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Army suicides: Poor leadership, not repeat deployments blamed

 
 
Reply Fri 30 Jul, 2010 09:39 am
July 29, 2010
Army suicides: Poor leadership, not repeat deployments blamed
By Nancy A. Youssef | McClatchy Newspapers

WASHINGTON — A new Army report has found that inattention to rising rates of drug abuse and criminal activity among soldiers and not repeat deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan is responsible for the record-high levels of suicide among troops.

The 350-page report, which was released Thursday, said that military commanders are so focused on preparing their troops for war that they've allowed troops to engage in risky behavior at home that may lead to suicide.

The 15-month study, titled Health Promotion, Risk Reduction, and Suicide Prevention, said that the vast majority of soldiers who killed themselves — 79 percent — had never been deployed to a combat zone or had been deployed just once.

The report instead blamed the Army's intense focus on war preparations for "unintentionally" limiting base commanders' "leadership and management requirements."

The result, the report found, is that "enforcement of policies designated to ensure good order and discipline has atrophied. This, in turn, has led to an increasing population of soldiers who display high risk behavior which erodes the health of the force."

The report said that both the use of illegal drugs and the involvement of soldiers in other criminal activities have skyrocketed — and that suicide was one of the results. It called for commanders to move more quickly to eject repeat offenders from the military.

Since fiscal year 2005, 29 percent of suicides included either drug or alcohol abuse, the report found.

"As we continue to wage war on several fronts, data would suggest we are becoming more dependent on pharmaceuticals to sustain the force. In fact, anecdotal information suggests that the force is becoming increasingly dependent on both legal and illegal drugs," the report found. About one third of soldiers are on some kind of prescription drug, the report found including 14 percent who are taking some kind of pain medication.

In addition, there has been an increase in crimes. Soldiers committed 50,523 offenses in fiscal year 2009, compared with 28,388 five years earlier.

The study was commissioned after the Army suicide rate, traditionally below the average civilian rate of 19.2 per 100,000 people, rose to 20.2 per 100,000 in 2008.

Gen. Peter Chiarelli, the Army's vice chief of Staff of the Army, who's led the Army's effort to tackle the rising suicide rate, said the report suggested that leaders who excel on the battlefield may be failing their troops once they return home.

Chiarelli has made the issue a personal priority. He's briefed monthly on each suicide in the Army and has made suicide prevention a top Army issue. At bases throughout Iraq and Afghanistan, signs now tell soldiers to look for warning signs among their comrades.

Back home, however, base commanders remain focused on preparing troops for their next deployment and on the effects of the last deployment. "Because of everything we're doing, we have not paid the attention we need to high-risk behavior," Chiarelli said.

Chiarelli said that the report suggested that commanders must be schooled to spend more time with soldiers, particularly those new to the military and be aware of problems.

The report called for a renewed emphasis on drug and alcohol abuse programs and for commanders to intervene when soldiers violate disciplinary standards. It included several pages devoted to when commanders should move to eject repeat offenders from the military.

"The obligation and authority of a commander to levy consequences for action is a tool every commander must use," the report said. While commanders may struggle to mentor young soldiers, they must also recognize when the best thing for the Army is to seek to have a soldier returned to civilian life.

The authority to separate someone from the Army, the report said, is "arguably the most important tool the leader has to manage the readiness, health, welfare, morale and discipline of the unit."

The report said the Army has done a poor job of recognizing and dealing with drug abuse within its ranks and urged commanders to take a tougher line.

"Serial drug abuse contradicts Army values," the report said. "The large number of soldiers with three or more positive drug tests demonstrates that the Army by its inattention is condoning high risk behavior . . . One should question the fitness and readiness of a soldier who has been identified as a serial abuser."

Drug use is also linked to "criminal activity, spouse abuse and financial strain," the report said.

The report also found that the Army needs to provide at least 36 months time at home between combat deployments — something it won't be able to do for years.

That means that soldiers and their families will face unusually high level of stress, even after a soldier has returned from a deployment — and that the stress may continue "indefinitely," the report found.

In 2009, 160 soldiers committed suicide and another 146 died by other violent means, such as murder, drug abuse or reckless driving while drunk. Another 1,713 attempted suicide.

So far, the Army has not been able to stop the epidemic of suicides. In June, the Army said 32 active duty and reserve officers committed suicide, the highest monthly figure since the military began keep such statistics. So far in 2010, there have 80 reported active duty soldier suicides and another 65 among reservists.

Read the full report: http://www.army.mil/-news/2010/07/28/42934-army-health-promotion-risk-reduction-and-suicide-prevention-report/index.html

Read more: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2010/07/29/98364/army-suicides-poor-leadership.html#storylink=omni_popular#ixzz0vBFUJw64
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BumbleBeeBoogie
 
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Reply Fri 30 Jul, 2010 09:42 am
@BumbleBeeBoogie,
Commentary: Suicides, violence and drug abuse mark the strains of endless war
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
7/28/10

On average, one U.S. soldier killed himself each day last month. That is the highest single-month suicide total reported by the U.S. Army since the Vietnam War ended more than 35 years ago.

It's also a symptom of a much larger problem.

The physical and emotional burden of fighting simultaneous wars in Iraq and Afghanistan has fallen disproportionately on too few American families. After nine years, the strain of near-constant deployment and redeployment is obvious.

Last year, for the first time in decades, the Army's suicide rate exceeded that of similar-age civilians. Six Missouri Army National Guard soldiers have committed suicide so far this year.

As for last month's toll, the 32 Army suicides mean that about as many U.S. soldiers died by their own hands as in combat in Afghanistan.

And that's only part of the story.

The grim statistics don't count veterans who already have returned home and separated from the service. Nor do they count Marines, sailors or airmen.

In 2008, an influential RAND Corp. report estimated that at least 300,000 troops returning from Iraq and Afghanistan suffer from post-traumatic stress or major depression. That's roughly one in every five. People with such illnesses are at increased risk of suicide or violent behavior.

Military officials also are reporting high rates of alcohol and drug abuse. Divorce rates are up. So are rates of domestic violence and crime.

All of this has occurred even as the military has made a major effort to increase counseling for returning troops and to address the psychological needs of combat veterans.

But warrior culture, military culture, does not lend itself to such things.

The ideal is, and always will be, the tough soldier who ignores physical and emotional injuries as he presses ahead with his mission.

Faced with an entrenched enemy, military commanders of the 18th century often recruited what was called a "forlorn hope" to lead the assault. Think of it as a suicide squad.

The members of the squad went in first, fighting until victory was achieved or reinforcements arrived.

When you think about it, that's a little like how the all-volunteer military works. Except that instead of sending them once into the breech, we've sent them three and four and five and six times.

Now we must be the reinforcements.

U.S. Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., a member of the Armed Services Committee, wants to allow service members to receive confidential counseling. That's an important step that would allow some troubled service members to talk about their problems without sacrificing their careers.

McCaskill also is supporting legislation that would allow therapists to be embedded with National Guard units so that they would be available to anyone who needs help in the combat zone.

The military and the VA are facing shortages of psychiatrists and therapists, as are civilian health care providers. Those shortages must be addressed as part of a national physician work force development policy.

But that's going to take time; the problem for returning service men and women is acute now. All indications are that it will remain acute for the foreseeable future - long after the shooting stops in Iraq and Afghanistan.

We sent those young people into harm's way. We have a moral obligation to address the physical and mental problems their service created.

© 2010, St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

Read more: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2010/07/22/97936/suicides-violence-and-drug-abuse.html#ixzz0vBGYeh7b
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