Baghdad, Iraq (CNN) -- The U.S. military Sunday disputed Iraqi figures that indicated July was the deadliest month for civilians there since May 2008, saying the actual numbers are less than half what leaked internal Iraqi government figures show.
The U.S. command in Baghdad "refutes that 535 people were killed in Iraq during the month of July," the military said in a statement. It put the total number of people killed by "enemy action" at 222, including 161 civilians -- the ninth-lowest civilian casualty count since January 2008, according to the U.S. military.
Iraqi data leaked to the press Saturday reported 396 civilians, 50 Iraqi soldiers and 89 police officers were killed in July. Iraqi officials also said 100 so-called "terrorists" were killed, and 955 others were detained.
The reported number of civilian deaths was nearly double that of June, when 204 civilians were killed, according to Iraq. It's the highest monthly death toll for civilians since June 2008, according to Iraqi government figures.
The dispute over the numbers comes against the backdrop of the ongoing U.S. drawdown, with the aim of having troop levels at or below 50,000 by September 1. The U.S. military believes that the Iraqi security forces can maintain the current levels of relative stability, but that sentiment is not shared by many Iraqis.
CNN