The Pentagon revised its official wounded count to 365, up from 303 . The Intercept's investigation, based on hospital admissions, medevac records, and unnamed officials, put the figure at 520 or more. The revised number closes the gap slightly but remains roughly 30% below the independent estimate. Neither figure includes casualties from the 3 April F-15E and A-10 incidents. The real total is likely above 540. 1

Pentagon revises US wounded count to 365
The official count rose by 62 but remains 30% below The Intercept's independent estimate of 520 or more.
Official casualty figures remain 30% below independent estimates, excluding 3 April losses.
Deep Analysis
The US military's official wounded count rose from 303 to 365. But an independent investigation by The Intercept, using hospital records and Pentagon sources, estimated the real figure is 520 or more. Neither number includes the new casualties from 3 April's aircraft losses. Congress is being asked to approve $200 billion for this war based on data that the Pentagon's own sources say is incomplete by at least 30%.
- Consequence
Congress votes on war funding using official casualty data that independent sources place 30% too low, undermining the political basis for the $200 billion supplemental.
- Risk
Earlier casualty data showed 75% or more of wounded suffered traumatic brain injuries (ID:1690), a figure still absent from official reporting and likely to become a political liability.