81% military conflicts in the world initiated by US between 1945 to 2001
201 out of 248 armed conflicts that occurred in 153 regions across the world from 1945 to 2001, were initiated by the US
China's
human rights group in a report blamed the US for repeatedly waging wars in
foreign lands under the banner of "humanitarian intervention," and
added that from the end of World War II to 2001, it has "initiated 81% of
armed conflicts in the world."
In a report,
"Severe humanitarian disasters caused by US aggressive wars against
foreign countries," the China Society for Human Rights Studies (CSHRS)
said that the US foreign wars have "caused massive loss of military lives,
serious civilian casualties as well as property damage, leading to horrific
humanitarian disasters."
"The
selfishness and hypocrisy of the United States have also been fully exposed
through these foreign wars," the report alleged.
It is one of
several such reports released by Beijing in recent times amid tensions with
Washington.
The report
mapped wars in Korea, Vietnam, Gulf, Kosovo, Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria where
the US was directly involved and "caused enormous humanitarian
tragedies."
From the end
of WWII in 1945 to 2001, said the report, "among the 248-armed conflicts
that occurred in 153 regions of the world, 201 were initiated by the US,
accounting for 81% of the total number."
"Most
of the wars of aggression waged by the US have been unilateralist actions, and
some of these wars were even opposed by its own allies... The selfishness and
hypocrisy of the US have also been fully exposed through these foreign
wars," it said.
According to
the report, Washington intervened "directly or indirectly in other
countries' affairs by supporting proxy wars, inciting anti-government
insurgencies, carrying out assassinations, providing weapons and ammunition,
and training anti-government armed forces, which have caused serious harm to
the social stability and public security of the relevant countries."
"These
wars have directly led to humanitarian disasters in the war-affected countries,
such as personnel casualties, damage to facilities, production stagnation, and
especially unnecessary civilian casualties," it said.
"In the
war-affected areas, people died in their homes, markets, and streets, they were
killed by bombs, bullets, improvised explosive devices, and drones, and they
lost their lives during airstrikes launched by the US forces, raids launched by
their government forces, terrorist and extremist massacres, and domestic
riots," it added.
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