John Russell's Father: Army "Broke" Him

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SCHUYLER DIXON | May 13, 2009 06:13 AM EST | AP

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Wilburn C. Russell, 73, wipes his eyes after talking to reporters in front of the house his son U.S. Army Sgt. John Russell purchased in Sherman, Texas, Tuesday, May 12, 2009. Russell's son is accused of killing five fellow troops at their base in Iraq. (AP Photo/LM Otero)

SHERMAN, Texas — The father of a U.S. soldier accused of killing five fellow troops in Iraq said his son "forfeited his life" but the military bears some responsibility for the rampage.

Wilburn Russell said Tuesday that 44-year-old Army Sgt. John M. Russell wasn't typically a violent person, but counselors "broke" him before gunfire erupted in a military stress center Monday in Baghdad.

"John has forfeited his life. Apparently, he said (to his wife), 'My life is over. To hell with it. I'm going to get even with 'em,'" said the elder Russell, 73.

His father said the younger Russell, an electronics technician, was at the stress center to transfer out of active duty. He said his son was undergoing stressful mental tests that he didn't understand were merely tests, "so they broke him."

"I hate what that boy did," said the elder Russell, speaking in front of the two-story house his son was buying with his German wife in a new subdivision. "We're sorry for the families, too. It shouldn't have happened."

Excerpts of his military record, obtained by The Associated Press, show Sgt. Russell previously did two one-year tours of duty in Iraq, one starting in April 2003 and another in November 2005. The stress of repeat and extended tours is considered a main contributor to mental health problems among troops serving in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Sgt. Russell, who is facing charges of murder and aggravated assault, was about six weeks from the end of his third tour of duty in Iraq, his father said. Wilburn Russell said his son e-mailed his wife in Germany early this month, telling her officers threatened him during what he called the two worst days of his life.

"His life was over as far as he was concerned," said the elder Russell, who didn't know whether his son was being disciplined or facing a discharge. "He loved the military."

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The soldier's son, John M. Russell II, said he has communicated with his father by e-mail regularly. In the last message he received _ April 25, the day after his 20th birthday _ the younger Russell said his father sounded normal and planned to be back in Texas to visit in July.

"He's not a violent person," the son said. "He's just a loving, caring guy. He doesn't like to see anyone get hurt. For this to happen, it had to be something going on that the Army's not telling us about."

Sgt. Russell grew up in a rural, unincorporated area of Grayson County and graduated from Tom Bean High School in 1985. Records show he entered the Army National Guard in 1988 and served in the Guard until 1994, when he became an active duty soldier. His military record shows Russell served in Serbia through the last half of 1996 and Bosnia and Herzegovina in the last half of 1998.

He lives with his wife in Germany, where he's been for most of the past 10 to 15 years, but comes home a couple times a year, his father said.

The elder Russell said his son went active-duty after working various maintenance jobs around Sherman, a town of about 35,000 located about 60 miles north of Dallas. He'd also had a divorce and a few minor criminal scrapes in his hometown before enlisting.

When Russell's ex-wife sued for divorce in 1991, she obtained a temporary restraining order against him and an order withholding earnings for child support.

In an affidavit attached to the divorce petition, Denise Russell said her husband had committed "acts of family violence" and should be barred from coming within 200 yards of her or their son, then 2 years old. The document specifically cited an incident in which John Russell allegedly took the child after a confrontation with Denise Russell's mother.

"During this time, respondent physically attacked my mother, age 58, hitting her on the shoulders and about the head," the affidavit stated.

A call and visit to Russell's ex-wife weren't answered Tuesday.

In 1993, a month after the divorce decree was issued, Russell was charged with misdemeanor assault by threats, Grayson County online records show. The matter was later dropped.

Jack McGowen, listed as Russell's attorney for the divorce as well as the threat case, said Tuesday he couldn't recall either matter.

___

Associated Press Writers Danny Robbins and Jeff Carlton in Dallas, Pauline Jelinek in Washington and AP researcher Rhonda Shafner contributed to this report.

SHERMAN, Texas — The father of a U.S. soldier accused of killing five fellow troops in Iraq said his son "forfeited his life" but the military bears some responsibility for the rampage. Wilburn...
SHERMAN, Texas — The father of a U.S. soldier accused of killing five fellow troops in Iraq said his son "forfeited his life" but the military bears some responsibility for the rampage. Wilburn...
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- nivek I'm a Fan of nivek 4 fans permalink
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How can an act like this come as a surprise to anyone? Not to single out this individual, but as a culture we have been terrorized, murdered, and terrorized some more. People, we are not well out there across America. Families are falling apart and are financially devastated by long over-seas deployments. Imagine how our warriors must feel, under constant pressure, mortal danger, and the expectations placed on them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:53 AM on 05/14/2009
- Flavor I'm a Fan of Flavor 67 fans permalink

Right On, nivek, if we don't watch it we will be treating these soldiers just like they did the vietnamese soldiers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:01 AM on 05/14/2009
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This man was trained to solve problems with violence. I don't understand why he's in trouble for killing people, wasn't this exactly the response that was expected from him?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:14 AM on 05/14/2009
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Big tough BIG GUN TOTing macho man wasn't man enough to admit he had a problem.

And our armed services created him!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:17 PM on 05/13/2009
- ttyy I'm a Fan of ttyy 6 fans permalink

I feel bad for him, BUT blaming the victims is vulgar, nasty and 100% wrong. His son was mentally ill and I doubt that even a slight percent of his paranoid claims he made were based in fact.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:03 PM on 05/13/2009
- AmandaBC I'm a Fan of AmandaBC 569 fans permalink
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He's blaming the Army, not the victims. He makes very good points. The American military is very much out of control.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:17 PM on 05/13/2009
- sloreader I'm a Fan of sloreader 17 fans permalink

Dad is traumatized and in pain, cut him some slack for a few weeks at least.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:27 PM on 05/13/2009

The military is like a fan:
Stand in front of it and it blows
Stand behind it and it sucks
Stand beside it and it doesn't do a f***ing thing for you.

There is no place in the military for thinking people...only people that can blindly obey.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:09 PM on 05/13/2009
- robXdion I'm a Fan of robXdion 185 fans permalink
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WOW!!! Such a very, very, apt analogy. Took me over 10 years in the Marines to get that one. And they chew up their people the worst. Even Colin Powell is proof of that truth. Smart as he is and he was still blindly obeying up until recently.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:31 AM on 05/14/2009
- Flavor I'm a Fan of Flavor 67 fans permalink

Sunzen, I agree with you, when these troops come home they don't want to hear who fault it was they were at war, they could care less they want our support. Some will come back messed up in their thinking and let alone the loss of limbs, they left to serve and they did a great job. It is our duty to respect them and honor them and make sure that things are in place for mental help for the soldier and his family. The vietnamese soldiers were treated like crap when they came home and I think they need to give them that are alive the right welcome home celebration they deserve. What this one man did the other day was a tragedy but if we don't help the others we will see more of this, they have seen a lot and been thru a lot and they are not gonna want to hear the blame game.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:54 PM on 05/13/2009
- sunzen I'm a Fan of sunzen 4 fans permalink
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Bush Cheney and the rest of you Chicken Hawks and all people like you out there deserve to be held responsible for all of these needless killings and deaths all over the world! From the fire bombings of all Civilian areas in the major cities in japan to korea to vietnam, laos, cambodia, to iraq to afghanistan to iraq again...when does the killing and destruction end...Are we all stuck in a repeating nightmare???

People stop killing people...Big War Big Business stop killing poor brown, yellow people stop killing all people...we dont need robotic planes killing people we dont need high tech killing machines...stop the madness!!! Enough is enough!!! For a so called Christian Country we sure do our share of death and destruction...End it!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:28 PM on 05/13/2009
- mjtaylor22 I'm a Fan of mjtaylor22 38 fans permalink
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just imagine that but the time these wars are feasible able to come to an end,
we will a good 200,000 soldiers that experienced the most harsh and hateful conditions one could imagine, and to top it all off they would have probably served multiple extended duties,a nd witht he Bush Admin seeking to suppress Post traumatic stress Disorder, how many will continue to go untreated and be put right back in regular society with little or no support.

gotta get them the support needed for transition back to regular society
or the mental stresses of these elongated wars will spill all over our cities and rural areas like a plague.
our antion will be scarred for generations by the Devistation of the Bush/Cheney Administration

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:22 PM on 05/13/2009
- sunzen I'm a Fan of sunzen 4 fans permalink
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These soldiers are returning to this country damaged. Are we going to help them or let them suffer like we did with all the other wars? There is a fate worse than dying.

The Army culture is mentally ill!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:20 PM on 05/13/2009
- Palemoon I'm a Fan of Palemoon 166 fans permalink
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End the war NOW! We never had any business going there, we have no business staying 1 minute longer. The only thing Iraq accomplished in destroying, was our economy, our military, our image around the world, in effect, destroying our country.

The only good thing that this war exposed, was just how many incompetent fools we have in DC and the Pentagon. Never before in my life, nor reading all of the annals of history, have I seen such irrational, irresponsible behaviour by a segment of any society that can be called "leaders". They are not leaders, they are charlatans.

And where are all of the "support our troops" people now? When our troops need you the most, you are nowhere to be seen. You stand by and let them be sent for tour after tour to a cesspool. You stand by and allow them to live in squalid conditions in what is supposed to be our finest VA hospital. You stand by and allow politicians to close VA hospitals, War Veterans Homes, cut and deny them benefits, deny those who gave the ultimate sacrifice, any memorials when they come home for the last time.

Where, oh where, is the real support for our troops?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:55 PM on 05/13/2009
- research I'm a Fan of research 257 fans permalink

Army attitude toward stress a factor in suicides? (homicides?)

http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4188/is_20051012/ai_n15709011/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:15 PM on 05/13/2009
- tydicea I'm a Fan of tydicea 9 fans permalink
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When I was in the military as an enlisted man, a person of superior rank could do whatever they felt like to you short of hitting you, and even that was often not out of bounds. I have no idea what happened to that soldier to push him over the edge but I will say this, he didn't get there by himself. First thing people should be asking is the rightness of making anyone do (3) combat tours......

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:25 PM on 05/13/2009
- fbr79 I'm a Fan of fbr79 12 fans permalink
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I guess you were in the military quite a long time ago. I am an NCO in the AF and I was an NCO in the Army for years and believe me, you cannot do whatever you feel like to a soldier or an airman. There is plenty of help available from other NCOs, Soldiers, Mental Health Professionals, Medical professionals, Chaplains and Officers with open door policy. His own father said that he was the type of person who would not ask for help even if he knew he needed it. Some people just keep everything inside and end up exploding harming themselves and others. I would like to know more details about his situation. I know people who have done 4 or 5 tours who are not about to go on a killing spree. Most people who go to Iraq and Afghanistan are support personnel, not Infantrymen. We go through the stress of being in a warzone and we might experience situations of danger at times. However, we are not in the line of fire in a daily or even a weekly basis. The most danger a support person goes through is usually while entering or leaving the area. I see absolutely nothing wrong with 3 combat tours, I'm sure he had his year at home between them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:52 PM on 05/13/2009
- tydicea I'm a Fan of tydicea 9 fans permalink
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I hear what you are saying, and yes I was on active duty 30 yrs ago. I do disagree with one thing though, I won't argue that for some people 3, 4, or even 5 combat tours may have no or marginal effect. But clearly, we are not all equal and there will be people that even 1 combat tour is one too many. Good luck to you, and all who continue to serve.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:23 PM on 05/13/2009
- sneez54 I'm a Fan of sneez54 8 fans permalink

Mr. Russell,
I feel for you. I have an uncle that "broke" during Vietnam.
Please make sure Bush/Chene­y/Condi/Ru­msfield get a letter from you.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:19 PM on 05/13/2009
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When I was a plebe at the Us Naval Academy, I tortured a man. It was part of the program.

Any questions?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:43 PM on 05/13/2009

Lots of questions. Let's start with two: Are you ashamed? If not, what in the hell is wrong with you?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:26 PM on 05/13/2009
- AnnArky I'm a Fan of AnnArky 35 fans permalink
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and your point is?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:59 PM on 05/13/2009
- sunzen I'm a Fan of sunzen 4 fans permalink
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They encourage dehumanizing behavior to desensitize our best and brightest to kill other human beings...how about that point?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:33 PM on 05/13/2009

There have been hundred of thousands of soldiers in and out of Iraq since 2003. I'm actually surprised this hasn't happened more often...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:38 PM on 05/13/2009
- mjtaylor22 I'm a Fan of mjtaylor22 38 fans permalink
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prob has, the bush admin did not allow the media to report on things though
remember

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:24 PM on 05/13/2009
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