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MARINE RECRUITS LEARN TO BATTLE SUICIDE -- This
as commanders and fellow Marines express surprise
and regret over suicide of 20-year-old Lance
Corporal.

FRONT LINES: Marines engage in a
“guided discussion” with their drill instructor, Staff Sgt. Nicholas
Romer. (photo: Sean Masterson / For The Times) |
For more about veterans and suicide, use the VA
Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=suicide&op=and
We have two stories.
First story here...
http://www.latimes.com/n
ews/local/la-me-suicide20-2008jul20,0,4306936.story
Story below:
-------------------------
Marine recruits learn to battle suicide
As deaths increase, drill instructors and
chaplains are teaching warning signs and prevention strategies.
By Tony Perry
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
SAN DIEGO — The basic rule for Marine boot camp is simple: Keep your mouth
shut and mind your own business.
But it's different when the subject is suicide.
Drill instructors encourage recruits to share their feelings in "guided
discussions" and tell them to watch out for, and promptly report, warning
signs in their buddies.
The suicide rate in the active-duty Marine Corps was 16.5 per 100,000 in
2007 -- below both the active-duty Army and a similar demographic in the
civilian population. But it had jumped from 12.9 in 2006.
In the first six months of this year, 25 Marines committed suicide, the
most in that period of time since such records began to be kept several
years ago. If that trend persists, 2008 could prove the worst year for
Marine suicides since at least the beginning of the war in Afghanistan.
"Current prevention strategies are being evaluated and developed to
respond to this increase and the ongoing wartime demands and associated
stressors confronting Marines," said Navy Cmdr. Aaron Werbel, manager of
the Marine Corps' suicide prevention program.
"Training is being conducted for Marines, leaders, counselors, chaplains,
family members and frontline installation staff who have routine contact
with young Marines," he said.
In April, representatives of all the military branches attended a weeklong
conference here to hear from civilian experts and discuss ways to improve
prevention programs.
The Marine Corps provides advanced training in suicide prevention for
chaplains, corpsmen, mental health specialists and career counselors.
But the first line of defense against suicide remains the young Marine who
is in the best position to notice changes in a buddy. Learning how to
recognize warning signs is a key element of training, which begins at boot
camp and is reinforced later, particularly as Marines prepare to deploy.
On a recent Sunday afternoon, 72 recruits sat on the floor of their
barracks listening to a senior drill instructor talk about suicide. Two
days earlier they had heard a lecture from a chaplain about how to spot
suicidal tendencies.
Now
the drill instructor was checking to see what they remembered from the
lecture and encouraging them to talk about their experiences. When he
asked how many had known someone who committed or attempted suicide,
nearly a third of them raised their hands.
For the session, Staff Sgt. Nicholas Romer dropped the gruff, demanding
voice of the classic drill instructor. Now he was an older brother. By
prearrangement, two recruits role-played, with one acting as the would-be
suicide, the other his shipmate. Then Romer asked recruits to share their
views about suicide.
"This recruit knows that in the Bible it says 'Thou shall not kill,' and
that includes yourself," said one recruit. "If the last thing you do is to
commit a sin, you're going to hell."
"As a Buddhist, this recruit knows that life is a gift from God," another
said.
Some of the young men expressed anger and many expressed sadness.
"The people who die like that are the worst . . . people you'll ever
meet," a recruit told Romer. "All you're doing is taking your burden and
throwing it on other people's burdens."
One recruit said that his grandfather had committed suicide after his
grandmother died of cancer. Another said he had come home and found his
mother hanging. Several said they had had to wrestle guns and knives away
from friends.
Romer listened to them and provided perspective: "There's nothing here
that is so bad it's worth taking your life."
He also reinforced the chaplain's message that it's the duty of the
individual Marine to intervene when a buddy starts showing possible signs
that he is thinking of suicide: giving away his possessions, acting
unusually listless, withdrawing from contact, getting angry for no reason,
showing a preoccupation with death.
Judging from the risk factors, Marine enlistees are prime candidates for
suicide. They are young males far from home and family support. They are
being stressed to their mental and physical limits. Their coping skills
are still maturing.
Once recruits graduate from boot camp, the risk factors increase with easy
access to weapons, the probability of repeated deployments to Iraq, the
prospect of Dear John letters from girlfriends who grow tired of waiting.
Recruits are told that if a Marine exhibits warning signs, it's their duty
to inform a sergeant, a chaplain, a corpsman: somebody in the chain of
command. If nothing else, they are told, take away the Marine's weapons.
"Every year we lose about a rifle platoon worth of Marines to suicide,"
Navy chaplain Lt. Wayne Tomasek told the recruits in the lecture that
preceded their discussion with Romer.
"There is no tomorrow. Tomorrow will be too late," Tomasek said.
"Intervene now. Don't waste time. Are you up for that challenge?"
"Yes, sir!" the recruits shouted back.
The majority of Marine suicides occur stateside.
Of the 25 who killed themselves this year, eight had never deployed to
Iraq or Afghanistan, 15 had returned from a war-zone deployment and two
committed suicide in Iraq.
In 2007, of the 33 Marines listed as suicides, most were under 24.
Two-thirds used firearms. The others hanged themselves or took poison.
Werbel, manager of the suicide prevention program, has established a
website to provide information and updates on suicide prevention classes
and videos. He travels from base to base lecturing commanders on the need
to continually reinforce the lessons that recruits learn in boot camp.
At the Marine Corps recruit depots, every group of recruits gets a lecture
from the chaplain, a discussion with a drill instructor and a test.
Instructors are ordered to refer any recruit who looks shaky to mental
health specialists on base.
In his discussion, Romer emphasized group loyalty.
"The guys you'll deploy with are not just your friends. They're your
brothers."
Moments later, before the recruits hurried off to the chow hall,
19-year-old Christopher Martinez of Keller, Texas, discussed what the
effect on the group would be if one of them committed suicide.
"It would be devastating to all of us," Martinez said. "We've only been
together a few weeks, but this group has jelled into something special.
We're going to be Marines."
tony.perry@latimes.com
---------------
Second story here...
http://www.latimes.com/
news/local/la-me-marineside20-2008jul20,0,1507381.story
Story below:
Suicide of 20-year-old Marine a sadly common tale
In a report on the death, his commanders and
colleagues express surprise and regret. 'I will always wish there was
something else we could have done to let him know we cared and were there
for him.'
By Tony Perry
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
When interviewed about his death, none of the Marine's buddies said they
had seen any sign that he was thinking of suicide.
Always quiet, he had seemed more withdrawn than usual. He had never felt
at ease in Iraq and he repeatedly said he deserved to be back at Camp
Pendleton. His reputation was that of a marginal performer who was good
for a few days and then would backslide.
He was embarrassed at getting caught three times not paying attention
while standing guard. He had been ordered to write letters of apology to
his platoon.
Instead he was found dead on his bunk, his M-16 near his body. Tests on
the weapon showed it was in perfect shape, seeming to rule out an
accident.
Through
the Freedom of Information Act, The Times obtained the investigatory
report on the death of the 20-year-old lance corporal -- one of at least
168 young Marines who have killed themselves since the Marines were
ordered in early 2003 to topple Saddam Hussein.
To spare the family additional pain, The Times has decided not to publish
his name or identifying information such as his battalion or where in Iraq
the death occurred.
The death has been ruled a suicide, although the man's family cannot
accept that finding, according to a family friend. The family declined to
talk to The Times. News stories about their son's death never mentioned
suicide.
If there is anything distinguishing about the suicide, it may be that it
was not unusual. An Army study found soldiers had exhibited the classic
warning signs -- talking of feeling hopeless and worthless, of not having
anything to live for -- in only about half of Army suicides.
The signs are often more subtle, said a chaplain familiar with this case.
For young Marines, that increases the difficulty of being on the lookout
for a buddy who may be sinking into despair.
"More and more," said Navy Cmdr. John Dickens, deputy chaplain for the 1st
Marine Division, "the warning signs aren't predictions of suicide but
rather invitations for somebody to ask: 'Are you thinking of killing
yourself?' "
If anybody asked that question in this case, it is not reflected in the
report. The Marines were busy with their daily duties, excited about going
home soon, after a deployment in which several among them had been killed
by the enemy.
The suicide left other Marines confused.
"Considered him a good friend," an investigator wrote after talking to one
Marine. "Was mad at first but now he understands that there must have been
something that he just couldn't handle."
The investigator wrote that a second Marine said he "doesn't understand
how he could do that to his mom."
The death occurred just days before the unit was due to return home --
often a dangerous time, emotionally. Marines are given "warrior
transition" counseling before leaving Iraq, in which they are warned about
the stresses of returning home.
In a war zone, Dickens said, "life is more dangerous but it's simpler.
Back home, life is more complicated."
One Marine concluded that maybe the Marine killed himself after "realizing
that there was nothing going on at home when all the other Marines had all
kinds of other plans to see friends and girlfriends."
If there was an event that pushed the Marine over the edge, it may have
been the punishment meted out after he was found, for the third time, not
paying attention on guard duty. The first time, he had been caught
smoking. The next, he was not wearing his protective vest. The last time,
someone had spotted him masturbating.
He was ordered to write individual letters of apology to his platoon
mates, a light punishment by Marine standards.
In boot camp, Marines are taught that a humiliating incident can sometimes
push someone to suicide.
"Losing face is a tremendous factor in the Marine Corps," Dickens said.
"The sense of letting down your unit can weigh heavily on a Marine."
In his letters of apology, the Marine promised to do "everything I can do
to earn your trust back. It won't be easy but nothing worth doing is
easy."
The hand-printed letters are attached to the report. Also attached is a
memo sent from the battalion commander to the commanding general.
"I will never know exactly what was going through (the Marine's) mind
during those final, desperate moments," the battalion commander wrote.
"But I know I will always wish there was something else we could have done
to let him know we cared and were there for him."
tony.perry@latimes.com
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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