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Soldier Suicides This Year To Top Those In 2008

PAULINE JELINEK   11/17/09 07:45 PM ET   AP

Soldiers

WASHINGTON — Soldier suicides this year are almost sure to top last year's grim totals, but a recent decline in the pace of such incidents could mean the Army is starting to make progress in stemming them, officials said Tuesday.

Army Vice Chief of Staff General Peter Chiarelli said that as of Monday, 140 active duty soldiers were believed to have died of self-inflicted wounds so far in 2009. That's the same as were confirmed for all of 2008.

"We are almost certainly going to end the year higher than last year ... this is horrible, and I do not want to downplay the significance of these numbers in any way," he said.

But Chiarelli said there has been a tapering off in recent months from large surges in suspected suicides in January and February.

"Our goal since the beginning has been to reduce the overall incidence of suicide and I do believe we are finally beginning to see progress being made," Chiarelli told a Pentagon press conference.

He attributed those hints of progress to some unprecedented efforts the Army has made since February to educate soldiers and leaders about the issue.

Officials are still stumped about what is driving the historically high rates across the military force. When asked whether the rates reflect unprecedented high stress from long and repeated deployments to provide manpower for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, Chiarelli said he didn't know.

"The reality is there is no simple answer," he said. "Each suicide is as unique as the individuals themselves."

The rising suicide rate is not unique to the Army. Marine Corps suicides also are higher again this year – there were 42 reported as of Oct. 31 compared with 42 for all of 2008, 33 in 2007 and 25 in 2006.

Though the two ground forces have borne most of the fighting in the two current wars, both the Army and Marines have found that about a third of the self-inflicted deaths were among troops that had never deployed to the battles.

Chiarelli said that on top of the 140 suicides reported from the active duty Army force, there were another 71 suicides by troops in the National Guard and Reserve.

All of the numbers are preliminary in that investigations into some of the deaths are still ongoing. Of the 140 so far this year among active duty troops, 90 have been confirmed as suicides and 50 are suspected but the probes are not yet finished.

Each year, nearly all suspected suicides are eventually confirmed. For instance in 2008, there were 143 suspected and 140 were eventually confirmed.

Chiarelli said officials will continue to focus on things that are symptoms of high-risk individuals such as undiagnosed brain injuries like concussions; on Post-Traumatic Stress, and on risky behavior such as poor diet and sleep habits as well as more serious behaviors such as drug and alcohol abuse.

The Army widened its suicide prevention in March in an attempt to make rapid improvements. In October, the service introduced its Comprehensive Soldier Fitness program, which Chiarelli called "the biggest step ... taken to enhance wellness in the entire force through prevention rather than treatment."

The program aims to put the same emphasis on mental and emotion strength as the military traditionally has on physical strength. Basic training now includes anti-stress programs as part of a broader effort to help soldiers deal with the aftereffects of combat and prevent suicides.

Also last month, the Army started using a new screening questionnaire to try to determine preexisting or current mental health issues among troops as part of the enlistment process.

Despite those campaigns, another jump in suicide figures for 2009 would make it the fifth straight year that such deaths have set a record within the military. Last year's 140 record erased a high 115 in 2007 and 102 in 2006.

Chiarelli said officials are concerned with increases this year at Fort Campbell, Fort Stewart and Schofield Barracks and are trying to learn why suicides rates are down at Fort Hood, Fort Bragg and Fort Drum.

At Fort Campbell in Kentucky there were 18, while at Fort Bragg, N.C., which has almost double the population, there have been six all year.

Using some bases as examples of the trend downward, Chiarelli said that of the 18 suicides reported this year at Fort Campbell, 11 of those were in the first four months of the year. At Schofield Barracks in Hawaii, there were seven all year so far – five in the first five months of the year and only two since.

The numbers kept by the service branches don't show the whole picture of war-related suicides because they don't include deaths after people have left the military. The Department of Veterans Affairs tracks those numbers and says there were 144 suicides among the nearly 500,000 service members who left the military from 2002-2005 after fighting in at least one of the wars.

The true incidence of suicide among military veterans is not known, according to a report last year by the Congressional Research Service. Based on numbers from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the VA estimates that 18 veterans a day – or 6,500 a year – take their lives, but that number includes vets from all previous wars.

___

On the Net: http://www.army.mil

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04:38 PM on 11/18/2009
This should be the lead story on page one.

But its neatly tucked away inside so nobody gets hurt feelings.
04:12 PM on 11/18/2009
This is tragic, but not surprising­.

The troops in Afghanista­n asked for reinforcem­ents months ago and the wannabe commander-­in-chief is still thinking about it.

Somehow the FIERCE URGENCY OF NOW ended November 5, 2008 and nobody noticed.
05:22 PM on 11/18/2009
I bet you were there in afghanista­n and knew exactly what we needed ... it's ironic a wannabe soldier is labeling someone as a wannabe commander in chief... stop talking like you know the situation over there...
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
jsgaetano
Semper Fidelis Tyrannosaurus!
12:25 PM on 11/18/2009
Even more statistics showing how conservati­ves "support our troops".

With how shamefully conservati­ves have treated our brave military people, it shocks me anyone even listens to what they have to say.

The behavior of conservati­ves toward our troops the last nine years has been nothing short of treasonous­.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tredwell
Behavior Specialist,Family been i
12:13 PM on 11/18/2009
I don't get it. Are we still at war? I thought Nancy Pelosi promised to end it in 2006. Isnt that why she was voted in? Isnt that why the Democrats were given the majority to do thus ? Could they have lied? Nancy what is going on? Why are we still there? If you had the votes topass a very unpopular Health care bill, why are we still dying in Iraq and Afganistan­? Why? Why?
04:09 PM on 11/18/2009
Try this one.

From a videotaped interview, October 27, 2007

OBAMA: I will promise you this, that if we have not gotten our troops out by the time I am president, it is the first thing I will do. I will get our troops home, we will bring an end to this war. You can take that to the bank.
04:13 AM on 11/18/2009
Tragedy.
History is going to judge Bush and all those neocons in his administra­tion harshly about invading Iraq. Cheney, this needs to keep you up at night. Though I somehow beleive it doesn't weigh on him at all.
10:05 AM on 11/18/2009
Don't think so......he­'s too busy counting his$$$$$$$­.
11:38 AM on 11/18/2009
What about Obama? He can end this charade today if he wanted to. These two occupation­s for greed and profit now belong to Obama.
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SolarArray
Get your Health Stamps before they run out!
12:33 AM on 11/18/2009
George Bush, you sleeping ok these days?
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
ProfessorDuh
06:58 AM on 11/18/2009
Sociopaths sleep soundly.
10:33 PM on 11/17/2009
If a soldier wants to talk to someone about a problem it's usually the end of his or her career.
05:27 PM on 11/18/2009
... ? What ?!?!?

I have a lot of friends that went to the doc and found help after deployment­s... non of their careers were affected by their "visits"..­. I don't know where you are getting your informatio­n from...
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04:00 PM on 11/17/2009
Back in 2003 the Army didn't believe soldiers suffered from stress...b­ut they're learning..­.the hard way....
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dfranz
With Liberty and Justice for all
05:44 PM on 11/17/2009
It really sucked in 1970. They wouldn't even talk to you.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
ProfessorDuh
03:50 PM on 11/17/2009
I understand there's a wonderful new positive trend hidden within the increasing number of military suicides.
The disgusting PR spin-docto­ring of the news makes me puke. Maybe there's a positive trend hidden in the vomit.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RickCoMatic
End WAR Spending! Rebuild AMERICA!
03:28 PM on 11/17/2009
The "Volunteer G.I.'s" are supposed to be protecting The United States. Not sent to God-forsak­en places and be in harms way 24/7/365.
We are engaged in two wars. Far beyond the capability of just those who answered the call to Duty for a few years to earn College tuition.
When we have needed manpower at the levels demanded to sustain being engaged in these conflicts like these for such extended time; the Draft Boards sent-out letters and enlisted men to provide enough Troops that multiple tours on the Front Lines weren't mandatory.
We NEED the Draft Boards OPENED.
We NEED these wars to be waged by the WHOLE Country.
Once we bring the Armed Forces to full strength by enlisting those who are letting Volunteers carry their slack; demonstrat­ions will begin. Exit strategies will get formulated and the Troops will no longer need to take their own lives to show us that they have had all they can endure.
I rise and make the Motion for Congress to Reinstate Selective Service Enlistment­s immmediate­ly.
Will somebody please Second my Motion!
If we cannot have Health Care. We can at the very least do something to end our Troops killing themselves to escape form being indentured mercenarie­s needing to end their lives by their own hands to end being forced to wage a war their Country does not genuinely support!
03:40 PM on 11/17/2009
We need to take the profit out of war. If there were no profit, there would be no wars.
03:53 PM on 11/17/2009
It would help if President Obama hadn't named a VP and lobbyist for Raytheon to Deputy Secretary of State. What do you think this guy, William Lynn, will be pushing for? Why do you think Obama just HAD to escalate Afghanista­n into a full-blown quagmire?

Now our soldiers are in harm's way in Afghanista­n while Obama pharts around making a decision--­that is, when he doesn't drop everything to jet off on a vanity trip to Asia.

Troops who have had multiple TODs will have minds that have been forever changed. We will be looking at a future where our society is loaded with psychotic veterans. And we, as a society, will have to take care of their families when they cannot.
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Chopin
Multiply the truth. Speak truth through power.
09:45 PM on 11/17/2009
"We need to take profit out of war. . . . no profit, no war!" That's self-evide­nt truth, to truth seekers.

Stripped to their essential core element, wars are waged to plunder. Throw in all the high sounding words and catch phrases, the essential nature of wars remains the same. Nation A invades nation B to plunder its resources and wealth. Nation B fights back, to protect its people, to defend its resources and wealth, with all it's got. Mark this --- to launch an invasion into another people's land and home, Nation A needs little more than people who can shoot, and would risk getting killed. For the people of Nation B, it's a whole different story and entirely different perspectiv­e.

In the long run, Nation A breeds a people of insensitiv­ity to humanity, other people's or their own. Whether a nation of habitual invaders and occupiers recruits its soldiers by public conscripti­on or private mercenary auctions is of little real consequenc­e. The deed is foul.

Is it any wonder the incidence of PTSS (diagnosed­+undiagnos­ed) and suicides among American soldiers+r­eturning vets in invasion and endless occupation of Iraq and Afghanista­n has skyrockete­d? . . . I still encounter on daily basis VietnamWar vets among displaced and lost men roaming street corners in my city, and byextensio­n in metropolit­an cities across USA, 30+YEARS AFTER VIETNAMWAR HAD ENDED, but not for them. The longterm tragic legacy of wars+occup­ations of Iraq+Afgha­nistan will linger for 3-4 decades to come, right here in USA.
03:21 PM on 11/17/2009
Gives a new meaning to the term 'Die for your country', doesn't it?
02:56 PM on 11/17/2009
Until we vote out and purge out all these war mongers who profit from war, nothing will change.
03:54 PM on 11/17/2009
When Obama is appoining them to key decision-m­aking positions in his administra­tion, the problem is the one doing the appointing­.
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02:21 PM on 11/17/2009
Multiple, mandatory deployment­s with no end in sight. A government opposed to reinstitut­ing a draft because doing so would bring the wrath of the American people down on politician­s involved in jobs of perceived power with a provision of celebrity.­The military can establish all the programs it wants, but if the abuse of troops doesn't stop, neither will the tragedy of men and women taking their own lives.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
MikeDu
Both salubrious and lugubrious concurrently.
01:48 PM on 11/17/2009
Representa­tive Burr's trying now to make sure every mentally unstabile PTSD suffer will have access to a handgun.
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dfranz
With Liberty and Justice for all
01:46 PM on 11/17/2009
The stress of combat and multiple deployment­s on soldiers is incalculab­le and not understood by people who have never been there.

I know the toll that the war and it's residue took on the psyche of soldiers who returned from Viet nam. Within 5 years of that war ending 3 times as many soldiers had died of suicide than were killed in combat. As a combat vet myself with many vet friends, I don't personally don't know a Viet Nam vet who has not been divorced at least once. It makes no difference if the soldiers are volunteers or draftees, all are affected.

War takes a terrible toll on human beings. That is why war should be the course of last resort, not the method of choice.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Gidster
Not so much Liberal as I am anti evil.
02:11 PM on 11/17/2009
Very well said.
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dfranz
With Liberty and Justice for all
02:15 PM on 11/17/2009
Airborne!
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luvobama
Hospice volunteer...
02:26 PM on 11/17/2009
Fanned. Nice comment. This is a tragic situation.