© AFP/Getty Images/File Ben Sklar |
The flag detail retires the flag at a remembrance service in Kileen, TX © AFP/Getty Images/File Ben Sklar |
Roughly two in every three victims have served at least one combat tour.
The vast majority are men.
One, Staff Sergeant Jared Hagemann, was found dead with a gunshot wound to his head earlier this summer. An Army Ranger in Washington state, he had deployed eight times.
The Army's recently retired chief of staff, General George Casey, once insisted it wasn't clear if combat stress was a factor.
But last year he conceded that stress as well as such problems as ruined relationships played a role as well. "As I look at it, it has to add stress," Casey said.
Yet active-duty troops aren't the only war-weary soldiers.
Last year's suicide mark was driven by a sharp rise of deaths in the guard and reserve.
With more than half the year gone, the Army Reserve's top commander, Lieutenant General Jack Stultz, sees little improvement but is still trying to reach out to his troops, who are citizen-soldiers often disconnected from military support.
"Our suicide rates in the Army Reserve are trending about where they were this time last year, which I guess the good news is it doesn't seem to be increasing, the bad news is it doesn't seem to be decreasing," he said.
Many of those killing themselves have done so quietly.
Sergeant 1st Class Gregory Eugene Giger grew despondent in the wake of a divorce that began while he was in Iraq.
One of the 22 suicides at Fort Hood in 2010, he was found hanging by a necktie in his apartment off the post. His mom called Giger a "tall quiet Texan," devastated by the breakup. "I think he probably had a lot going on that he just stuffed down inside of him," Helen Giger said.
Killeen, an Army town since World War II, has seen its share of violence that includes a 1991 massacre where a gunman killed 23 restaurant patrons before shooting himself.
Nearly two years ago, Army psychiatrist Major Nidal Malik Hasan was shot after a rampage that left 13 dead and 32 wounded on Fort Hood.
Yet over one long weekend last year four soldiers, all combat veterans, committed suicide.
One, Sergeant Michael Timothy Franklin, was believed to have murdered his wife at their residence off the post before killing himself.
Just a month earlier, Armando Galvan Aguilar Jr., 26, was cornered by police outside a gas (petrol) station northeast of Fort Hood at the end of an early morning high-speed chase.
"Mando" as friends called him, had been home from Iraq for a year. Fort Hood doctors had treated him for post-traumatic stress disorder and depression, but he still struggled.
He had trouble sleeping and sometimes mixed alcohol with his medications.
On the last night of his life, Aguilar drank 30 beers. Then he shot himself in the head with a .45-caliber handgun that he'd taken from a fellow soldier, ironically, to stop him from committing suicide.
© AFP -- Published at Activist Post with license
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