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Pentagon: Suicides of U.S. troops
rising in Iraq
Washington -
At least 21 U.S. troops have committed suicide in Iraq, a growing toll
that represents one of every seven American "non-hostile" deaths since
the war began last March, the Pentagon said on Wednesday.
"Fighting this kind of war is clearly
going to be stressful for some people," Assistant Defense Secretary
for Health Affairs Dr. William Winkenwerder told reporters in an
interview.
He said the military was taking steps
to prevent suicides, ascribed by one defense analyst to a perception
among young soldiers that the U.S. force in Iraq was spread thin and
faced an endless task.
"What you're really talking about
here more than anything else is the perception that the future just
looks indefinite and there are not enough troops coming in. It can
look awfully bleak for an awful long time," said Ken Allard, a retired
Army colonel who now works with the Center for Strategic and
International Studies, a Washington think tank.
Winkenwerder
said that of 21 confirmed suicides during the past year associated
with the war in Iraq, 18 were in the Army and three others in the Navy
and Marine Corps.
The suicide toll is probably higher
than 21 because some "non-hostile" deaths are still being
investigated, he added.
14 PERCENT OF 'NON-HOSTILE' DEATHS
A total of 496 U.S. troops have been
killed in Iraq since the war began last March, 343 of them in combat
and 153 in non-hostile incidents ranging from accidents to suicide,
according to the Pentagon.
The 21 suicides represent nearly 14
percent of non-hostile deaths reported by the military, an increase
over the proportion of 11 percent as of three months ago when the
suicide number totaled 13.
Winkenwerder
added that that nearly 400 troops had been evacuated from Iraq for
stress-related problems.
The United States has about 123,000
troops in Iraq. The Pentagon plans to reduce that to about 110,000 by
summer as it rotates those in the country home for rest.
Winkenwerder
said the military was concerned over the suicides and was moving to
deal with combat stress and other emotional problems triggered by
armed conflict.
The military's responses to stress
problems now include toll-free telephone numbers for troops to call
for help as well as an increased number of military psychiatric
specialists in Iraq to deal with problems before they become critical.
"Are those individuals who need
(stress) support getting it? Are they being identified?," Winkenwerder
asked. "We believe 'yes."'
Winkenwerder
suggested that the Army had become more aware of stress after several
domestic murders involving soldiers who returned to their base in
North Carolina from Afghanistan in 2002.
Authorities say four soldiers at Fort
Bragg killed their wives in June and July of 2002. Three of the cases
involved Special Operations soldiers returning from Afghanistan. Two
of the soldiers committed suicide and the other two were charged with
murder. A fifth case involved a Special Forces major who was killed,
with his wife charged with murder.
A November 2002 Army report concluded
that the stress put on military families by frequent separations as
the soldiers trained and fought may have contributed to the killings. --
Reuters
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