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A Sign of Empire Pathology
More US military personnel have taken their OWN lives
than have died in action
By Finian Cunningham
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Here
is a shocking statistic that you won't hear in most western news
media: over the past nine years, more US military personnel have
taken their own lives than have died in action in either the
wars in Iraq or Afghanistan. These are official figures from the
US Department of Defence, yet somehow they have not been deemed
newsworthy to report. Last year alone, more than 330 serving
members of the US armed forces committed suicide - more than the
320 killed in Afghanistan and the 150 who fell in Iraq (see
wsws.org).
Since
2001, when Washington launched its so-called war on terror,
there has been a dramatic year-on-year increase in US military
suicides, particularly in the army, which has borne the brunt of
fighting abroad. Last year saw the highest total number since
such records began in 1980. Prior to 2001, the suicide rate in
the US military was lower than that for the general US
population; now, it is nearly double the national average.
A
growing number of these victims have been deployed in Iraq or
Afghanistan. What these figures should tell us is that there is
something fundamentally deranged about Washington's "war on
terror" - which is probably why western news media prefer
to ignore the issue. How damning is it about such military
campaigns that the number of US soldiers who take their own
lives outnumber those killed by enemy combatants.
What
is even more disturbing is that the official figures only count
victims of suicide among serving personnel. Not included are the
many more veterans - officially classed a civilians - who take
their own lives.
Most
likely, these deaths are reported in some small-town newspaper
in "a brief" news item with no context or background
as to what drove these individuals to take their own lives. It
is estimated that the suicide rate among veterans demobbed from
fighting in Afghanistan and Iraq is as high as four times the
national average. The US Department of Veteran Affairs
calculates that over 6,000 former service personnel commit
suicide every year.
Many
of these men have come home to a country they have fought for
only to find no jobs, their homes repossessed by banks that have
enjoyed trillion-dollar bailouts and broken relationships.
Meanwhile,
President Obama - the erstwhile peace candidate - has taken on
the role of Commander in Chief with gusto, telling his
countrymen and women that they are fighting a "just
war" to "defend American lives". Only a year ago,
he was campaigning for the presidency on a ticket to end such
wars. Now, more than his predecessor, George W Bush, Obama is
committing to wars without end. How soul-destroying is that for
a grunt holed up in a bunker, with his young family back home
probably telling him that they have just signed up for food
stamps? In their guts, these US soldiers must know - as many
other ordinary people around the world do - that these wars are
nothing but a desperate, pathological bid by a dying power to
salvage its crumbling empire - an empire that enriches a tiny
elite and impoverishes the majority. Is it any wonder that many
of them simply lose the will to live?