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Army Suicides Reach One a Day; Epidemic Spreads to National Guard and Reserves
Thursday, July 29, 2010
Army Suicides Reach One a Day; Epidemic Spreads to National Guard and Reserves

The U.S. Army, along with the National Guard and Army Reserves, averaged a suicide a day in June, making what already was a bad year even worse.

 
Thirty-two soldiers, including 11 in the Guard and Reserve, killed themselves last month, a rate of suicide not seen since the Vietnam War. Seven of the suicides took place I Iraq or Afghanistan.
 
During the first six months of 2010, 65 members of the Guard and Reserve took their own lives, compared with 42 for the same period in 2009.
 
Although the strain of multiple deployments is often cited as a major cause in the rise in military suicides, this is only occasionally a factor in National Guard and Reserves cases. Some observers feel that the military suffers from a drastic shortage of mental health professionals.
-Noel Brinkerhoff, David Wallechinsky
 
National Guard and Reserve Suicide Rates Climbing (by David Goldstein, McClatchy Newspapers)
Pentagon Begins Massive Suicide Study (by Jamie Mei Cheng, AllGov)
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Comments  
Seamus MacNemi - 8/2/2010 2:27:30 AM              
The ideas of good and bad that we meet in peace time in civilian life do not apply in the same way in combat. One must be willing to take any option that offers tactical advantage. You do not always have to shoot to kill. Some times it is far more advantageous to shoot to wound and incapacitate an enemy. If an enemy hides behind a civilian such as a child then you can shoot out his legs and drop him creating an additional burden for his forces because then his comrads will be tasked to rescue him or risk his being captured. Either way the enemy's forces are diminished increasing your own potential for success.

sanjib sinha - 8/1/2010 7:31:19 AM              
Stop US imperialist war worldwide ! Stop Nato ! Join our world communist group ! http://groups.yahoo.com/group/communist_news/

Daniel - 7/31/2010 10:45:41 AM              
The Pentagon report has actually statistically shown that soldiers with fewer deployments are more at risk than those who have been deployed numerous times. It looks more like domestic problems started by disregard for consequences of criminal activity compounded by the stress of the military lifestyle and a lack of discipline from the victim's commanding officer is to blame for the suicides than is guilt at heinous acts of war. If you don't believe me, I recommend you watch this video and come to your own conclusion: http://tinyurl.com/28g4jcd However, I will also say this explains how the same trend could be happening in the National Guard and Reserves. It is fairly clear as well whether you're in the "guilt trip" camp or the "domestic problems" camp that there is an absence of leadership among the CO's. There are stories of CO's not even knowing their own people committed suicide until three or four weeks after the fact.

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