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DIVORCE RATE INCREASES IN ARMY AND MARINE
CORPS --
"Divorce rates are up, no doubt about it, a kind
of predictable
ripple effect of this pace of operations. And
that's not even
taking into account the number of marriages that
are strained."
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-------------------------
Divorce rate increases in Marine Corps, Army
By PAULINE JELINEK
WASHINGTON (AP) — The divorce rate among soldiers and Marines increased
last year as military marriages suffered continuing stress from America's
two ongoing wars. There were an estimated 10,200 failed marriages in the
active duty Army and 3,077 among Marines, according to figures obtained by
The Associated Press for the budget year ended Sept. 30.
That's a divorce rate of 3.5 percent among more than 287,000 married
troops in the Army, up from 3.3 percent in the previous fiscal year,
according to Defense Department figures.
"With increasing demands placed on Army families and soldiers — including
frequent deployments and relocations — intimate relationships are tested,"
said Army spokesman Paul Boyce.
The new data shows 3.7 percent of more than 84,000 married Marines
divorced in fiscal year 2008, up from 3.3 percent in 2007. The Marine
Corps called the increase statistically small and said officials would
need to examine them farther.
"That said, Marine Corps leadership is keenly aware of the burden military
families carry in a time of war," said Col. Dave Lapan, a spokesman. "Our
leaders, from the commandant on down, are paying serious attention to the
strain."
Some veteran and family groups question whether Pentagon figures are too
low, saying they do not take into account many who divorce after leaving
the service. The groups are unable to offer other estimates.
"Divorce rates are up — no doubt about it — a kind of predictable ripple
effect of this pace of operations," Paul Rieckhoff of the Iraq and
Afghanistan Veterans of America said in a recent interview. "And that's
not even taking into account the number of marriages that are strained"
but still holding together.
But
defense officials say they are holding divorces down below what they might
otherwise be with a myriad of efforts in recent years to support couples
enduring unprecedented separations and other hardships because of the wars
in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The long and repeated deployments required of many troops have been widely
blamed for unprecedented stresses on military couples. Spouses at home
must manage families and households without their partner. The strain also
has contributed to higher suicide rates and more mental health problems
among troops.
The Marines and soldiers have been the bulk of the land force fighting the
two wars.
The divorce rate stayed at 3.5 percent this year for the Air Force and
went down slightly to 3 percent from 3.2 percent for the Navy.
Women in the military usually suffer higher rates of failed marriages than
men and that trend held true again last year. Army women divorced at a
rate of 8.5 percent compared to 2.9 percent for men. Female Marines
divorced at a rate of 9.2 percent, compared to 3.3 percent of the married
men.
There is no comparable system for tracking civilian divorces. The Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention said the divorce rate for the general
population was 3.6 per 1,000 people in 2005 — the most recent statistics
immediately available; that was the lowest rate since 1970.
The per capita divorce rate is different from a second method of
calculation — the percentage of marriages that eventually will end in
divorce or separation. The CDC said that year that 43 percent of all first
marriages end in divorce within 10 years.
The military numbers also do not speak to troubled but intact marriages.
In mental health surveys taken in Iraq, some 15 percent of troops have
said they intended to divorce when they got home.
All the services have started programs to help couples weather wartime
stresses.
"Military families continue to stand behind their soldiers and help those
in need," Boyce said, noting that 58 percent of soldiers in today's Army
are married. "America is now in the third-longest war in its history. This
is the first extended conflict since the Revolution fought with an
all-volunteer Army."
Military programs aimed at helping couples include the Army chaplains'
Strong Bonds, which helps single-soldiers choose mates wisely and build
lifelong relationships; a couples course, and a family course that trains
couples with children to stay close and parent well.
Officials also have worked to improve the quality of life for families by
funding various programs and services such as health care, better schools,
youth services and child care.
The Marines have offered workshops to teach couples to manage conflict,
solve problems and communicate better. The Navy started a similar program,
using weekend retreats for couples.
Troops also get mental-health training in a program called Battlemind that
teaches about common problems to expect at home as they readjust to
domestic life.
On the Net:
* Defense Department:
http://www.defenselink.mil
-------------------------
posted by Larry Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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