 |
|
U.S.
soldiers spoke their minds out, saying they wanted to go home on
their feet and not shrouded in coffins
|
LONDON,
January 25 (IslamOnline.net) – In a rate considered abnormally high,
the overall suicide rate among U.S. soldiers in occupied Iraq is
running at an average of 13.5 per 100,000 troops, while one in every
five soldiers will suffer from chronic distress in the future, U.S.
military psychiatrists said.
The
real rate might never been known as the U.S. Defense Department
imposes a news blackout on suicides in the chaos-mired country and
refuses to say which of its "non-combat" fatalities have
been self-inflicted, The Guardian reported Sunday, January 25.
In
terms of figures, at least 22 soldiers have killed themselves so far
in Iraq, which accounts for about 7 percent of all service deaths in
Iraq, said the British daily.
One
of the suicide cases was Army Specialist Joseph Suell, who wrote a
last letter home to his mother before he killed himself by an overdose
of a painkiller last June.
In
the letter, Suell complained how he missed his wife and daughters
during a year-long posting to South Korea, Kuwait and finally to Iraq.
The
Guardian said that just two suicides were reported among U.S.
personnel during the entire Gulf war in the 1990s.
Psychiatrists
noted that the majority of the so-called "psychiatric
evacuations" have taken place after May 1, when U.S. President
George W. Bush declared "major combat" effectively over.
Colonel
Theodore Nam, chief of in-patient psychiatry services at the Walter
Reed Army Medical Centre in Washington, said no psychiatric cases at
all were evacuated during the major combat, expecting high levels of
psychiatric casualties.
Last
month, reports confirmed that more than 600 U.S. servicemen and women
had been evacuated from Iraq for psychological problems.
Chronic
Stress
The
chairman of psychiatric services at the Naval Medical Centre in San
Diego, Captain Jennifer Berg, said the Post Traumatic Stress Disorder
(PTSD) is expected to afflict 20 percent of the servicemen and women
in Iraq.
"There
is a feeling among troops there that they have fallen off the public
screen. And the longer people are there, the more we are seeing people
come forward with stress reactions," she stressed.
Berg
said U.S. soldiers are now suffering from "chronic stress"
due to "a combination of danger, boredom and sleep deprivation,
and the knowledge that they are a long way from home".
"In
addition, people are no longer sure when or what the end will be. No
one knows when they will be going home," she added.
The
psychiatrists have seen symptoms, including disturbed sleep, heart
palpitations, aggression, irrational anger and feelings of alienation,
and most cases have already ended in suicide, the British daily said.
It
recalled that U.S. personnel in occupied Iraq had undergone
psychological suitability checks before going to war.
Just
nearly one month after May 1, U.S. soldiers spoke their minds out,
saying they wanted to
go home on their feet and not shrouded in coffins.