Why Isn't the Press on a Suicide Watch?
You'd never know that at least 3% of all American deaths in Iraq are due to self-inflicted wounds. And that doesn't include the many vets who have killed themselves after returning home.
By Greg Mitchell
NEW YORK (August 13, 2007) -- Would it surprise you to learn that according to official Pentagon figures, at least 118 U.S. military personnel in Iraq have committed suicide since April 2003? That number does not include many unconfirmed reports, or those who served in the war and then killed themselves at home (a sizable, if uncharted, number).
While troops who have died in "hostile action" -- and those gravely injured and rehabbing at Walter Reed and other hospitals -- have gained much wider media attention in recent years, the suicides (about 3% of our overall Iraq death toll) remain in the shadows.
I did what I usually do with a suicide report. I made it personal. We can look at a number and then move on but a name, a story about the person or the voice of a family left behind to grieve makes that "number" matter.
There is a very long list on that post and that's why I am so depressed today.
Wounded Times Blog is 5 years old this month and I am still having to post about military suicides along side of claims the DOD and the VA are doing something about all of this. They also claim what they are doing will work. Nothing has worked.
So I sit here reading more emails and comments from families after they had to bury their sons and daughters, wondering why they came home from combat but didn't want to live anymore. Wondering what they could have done. Wondering why no one told them about what they are painfully discovering now.
This is not an anniversary to celebrate. It is one of anguish because of how little has been actually achieved.
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