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Jun 16 2007
They don't tell you this | Print |  E-mail
By Shahram Vahdany   
David Fickel, a 25-year-old Minnesotan honorably discharged from the Marine Corps after serving in Iraq, used a shotgun to take his own life on Memorial Day, 2006

Linda Michel, a 33-year-old Navy medic from Albany, who served at a U.S.-run prison near Baghdad, returned to her husband and three children last October and, two weeks later, shot and killed herself

Jonathan Schulze, a 25-year-old from New Prague, MN, asked to be admitted to a VA hospital on January 11 because he was thinking of killing himself. Told he was No. 26 on the waiting list, he hung himself at his parents' farm, leaving behind his pregnant wife and a young daughter.

Michael Bramer, a 23-year-old from Boston who had served with the Army's 82d Airborne Division, turned up the surround sound on his television on January 17 and took his own life


Jessica Rich, a 24-year-old Army Reservist and mother of a 7-year-old son, despaired of leaving behind her nightmares and flashbacks of Iraq. On February 8, she drove her car into oncoming traffic on I-25 outside of Denver and died

Chris Dana, a 23-year-old Iraq war veteran from Helena who friends said wore his uniform and boots for weeks at a time, even to sleep, shut himself in his bedroom in March, put a blanket over his head, and shot himself.
A Testimony

It is only recently that I have come to think of myself as a war widow. When my husband Daniel came home from Vietnam in 1970, the relationship between combat-related stress and suicide was officially unrecognized. When Daniel took his own life, it never occurred to me to blame the war. I thought that if only I had been kinder, more patient, more vigilant, I might have prevented his death. The shame and guilt on top of my grief were a terrible burden. It was decades before I could find some compassion and forgiveness for that young woman who had no idea what she was up against.


In the years since Daniel's death, there has been a steady stream of reports, many from mainstream sources, claiming shocking numbers of suicides among Vietnam veterans. Rather than tracking or investigating those claims, the government has first refused to investigate and then used the lack of evidence to argue that the claims were untrue.

That disingenuous stance mirrors the current official response. While a mental health advisory team was sent to Iraq in 2003 to investigate alarming reports of suicides among American troops, the team concluded that soldiers were killing themselves, not because of the horrors of combat, but for what was labeled "underdeveloped life coping skills". The Army's Surgeon General told "Stars and Stripes" in December that he had "no evidence linking suicides with multiple deployments or Post Traumatic Stress Disorder" "(W)e've had young soldiers," he elaborated, "who will get bad relationship news and walk right into a Porta-Potty and end their lives."

Since 2003, the suicide rate for active-duty soldiers has continued to rise. The Army camouflages the real numbers as non-combat-related accidents. Veterans' suicides are not included on official casualty lists because they are not considered service-related deaths.

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Comments (8)
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1. 16-06-2007 13:47
Jonathan Schulze
You may be media with conscience, but you've got a problem with accuracy in at least one of these cases. Jonathan Schulze did not kill himself at his parents' farm. He committed suicide at an apartment in New Prague, MN, about 20 miles from his hometown. I don't know if it was his apartment or a friend's apartment.  
 
The other facts in Schulze's case are accurate, as far as I can see, but you might want to correct the one, since it hurts your credibility.
Guest
codger1016@yahoo.comNOSPAM! ">Chuck Kajer
2. 16-06-2007 15:36
Jonathan Schulze
Thanks Chuck! 
 
I will recheck that. Meanwhile lets accept your version. 
 
Best, 
Shahram
Guest
Shahram
3. 16-06-2007 15:45
Jonathan Schulze
Boston Glob 
 
Quote:
 
...and a leather-bound Bible and headed out from the family farm for a 75-mile drive to the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in St. Cloud, Minn... 
... Four days later, on Jan. 16, he wrapped a household extension cord around his neck, tied it to a beam in the basement, and hanged himself.

 
 
CNN.com - Anderson Cooper 360° Blog 
Quote:
 
... Four days after his visit to the VA hospital, Jonathan Schulze put a household electric cord around his neck and hanged himself in the basement of a friend's home. A picture of his one-year-old daughter was at his side.

Guest
Shahram
4. 17-06-2007 02:12
Non-combat Deaths
Please visit us at http://non-combat-death.org for more information and perhaps a source of comfort.
Guest
5. 17-06-2007 06:31
Non-combat Deaths
Why should it be a source of comfort? 
 
Sorry, but I fail to see any comfort on killing civilians
Guest
Shahram
6. 18-06-2007 18:06
Non-combat Deaths
Please send this to James Carroll at the Globe (Boston), who seems to believe that blowing up people is okay but not blowing up religious/historic sites.
Guest
7. 10-12-2007 03:56
Non-combat Deaths
Shahram, 
 
Non-combat-death.org is a place where families suddenly realize that they are not alone. They can contact us and participate in a private email group. We provide information on dealing with grief and re-investigation of deaths when necessary.  
 
You cannot imagine the amount of comfort and relief when you know that your profound experience with the non-combat death of a child can be understood by others in the same situation.
Guest
8. 10-12-2007 05:33
Braveheart
Please contact me.( you will find the contact form on the top menu) to see how we can assist you. 
 
You are doing a good job
Guest
Shahram

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