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The San Diego Union-Tribune

 
Army suicides in 2007 are highest on record

ASSOCIATED PRESS

May 30, 2008

WASHINGTON – U.S. soldiers committed suicide in 2007 at the highest rate on record, and the toll is climbing ever higher this year as long war deployments stretch on.

At least 115 soldiers killed themselves last year, up from 102 the previous year, the Army said yesterday.

Nearly one-third of them died at the battlefront – 32 in Iraq and four in Afghanistan. But 26 percent had never deployed to either conflict.

“We see a lot of things that are going on in the war which do contribute, mainly the longtime and multiple deployments away from home, exposure to really terrifying and horrifying things, the easy availability of loaded weapons and a force that's very, very busy right now,” said Col. Elspeth Ritchie, psychiatric consultant to the Army surgeon general.

“And so all of those together we think are part of what may contribute, especially if somebody's having difficulties already,” she told a Pentagon news conference.

Some common factors among those who took their own lives were trouble with relationships, work problems, and legal and financial difficulties, officials said.

More U.S. troops also died overall in hostilities in 2007 than in any of the previous years in Iraq and Afghanistan. Violence increased in Afghanistan with a Taliban resurgence, and U.S. deaths increased in Iraq even as violence there declined in the second half of the year.

Increasing the strain on the force last year was the extension of deployments to 15 months from 12 months, a practice ending this year.

The 115 confirmed suicides among active-duty soldiers and National Guard and Army Reserve troops who had been activated amounted to a rate of 18.8 per 100,000 troops – the highest since the Army began keeping records in 1980.

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