No! They have had 3 rebreather fatalities but those deaths have not been directly caused by the rebreather.
From the English report [1] "Three fatalities were ultimately reported; these concerned 2 CS students using the OXYGERS 57 who were unable to return to the surface, caught under a barge, during an attack swim and another accident in which an MCD was trapped in a deep wreck with no visibility during a dive using a MIXGERS apparatus. CNS oxygen toxicity for the CS and insuffi cient gas associated with panic for the last decedent were identifi ed as the disabling agents in post-mortem investigations....However, the diving procedures imposed by military regulations (mouthpiece strap, buddy team with link, and diving instructor with open circuit to lend assistance if necessary during training) have greatly limited life-threatening complications, ie, drowning, which are too often recorded in recreational technical diving."
So, back to the question I asked you. How many of the 280 or so rebreather fatalities are down to the rebreather? You can't say all of them because you do not have the evidence...
Regards
[1] Gempp, E., Louge, P., Blatteau, J.E. & Hugon, M., 2011, Descriptive Epidemiology of 153 Diving Injuries With Rebreathers Among French Military Divers From 1979 to 2009, Military medicine, 176(4), pp. 446-50