Somehow, though, ISIS’s “overall force” is the same size as it was when the U.S. air campaign expanded into Syria over a year ago, per the same official who gave USA Today the updated casualty figures this week. ISIS is famously adept at recruiting foreign fighters, but Long War Journal’s Thomas Joscelyn was skeptical that recruitment could account for those numbers.

1. US mil officer says 20,000 ISIS members killed, but overall force remains 20-30k, same as when bombings began. http://t.co/VeCyQ82Zd6 — Thomas Joscelyn (@thomasjoscelyn) October 14, 2015

2. So, if you believe that, then ISIS has replaced anywhere between 67% and 100% of its ranks since US-led bombing campaign began last year. — Thomas Joscelyn (@thomasjoscelyn) October 14, 2015

3. Far more likely, as we've argued from beginning: the total # of ISIS fighters was drastically underestimated in the initial assessments. — Thomas Joscelyn (@thomasjoscelyn) October 14, 2015

One reason to tally the number of enemy fighters killed is to know what the U.S. military and its allies are up against. Early on in the Iraq War, the U.S. military maintained that it wasn’t keeping track at all—“American officers have learned,” The Times reported at the time, “that no figures are vastly better than bad figures.” But the practice started creeping back in Iraq 10 years ago, in what The Washington Post called “an ad hoc process ... with authority to issue death tolls pushed out to the field and down to the level of division staffs,” usually after major operations.

And it’s easy to see why, today, the number of dead enemy combatants might seem appealing as a tangible, relatively precise metric in a war where the battle over territory looks stalemated and “defeating the ideology” that motivates ISIS appears a long way off. What else is there to point to as the product of billions spent on bombing raids in Iraq and Syria?

Still, the body-count estimates themselves are fuzzy­­—not least because in this aerial campaign, there are very few people on the ground to count casualties. As Nancy Youssef of The Daily Beast has pointed out:

At the peak of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, U.S. ground troops were essential in not only determining targets, but then assessing the damage. In this war, the targeting is often happening on computer monitors thousands of miles away, capturing images from drones. The assessment of the strikes comes in real-time video from the aircraft. And Air Force assessors are the first to say such imaging never tells the whole story.

Kirby put this more colorfully in January: “We don't have the ability to—to count every nose that we shwack.”

The larger issue is the inherent difficulty of measuring the success of America’s Operation Inherent Resolve against ISIS. What are the appropriate increments of progress toward the goal President Barack Obama laid out to “degrade and ultimately destroy ISIS”? Youssef again:

... [Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Martin] Dempsey and others have repeatedly said ISIS cannot be defeated militarily. So however detailed the statistics of the battlefield are, they cannot achieve the goal. If thousands of tanks are destroyed, for example, and ISIS can still successfully draw fighters from around the world, the numbers don’t matter.

And if the United States can’t know when it has won—or lost—it can’t know when the killing will stop. Nor, apparently, exactly how much it has already done.