|
WSWS
: News &
Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Alarming rise in suicides among US troops in Iraq
By Jeff Riley
5 December 2003
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
One grim indicator of the sinking morale of US occupation forces
in Iraq is the alarming number of suicides among American soldiers.
The deaths of at least 17 US troops in Iraq15 Army personnel
and two Marineshave been confirmed as suicides over the
past seven months, according to a recent Associated Press review
of Army casualty reports. Nearly all of the suicides have occurred
since May 1, when the Bush administration declared an end to major
combat operations.
This number represents more than 10 percent of non-combat deaths
there. According to one estimate, US troops in Iraq are committing
suicide at three times the usual rate.
Dozens of other deaths are currently under investigation, and
the real number of suicides could be significantly higher. Over
500 soldiers have recently been evacuated from Iraq for mental
health reasons. The Army has sent a team of mental health specialists
to Iraq to assess what is perceived as a growing problem of both
depression and suicide.
The 130,000 US troops in Iraq are facing extended yearlong
deployments under the harshest of living conditions combined with
daily guerrilla-style attacks from an increasingly aggressive
Iraqi resistance.
As of December 3, there have been 441 soldiers killed, 302
since May 1, when President Bush announced that major combat
had ended in Iraq. Of these deaths, 154 are being categorized
as non-hostile. The Pentagon has released the figure
of just over 2,145 wounded, 351 of them in non-hostile
incidents. Out of these injuries, 20 percent have suffered severe
brain injuries, and many are left with disabling and disfiguring
wounds, including amputations.
It is also widely acknowledged that this is a small portion
of the troops suffering serious medical problems in Iraq. As of
November 20, the Landstuhl Army Medical Center in Germany had
received 8,093 injured or sick troops for treatment, many for
mental health problems.
There is evidence that some of the suicides may have occurred
accidentally as soldiers, desperate to get out of Iraq, attempted
to injure themselves. Reports include that of one soldier who
shot himself in the leg after being told that he could not go
home. The bullet hit an artery and he bled to death.
In another incident, a woman fatally shot herself in the stomach,
also in an apparent attempt to inflict a wound that would result
in her evacuation from the country. Captain Justin Cole, a military
stress officer working out of Tikrit, said he believed the two
soldiers hadnt meant to kill themselves.
Other cases clearly involve unbearable mental and emotional
stress. Army Private Corey Small, 20, of East Berlin, Pa., was
married and the father of a 4-year-old boy. Small and his family
were living in Fort Polk, La., where he was stationed. He was
deployed to Iraq last May, and by July he was encamped in an abandoned
hospital in Baghdad with no running water or electricity.
He died on July 3 from what Army officials called a non-combat
cause. Fellow soldiers later reported that after calling
home to the US he shot himself in front of other troops waiting
to use the phone.
There is also the case of Army Specialist Joseph D. Suell,
24, of Lufkin, Tex., who reportedly took his own life in June
by swallowing an entire bottle of Tylenol while deployed in the
desert. His widow, Rebecca Suell, reached for answers while speaking
with the Associated Press. Why, she wondered, would her husbandas
sad and tired of Iraq as he waskill himself when she had
just told him how much she loved him and how much their children
missed him and needed him?
Joseph Suell wrote to his family that he suffered through sleepless
nights where all he heard were gunshots and people screaming.
According to his aunt, Deborah McCay, he also wrote that he feared
he would lose his life to snipers, and said that even Iraqi children
were carrying bombs and grenades to use against US troops.
He was so desperate to come home that he asked his wife to
plead with his commanding officerwhich she did. She explained
the difficulties of life without her husband, but to no avail.
Attending nursing school and working at Wal-Mart while trying
to raise three children was proving to be more than she could
bear alone. She explained that their youngest daughter did not
even know her father, who was stationed in Iraq the day she was
born, and that all he wanted was to be home with his family for
Christmas.
As US troops face their first Christmas in Iraq, some mental
health professionals have warned that the suicide rate normally
peaks during the holiday season.
In September, Stars and Stripes, a semi-official newspaper
for soldiers and government civilians abroad, conducted a survey
and found that morale of soldiers in Iraq had become a serious
problem. Depression, mild and severe, is plaguing troops with
increasingly fatal consequences.
Of the 2,000 US troops surveyed, nearly half rated their morale
as low or very low. One-third reported that their mission was
not clearly defined or not at all defined,
while close to one-third of those polled stated that the war in
Iraq was of little value or of no value at all.
The study also revealed that many of the troops viewed themselves
as sitting ducks rather than as soldiers engaged in
war.
Commenting on the survey, David Segal, a military sociologist
with the University of Maryland, told the Washington Post:
I am getting a sense that there is a high and increasing
level of demoralization and a growing sense of being in something
they dont understand and arent sure the American people
understand.
Daily attacks against US troops, with often fatal results,
have increased to an average of more than 30 a day. Many soldiers
see no end in sight and are beginning to suffer both physically
and mentally from the stress of combat combined with harsh living
conditions.
Army spokeswoman Martha Rudd described the uniqueness of the
current situation in a statement to the pressIn most
previous conflicts you went, you fought, you came home. In this
one they went, they fought, theyre still there.
The violence being employed against the Iraqi people has also
begun to take its toll on the mental stability of American troops.
In one recently reported case, Army Special Forces Staff Sergeant
Georg-Andreas Pogany began shaking and throwing up after witnessing
an Iraqi man severed in half by heavy machine-gun fire.
Pogany could not sleep and suffered from what he described
as panic attacks. He reported to his superiors asking for help.
Instead, he was charged with cowardice, a charge that
was subsequently reduced to dereliction of duty.
The collapse in troop morale and the alarming increase in soldier
suicides have coincided with the continuing exposure of the lies
told by the Bush administration in dragging the American people
into the war in Iraq. The growing realization in the ranks of
the US military that they were sent into an unprovoked war on
false pretenses may have a more profound impact on morale than
the considerable physical dangers and hardships facing soldiers
there.
See Also:
US soldiers families, veterans
go to Iraq to oppose war
[4 December 2003]
Families of soldiers condemn
Bushs war
[27 October 2003]
Stars & Stripes
poll reveals: Growing anger among US troops in Iraq
[24 October 2003]
White House bans news coverage
of coffins returning from Iraq
[23 October 2003]
Thousands of US troops evacuated
from Iraq for unexplained medical reasons
[9 September 2003]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |