraqis to vote despite their fears of violence. (AP Photo/Italian Army)

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An Iraqi girl is searched by US Marines outside a polling center in the center of Fallujah, Iraq, Sunday, Jan. 30, 2005 to vote in the country's first free election in a half-century. (AP Photo/Mohammed Khodor)

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Disabled Mohammed Karim Khader, 80, is carried on the shoulder of a man on his way to cast his vote in the northern Kurdish city of Suleimaniya Sunday Jan. 30, 2005. Iraqi Kurds flocked to polling stations in northern Iraq to take part in elections they hope will herald a new era for their long-oppressed community.(AP Photo/Patrick Baz, Pool)

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A British soldier from 3 Company Welsh Guards, stands watch with an Iraqi police officer as thousands of Iraqis make a trip on foot to the town of Al Alamara, Iraq, to place their votes Sunday, Jan. 30 2005. Iraqis turned out to vote Sunday in their country's first free election in a half-century, defying insurgents who launched deadly suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling stations. By midday, at least 29 people were dead but the violence had slowed and voting picked up.(AP Photo / Daily Mirror/James Vellacott /Pool)

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Two protesters brace themselves as police try to pull them out of their vehicles to arrest them during a rally in front of the US embassy in Manila on Sunday Jan. 30, 2005. The demonstrators said that the elections in Iraq will not bring stability and security to the country unless the pullout of US presence. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila)

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Arlys Cooke, left, runs to greet her husband Comand Sgt. Maj. Michael Cooke, of the 91st Engineer Batallion, First Cavalry Division, as Lisa McMullen follows behind her Saturday, Jan. 29, 2005, during a welcome home ceremony at Fort Hood, Texas. More than 150 soldiers returned after serving nearly a year with the First Cavalry division and 13 Corps Support Command in Iraq. (AP Photo/Killeen Daily Herald, David Morris)