(CNN) — A major United States military post is shutting down for three days following a rash of suicides, the post announced. Fort Campbell, Ky., home of the Army’s 101st Airborne Division, started a three-day “suicide stand-down training event” Wednesday — the second one it has held this year, a post spokeswoman told CNN. At least 11 deaths of Fort Campbell soldiers this year are confirmed or suspected suicides, spokeswoman Kelly Tyler said. That’s out of 64 confirmed or suspected suicides in the entire Army, according to official statistics. At that rate, the Army is on pace for a record number of suicides this year.
The post commander, Brig. Gen. Stephen Townsend, addressed all 19,000 soldiers of the 101st Airborne Division on Wednesday, Tyler said. His intent was to be able to look them in the eye and make them aware that everyone cares about the issue, and make sure they know — corporal to general — what help is available,” she said. “To make sure that people know we want them to keep living.” Soldiers often refuse to admit they are having problems because of the culture of the military, she said. You still have the stigma in the Army of asking for help — it’s an institution of strength and honor. And they need to understand that there is strength and honor in asking for help,” Tyler said.
“It’s easy to lose focus of that. We are a nation at war, an army at war. The guys around you need you to be there. They need you to ask for help, or for them to ask for help if you can’t.”
Fort Campbell’s commanders are trying to impress upon the troops that this is more than a mandatory exercise. Combat stress manifests itself in different ways, he said, citing the case of a U.S. soldier charged with killing five of his comrades at a mental-health clinic in Iraq earlier this month. The incident in Baghdad brought a lot of attention to combat stress, but this is the other side of the coin,” he said. A record number of soldiers committed suicide last year — at least 133, the Army said. That was up from at least 115 in 2007, which was itself a record since the Pentagon began keeping statistics on suicide in 1980. The statistics cover active-duty soldiers and activated National Guard and reserves.
More soldiers killed themselves in January of this year than died in battle, Army statistics suggest.
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Douchebag troublemaker.
Way to dig up 4 year old stats. What a tool!
I’ll bet “airborne” has never been a soldier. What a tool indeed.
By the way, I am a vet.
# 18 O’Really,
I was being sarcastic on how the Republicans blame every Democrat Administration but pretend that nothing bad happened during their Republican Rule.
It seems like it’s true that soldiers are unable to think though.