Share

Army Reports Alarming Spike in Suicides Last Month

by: Pauline Jelinek  |  The Associated Press

photo
Jason Scheuerman's parents hold his photograph. Jason committed suicide in Iraq. (Photo: AP)

    Washington - The Army is investigating an unexplained and stunning spike in suicides in January. The count is likely to surpass the number of combat deaths reported last month by all branches of the armed forces in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere in the fight against terrorism.

    "In January, we lost more soldiers to suicide than to al-Qaida," said Paul Rieckhoff, director of the Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America. He urged "bold and immediate action" by the departments of Defense and Veterans Affairs.

    According to figures obtained by The Associated Press, there were seven confirmed suicides last month, compared with five a year earlier. An additional 17 cases from January are under investigation.

    There was no detailed breakdown available for January, such as the percentage of suicides that occurred in Iraq and Afghanistan or information about the dead. But just one base - Fort Campbell in Kentucky - reported that four soldiers killed themselves near the installation, where 14,000 soldiers from the two war have returned from duty since October.

    Some Fort Campbell soldiers have done three or four tours of duty in the wars. "They come back and they really need to be in a supportive environment," said Dr. Bret Logan, a commander at the base's Blanchfield Army Community Hospital. "They really need to be nourished back to normalcy because they have been in a very extreme experience that makes them vulnerable to all kinds of problems."

    Officials said they did not know what caused the rise in suicides last month and that it often takes time to fully investigate a number of the deaths. "There is no way to know - we have not identified any particular problem," said Lt. Col. Mike Moose, a spokesman for Army personnel issues.

    Yearly suicides have risen steadily since 2004 amid increasing stress on the force from long and repeated tours of duty in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    The service has rarely, if ever, released a month-by-month update on suicides. But officials said Thursday they wanted to re-emphasize "the urgency and seriousness necessary for preventive action at all levels" of the force.

    The seven confirmed suicides and 17 other suspected suicides in January were far above the toll for most months. Self-inflicted deaths were at 12 or fewer for each of nine months in 2008, Army data showed. The highest monthly number last year was 14 in August.

    Usually the vast majority of suspected suicides are eventually confirmed. If that holds true, it would mean that self-inflicted deaths in January surpassed the 16 combat deaths reported last month in all branches of the armed forces in Iraq, Afghanistan and other nations considered part of the global fight against terrorism.

    Army leaders took the unusual step of briefing congressional leaders on the information Thursday.

    An annual report last week showed that soldiers killed themselves at the highest rate on record in 2008. The toll for all of last year - 128 confirmed and 15 pending investigation - was an increase for the fourth straight year. It even surpassed the civilian rate adjusted to reflect the age and gender differences in the military.

    "The trend and trajectory seen in January further heightens the seriousness and urgency that all of us must have in preventing suicides," Gen. Peter Chiarelli, the Army's vice chief of staff, said Thursday.

    The other services did not immediately provide information on their suicide figures for January. But the Army in the past few years has posted a consistently higher rate of suicides than the Navy, Air Force and Marines as it has carried the largest burden of the two largely ground wars.

    In announcing the 2008 figures last week, the Army said it would hold special training from Feb. 15 to March 15 to help troops recognize suicidal behaviors and to intervene if they see such behavior in a buddy. After that, the Army also plans a suicide prevention program for all soldiers from the top of the chain of command down.

    Yearly increases in suicides have been recorded since 2004, when there were 64 all year. Officials have said over the years that they found that the most common factors were soldiers suffering problems with their personal relationships, legal or financial issues and problems on the job.

    But Army Secretary Pete Geren acknowledged last week that officials have been stumped by the spiraling number of cases.

    The relentless rise in suicides has frustrated the service, which has tried to address the issue through additional suicide prevention training, the hiring of more psychiatrists and other mental health staff, and other programs both at home and at the battlefront for troops and their families.

    In October, the Army and the National Institute of Mental Health signed an agreement to do a five-year study to identify factors affecting the mental and behavioral health of soldiers and come up with intervention strategies at intervals along the way.

    ---------

    Associated Press writer Kristin M. Hall in Nashville, Tenn., contributed to this report.

  

»


Comments

This is a moderated forum.  It may take a little while for comments to go live. Be civil and on-topic, don't threaten or advocate violence, please keep it under 300 words. Thanks for participating.

Just get those kids out of

Just get those kids out of there and stay out of where we shouldn't be. If they want to emulate the Roman empire then send the leaders out to fight as the Romans did. "Bundle" the"military/industrial/political complex" leaders together and parachute them into Afghanistan.

Maybe the grim reality that

Maybe the grim reality that Obama is elevating the war in Afghanistan has closed off hope that soldiers will ever get out of the Middle East. So disappointment with expectations inspired by his victory has made them feel they have no other way out.

This is bound to happen when

This is bound to happen when you send soldiers into hell. On their return from hell, they are not given proper mental health evaluations and health care just generally sucks back in the U.S. Until these senseless wars end, expect bad news from the depths of hell. Let's hold those responsible for creating this hell to account.

Perhaps the best course of

Perhaps the best course of action would to be to stop having American soldiers act in ways that are against what it is supposed to mean to be an American. Perhaps the bulk of these suicides are the result of 'crisis of faith' when they discover that the majority of the risk they take and damage they do is for corporate and political greed. Perhaps the best prevention to armed force suicides would be to never ask them to fight in a war that is morally bankrupt. Perhaps. . . .

I couldn't agree more with

I couldn't agree more with previous posts. Solders knowing they are in an unjust war, seeing the killing and maiming of innocent civilians, being re-deployed multiple times, knowing the American people are no longer behind their efforts, away from their loved ones for months if not years; it has to mentally and emotionally devastating. Its a way out. Not a viable one, but still a way.

88 months fighting a phony

88 months fighting a phony war in Afghanistan . . . Suicide in this context is a warning to us all: these soldiers are like the canary in the mine filled with explosive gas. These citizen-soldiers carry the psychological burden of having joined for all the right reasons (patriotism, idealism, American values), only to discover they serve evil, do evil. They witness first hand what the rest of us understand primarily on an intellectual basis. And in many cases, these soldiers are trapped: no option but another tour overseas, and no hope for a job at home. Despair replaces hope; suicide becomes the only way out. As a previous post pointed out, the answer is not hand-wringing by Army officials and 5-year psychological studies, the answer is to get the hell out of the "mine" . . . to stop doing evil in countries where we have no business being, and where we are not invited. Our imperialism overseas is form of group evil for which every citizen bears responsibility. As long as we buy into the propoganda (that we are speading democracy & freedom) of the ruling class, until we reject the corporatocracy that controls our mass media, this evil will continue and soldier suicides will increase.

War and the backlash of

War and the backlash of pain, to take one’s own life… An epidemic realized. Save a Stare Fish is a non for profit to look up. Why are there so many suicides? I just finished a book everyone should read, War Is a Force That Gives Us Meaning, written by Chris Hedges. In this book offered up by a 15 year journalist who traveled around the globe covering the violent conflicts of the last century, eye opening, chilling and ho so sad that we as a “civilization” sit in wonder about why…READ THIS BOOK, you will not ask why, it will give a good window, a review, a perspective of the challenges the soldiers the warriors of our modern day system and why our boys are killing themselves. It is ugly, painful and hard to digest and it makes sense if you look at the culture of violence mechanized war has become. Then I invite you to look up the Department of Peace and the peace conference taking place in March 2009. We can think of different ways to use our brilliant boys to protect our collective soil. We can invest in the health and well being of the warrior and put them to needed use in the current climate change of our fast moving globalization. The heart of the warrior, strong and needed, however the war games we are now playing are not serving the warrior or the nation.

Everyone has good points:

Everyone has good points: war is hell; this is not a war we should be in if there ever was; killing innocent civilians and risking your life for greedy "corp-gov." is demoralizing; President Obama and congress appear to be ramping up corp-gov's war rather than pulling back as many had (naively) hoped they would; health care (especially mental health care) for returning vets is mostly soul-less pill pushing (more "corp-gov"). Add to this: multiple toxic environmental exposures (depleted uranium being one of the worst), probable exposure to untested experimental vaccines, high incidence of head injury and limb loss, stratispheric stress, and the anticipation of coming home, if ever, to your country in total "recession" (depression). What is so mysterious about ever increasing suicide rates???

Even more deaths

Even more deaths attributable to the crimes of the Bush administration. What a waste of human life. He and Cheney should be turned over to the Hague.

No soldier in the history of

No soldier in the history of this country has had to fight on a daily basis with no relief for a period of two years, then go home for a couple months, and then return to fight again on a daily basis for another year or two. And now with Obama taking troops out of Iraq to place them in Afghanistan because as bad as things are in Iraq they are even worse in Afghanistan. How would anyone feel when subjected to an endless war and knowing their next deployment will be in a even more hostile environment. The government has stated that it can and will, and it has, extended tours of duty indefinitely, refused to discharge people whose years of service have been reached, leaving only one way out, suicide. And the people driving the war have never served in uniform and have none of their sons or daughter at risk.

I wonder if these suicides

I wonder if these suicides in January count those of soldiers on leave or those who have finished basic training and are waiting for orders to deploy. If so then there should be 8 suicides. On January 11 a soldier waiting to be deployed hung himself from a tree in his back yard in A/nasco, Puerto Rico.