Friday, April 6, 2012

Warrior Transition Battalion Soldier receives Bronze Star

Warrior Transition Battalion Soldier receives Bronze Star Award recognizes meritorious service as a medic in Afghanistan
Apr. 5, 2012
Staff Sgt. Danny Beard of Fort Campbell's Warrior Transition Battalion received the Bronze Star on Wednesday from Brig. Gen. Jeffrey Colt for actions as a senior medic with 4th Brigade Combat Team of the 101st Airborne Division in Afghanistan. / U.S. ARMY PHOTO

Written by
Stacy Rzepka
Blanchfield Army Community Hospital Public Affairs


Staff Sgt. Danny Beard of the Fort Campbell Warrior Transition Battalion was awarded the Bronze Star Medal on Wednesday, receiving the award from Brig. Gen. Jeffrey Colt, the 101st Airborne Division Deputy Commanding General for Support.

Beard earned the medal for his outstanding service as a senior medic while deployed to Afghanistan with the 4th Brigade Combat Team of the 101st Airborne Division from Aug. 2010 to Aug. 2011.

Colt said that it was a profound privilege to present a Bronze Star to a member of the non commissioned officer corps. Colt explained that non commissioned officers make up a "pillar of leadership in our Army which sets us apart from all others."

read more here

Combat wounded in Iraq to Papa John's in Kentucky

Iraq Combat Veteran Delivers Pizza During Two-Year Job Search
(Fort Mitchell, Ky.)
April 6, 2012
The Washington Post News Service with Bloomberg News (c) 2012, Bloomberg News.

FORT MITCHELL, Ky. — Army Pvt. Brandon Click was driving a 68-ton Abrams tank in Iraq on March 25, 2008, when a roadside bomb melted his eyelashes and peppered the left side of his body with shrapnel.

Now back home in the Cincinnati suburbs, the 26-year-old Army veteran says he's been delivering Papa John's pizza at night in his 2002 Pontiac Sunfire for a little more than $31,000 a year to help support his infant son while he searches for a job.

"It gets the bills paid, but barely," said Click, who crossed the Ohio River to Kentucky last week for a job fair intended to help returning Iraq and Afghanistan veterans.

As tens of thousands of young veterans come home from the wars, many are struggling to find work with civilian employers who don't recognize their skills, haven't shared their experiences and aren't sure what to make of them. The result is that unemployment for veterans, particularly those ages 18 to 24, has been rising even as the national jobless rate declines.

"Unemployment is our No. 1 issue," said Paul Rieckhoff, founder and executive director of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, a New York-based advocacy group, in an interview. "Unemployment is not down, it's up. And it's a serious problem."

While the military offers all departing service members transition assistance to help them prepare for civilian jobs, the unemployment rate for veterans who've served since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks was 12.1 percent last year, up from 11.5 percent in 2010, according to a report by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Among non-veterans, 8.7 percent were jobless last year, down from 9.4 percent in 2010.

The gap may widen as the economy recovers. Tens of thousands more troops will be coming home over the next two years from Afghanistan, where the U.S. plans to withdraw most combat forces by the end of 2014. At the same time, the Pentagon intends to reduce the U.S. military by 123,900 troops, or 5.5 percent, by fiscal 2017 to meet budget-cutting goals. read more here

Veterans wait because of lack of mental health specialists?

VA sees shortfall of mental health specialists
By Gregg Zoroya,
USA TODAY
As thousands of additional veterans seek mental health care every month, the Department of Veterans Affairs is short of psychiatrists, with 20% vacancy rates in much of the country served by VA hospitals, according to department data.

In Montana, where veterans wait an average of five weeks to begin counseling, an eight-bed wing of a mental health facility at Fort Harrison has been vacant for nine months because of a lack of psychiatrists, the VA says. The Rocky Mountain VA region needs to fill nearly one of four psychiatrist positions.

The vacancies occur at a time when the number of veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder is increasing by about 10,000 every three months, what experts say is the cumulative effect of a decade of war, VA data show.

More than 230,000 servicemembers have suffered traumatic brain injuries ranging from mild to severe since 2000, according to Pentagon data.

"Last year, VA testified that it has the resources to handle the influx of veterans suffering from the invisible wounds of war," says Rep. Jeff Miller, R-Fla., chairman of the House Veterans' Affairs Committee. "Now we learn from them there is a shortage. …VA needs to quickly figure out what the problem is." read more here

Navy jet crashes into apartments in Virginia

Navy jet crashes into apartments in Virginia
From Michael Martinez and Barbara Starr,
CNN
updated 1:34 PM EDT, Fri April 6, 2012
STORY HIGHLIGHTS NEW: A pilot and a person on the ground were injured, a hospital spokeswoman says NEW: The plane crashes into a building where senior citizens live, a witness says Two crew members in plane safely ejected Plane engine was straining and the jet was emptying fuel, witness says

(CNN) -- A Navy jet crashed Friday into some apartments near Virginia Beach, Virginia, sending flames and thick black smoke into the air, a military spokesman and a witness said. At least two people were hurt Friday, a hospital spokeswoman said. The pilot and a person who was on the ground were being treated for injuries, but the nature and extent of those injuries were not immediately clear, the spokeswoman said. Two apartment buildings were on fire, CNN affiliate WTKR reported, citing witnesses. The jet was from Naval Air Station Oceana in Virginia Beach, the Federal Aviation Administration said. The crew of the two-seater F/A-18 safely ejected, but their condition wasn't known, a Navy spokesman said. The plane is from a training squadron, the Navy said. read more here

Screaming Eagle Soldier to be presented Distinguished Service Cross

Screaming Eagle Soldier to be presented Distinguished Service Cross
April 4, 2012
By Fort Campbell Public Affairs

FORT CAMPBELL, Ky. (April 4, 2012) -- Sgt. Felipe Pereira will be presented with the Distinguished Service Cross by Gen. Ray Odierno, chief of staff of the Army, during a ceremony scheduled for April 12, 2012 at the 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) Headquarters located on Fort Campbell, Ky. Pereira is assigned to Company A, 1st Battalion, 502d Infantry Regiment (Strike).



The Distinguished Service Cross is awarded to a person who, while serving in any capacity with the Army, distinguished himself or herself by extraordinary heroism not justifying the award of a Medal of Honor; while engaged in an action against an enemy of the United States; while engaged in military operations involving conflict with an opposing or foreign force; or while serving with friendly foreign forces engaged in an armed conflict against an opposing Armed Force in which the United States is not a belligerent party.

The act or acts of heroism must have been so notable and have involved risk of life so extraordinary as to set the individual apart from their comrades.

The Distinguished Service Cross is second only to the Medal of Honor and this will be the first award to a 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) Soldier since the Division's service in Vietnam.

Law suit filed after Soldier's daughter killed herself at school

Mother sues Leander ISD over suicide
Meagan Allen, 15, shot herself in school bathroom
Published : Thursday, 05 Apr 2012
Erin Cargile
CEDAR PARK, Texas (KXAN) - This week marks one year since Meagan Allen, 15, killed herself at Leander High School. Her mother, Angela Kandis, filed a lawsuit against the Leander school district on April 3 claiming they did not do enough to help the struggling teenager.

There were warning signs on the outside to suggest she was hurting inside.

"She stopped wearing her contact lenses and started wearing her glasses -- that was kind of unusual for her. She stopped wearing her makeup, she stopped really dressing up," said Kandis.

The obvious change came in the classroom when the freshman's typically high grades plummeted.

"There were 24 zeros in a three week period," said Kandis. "She had a 12 average in math. She was in all advanced placement classes."

Meagan's mother, whose military husband was deployed at the time, said she met with teachers and fired off numerous emails to counselors and the assistant principal to try and figure out a plan to turn things around.

read more here

New York Marine dies of wounds from January attack in Afghanistan

U.S. Marine dies months after being injured in Afghanistan
5 APRIL 2012 SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS (BNO NEWS)
A U.S. Marine from New York who was critically injured in January when a suicide bomber attacked his patrol in southern Afghanistan has died at a military hospital in Texas, the U.S. Department of Defense confirmed on Thursday.

Corporal Christopher D. Bordoni, 21, of Ithaca, New York, was critically injured on January 18 when a suicide bomber attacked his patrol in Helmand province, located in southern Afghanistan. Bordoni was sent to a hospital in Germany before being transported to San Antonio Military Medical Center at Fort Sam Houston in Texas, where he died on Tuesday night.

Few details about the attack in January have been released by officials, but the U.S. Department of Defense earlier confirmed that 25-year-old Marine Corporal Phillip D. McGeath, of Glendale, Arizona, was killed in the same attack. They were both assigned to 1st Battalion, 6th Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina.

read more here

Military suicides 40% higher than last year

Yesterday I wrote Combat PTSD, the hard fall of the survivor for this very reason. When you have programs that have been "provided" by the military but do more harm than good, the proof is in the reality of numbers. Numbers do not lie. They do not spin. If the "resiliency" approach worked, the numbers would have gone down year after year and not up. As bad as the successful number of suicides is, the number of attempted suicides has gone up as well. Suicide prevention programs have been up and running for years but still these numbers go up. Group after group has shown up online "offering support" for combat veterans that have apparently not worked enough to drive down the number of veterans committing suicide.
Chief Roy: Suicide rate in 2012 is worrisome

By Markeshia Ricks - Staff writer
Posted : Thursday Apr 5, 2012

The number of Air Force military and civilian personnel who have committed suicide this year is up 40 percent from the same time last year, according to the service’s top noncommissioned officer.

Chief Master Sgt. James Roy, who was guest speaker for an Air Force Association lecture series, said among all Air Force military and civilian personnel there have been 35 suicides in the first quarter of the year, compared with 25 during the same time last year.

More Air Force personnel have died by suicide this year than the combined total of personnel who have died by accident or through combat, according to Roy.
read more here


This video is from November 2011 and shows that no matter how long they've been talking about military suicides, what they are doing is not working.

450,000 calls into suicide prevention hotline yet the number of veterans committing suicide has not gone down!

LOSING THE BATTLE: THE CHALLENGE OF MILITARY SUICIDE CNASdc on Nov 2, 2011

According to the report, Losing the Battle: The Challenge of Military Suicide, "Suicide among service members and veterans challenges the health of America's all-volunteer force." From 2005 to 2010, service members took their own lives at a rate of approximately one every 36 hours. This tragic phenomenon reached new extremes when the Army reported a record-high number of suicides in July 2011 with the deaths of 33 active and reserve component service members reported as suicides. Additionally, the Department of Veterans Affairs estimates 18 veterans die by suicide each day. Yet the true number of veterans who die by suicide, as Harrell and Berglass point out, is unknown. As more American troops return home from war, this issue will require increasingly urgent attention.

The Center for a New American Security (CNAS) cordially invites you to the event, Losing the Battle, on November 1, 2011, from 4:30 to 6:00 p.m., to discuss the issue of suicide in the U.S. military with leading experts in the field. At the event, CNAS will release the policy brief, Losing the Battle: The Challenge of Military Suicide, by Dr. Margaret Harrell and Nancy Berglass, which identifies and addresses the challenges associated with service member and veteran suicide.

The event will feature a discussion on suicide in the military with a distinguished panel of experts, including the report's author Dr. Margaret Harrell, CNAS Senior Fellow and Director of the Joining Forces Initiative; General Peter Chiarelli, Vice Chief of Staff of the Army; Juliette Kayyem, national security columnist for The Boston Globe and a lecturer in public policy at Harvard University; and Dr. Jan Kemp, National Mental Health Program Director for the Department of Veterans Affairs.


Veterans group suspends chapters at for-profit colleges

Veterans group suspends chapters at for-profit colleges
By Justin Pope
The Associated Press
Apr 05, 2012

A leading student veterans group is suspending chapters at 40 for-profit colleges, saying it's concerned they've been set up by the colleges as shell organizations to help them appeal to veteran students who carry lucrative government tuition benefits.

The schools may be creating what are essentially fake SVA chapters to help them qualify for lists of "military friendly" or "veterans friendly" colleges that are proliferating in guidebooks and online, Student Veterans of America executive director Michael Dakduk said Thursday. On some lists, the existence of an SVA chapter at a school figures into the formula.

The organization, which has 417 campus chapters, said it would not name the for-profit schools while it investigated further. But Dakduk said that during recent membership renewals, SVA discovered numerous chapters listing as contacts people SVA later identified as school employees, not student veterans, and that chapter websites simply redirected anyone interested to the colleges' pages.

He said SVA has occasionally encountered the issue before, including at not-for-profit universities, but he said the recent discovery amounted to a much more widespread pattern. read more here

Orlando veterans use yoga to calm PTSD

Vets learn to breathe
By Brittni Johnson
April 5, 2012

Yoga can help war veterans cope with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder through breathing and other relaxation techniques in yoga. A group in Massachusetts is bringing that training to East Orlando.

For many military personnel, adjusting to life after combat is a struggle. For Sean McGrath, a Marine, retiring and returning to normal life was made worse by a divorce at the same time. Life was difficult for him, and readjusting to everyday life with his family back home wasn’t going smoothly. They were worried.

“They didn’t know how to help me,” McGrath said.

But that next Christmas his sisters had an idea – yoga. McGrath, a Massachusetts resident, got a gift certificate to attend a Yoga Warriors class. He wasn’t so sure at first, but with one session he was hooked. McGrath felt comfortable in a class surrounded by people just like him. It was made for veterans.

Teacher Lucy Cimini, director for the Yoga Warriors, developed the program specifically for veterans dealing with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and the daily and specific stresses military members are exposed to. Through yoga, soldiers are able to cope with situations that trigger memories that cause fear or aggression by using the tools taught in the program, like deep breathing to calm down.

After getting an interest in how yoga helps military members, Cimini partnered with representatives from the U.S. Air Force, Tufts University and Worcester University to conduct a study on its effects.

The study, published in the January/February 2012 issue of the American Journal of Occupational Therapy found that hatha yoga is effective in treating PTSD and the stresses experienced by military personnel, even better than other more common treatments, like talk therapy.

“A lot of veterans say, ‘This not only helped me but it saved my life,’” Cimini said.

Now Cimini is bringing her skills as the founder of the first and largest yoga for veterans program in the U.S. to Yoga East in Avalon Park. Cimini will be teaching yoga teachers how to conduct their own yoga for veterans program. She’ll teach Yoga East owners Michelle and Greg Owens while she’s there this April. And then, most likely in May, Yoga East will offer its own free yoga for veterans class once per week.

read more here

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Vietnam vet may get Silver Star after 44 years

SF vet may get Silver Star after 44 years
By Bill McCleery
The Indianapolis Star
Posted : Thursday Apr 5, 2012
MICHELLE PEMBERTON / THE INDIANAPOLIS STAR Former Army Sgt. Frank Spink holds a Silver Star given to him by a fellow veteran and a copy of the original orders issued July 26, 1968 awarding him a Silver Star.

PLAINFIELD, Ind. — Army Sgt. Frank Spink was pulling overnight guard duty when he heard movement in the South Vietnamese jungle.

He listened, then realized enemy soldiers were approaching the U.S. Special Forces camp in Dak Pek, a village in Kontum province.

Spink quickly notified his platoon leader, rousted fellow soldiers and, in the darkness, opened fire on North Vietnamese troops. Aerial gun support helped to push back attackers.

During the fight that early June morning nearly 44 years ago, an enemy rocket exploded on Spink’s bunker. He was left with a mangled right arm that ultimately was amputated.

Spink’s action helped his unit repel the enemy and avoid heavier losses, said his platoon leader, Lt. John McHenry, now retired.

The soldier’s valor, according to orders written the next month by military brass, earned the Indiana veteran one of the Army’s highest honors for heroism: the Silver Star.

But Spink, now 66, never received the honor.

He never even knew he had been in line to receive it until last month. McHenry and another retired soldier are leading efforts to persuade military officials to award the medal they think Spink deserves.
read more here

Problems Found With Camp Lejeune's Care of Wounded

Problems Found With Lejeune's Care of Wounded
April 05, 2012
Fayetteville Observer|by Greg Barnes

A recent U.S. Department of Defense review of a battalion for wounded Marines at Camp Lejeune suggests that the battalion is hampered by drug abuse, the perception of a poor command climate and other problems.

But the review -- the third in a series to evaluate the military's policies and processes for wounded warriors -- was not nearly as scathing as an earlier assessment of the Army's Wounded Transition Battalion at Fort Drum, N.Y.

Although Fort Bragg's Warrior Transition Battalion will not be part of the Defense Department's assessment process, the post began its own inspection in mid-February. A report of those findings has been completed and is expected to be released to the public within 14 days, Col. Kevin Arata, a spokesman for the 18th Airborne Corps, said Wednesday.

Commanders for Fort Bragg and Womack Army Medical Center said previously that an outside inspection of the medical component of the battalion found "no red flags."

At Camp Lejeune's Wounded Warrior Battalion-East, the Department of Defense found a number of bright spots, including that the management and staff for the battalion and Naval Hospital Camp Lejeune are dedicated to providing the best available care and services.

But the review also uncovered serious problems, including: Prescription and illegal drug abuse has resulted in inadequate order and discipline in the battalion and may have a negative effect on recovery and transition of wounded troops. Those involved in the medical care and management of wounded troops said they lacked adequate training in handling of post-traumatic stress disorder, traumatic brain injury and the medical board process.

Wounded Marines spend too much time in the treatment, recovery and rehabilitation stages -- an average of 245 days.

Case managers sometimes exceeded their caseloads, potentially causing delays or other problems in recovery and transition.

Camp Lejeune's hospital did not have specific medication management policies or procedures in place to manage Marines who were prescribed multiple medications, including controlled substances.
read more here

Horse Therapy Helps Veterans Break Through PTSD


Horse Therapy Helps Veterans Break Through PTSD
By Terri Moon Cronk
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, April 5, 2012 – A Pentagon Channel documentary sheds light on how military veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder are finding help through the power of horse therapy.

"Recon: Unbridled" highlights “Horses for Veterans,” at Flag is Up Farms in California, an intensive three-day program designed to help veterans of all ages who have PTSD, free of charge.

“I think No. 1 is to work with veterans who have given up on life,” said Monty Roberts, a renowned horse whisperer. Roberts uses his horse-friendly “Joining Up” techniques on abused and mistreated horses, and adapts it for self-isolating veterans who have post-traumatic stress.

Roberts’ program is about learning to trust people by choosing to, rather than by force, he said. By using the language of the horse or the stress of the veteran to communicate, he added, his program engenders trust.

“When they trust you, they will migrate toward you, rather than going away [out of fear],” he said. “Horses are flight animals. They are frightened of everything they don’t understand. If they don’t trust it, they need to get away from it, and that’s how a veteran feels, too.”

The old style of “breaking” horses often involved using violence to force them into submission, but Roberts' style, which he calls “gentling” or “natural horsemanship,” is nonviolent.

“They get nothing from the fight, so they literally give up,” he pointed out.

Veteran Alejandra Sanchez is on her fourth visit to Flag is Up Farms, but remembers her first time like it was yesterday.

“I have never been so scared in my life,” she said. “I wasn’t even that scared when I was in Iraq. My anxiety was through the roof, because I had to face that I had post-traumatic stress.

“Every night you knew when the sun set, action was going to happen,” she continued, recalling her service in Iraq. “I remember coming to the oddly weird term of ‘I might not make it.’” Sanchez faced her fears head-on in the “Horses for Veterans” program.

“You have to work with people you don’t know, and you already have trust issues,” she said. “It definitely brought out all of the symptoms I face, but at an intense level I normally haven’t dealt with.” Sanchez said she had to learn to calm herself down for the horses to learn to trust her. “The horses would not respond to me if I was anxious, angry or violent,” she said.
read more here

If you live in Florida, there is a great program here for you too!
Equine Assisted Psychotherapy South Florida Veterans Multi-Purpose Center

Combat PTSD, the hard fall of the survivor

UPDATE,,,this is exactly why the numbers are what they are. They are about to make this worse by acting as if this training has not done more harm than good!
Air Force leaders continue to express concern over 2012 suicide numbers by Gene Rector Air Force officials continue to express concern over increasing incidents of suicide in 2012. In January, Air Force Chief of Staff Norton Schwartz ordered a stand-down day to "focus on resiliency" after 15 suicides were reported that month among active duty, National Guard, Air Force Reserve and civilian workers. However, the significant increase continues according to Chief Master Sgt. James Roy, the Air Force's top noncommissioned officer. read more here
Combat PTSD, the hard fall of the survivor
by Chaplain Kathie

The military has been unknowingly setting up survivors of traumatic events like this for a hard fall. When you read that a "suicide bomber on a motorcycle killed 3 soldiers" we don't really think about what it does to the others witnessing it.
GUL BUDDIN ELHAM / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Wounded U.S. soldiers lie on the ground April 4 at the scene of a suicide attack in Maimanah, Faryab province, which is north of Kabul. A suicide bomber blew himself up, killing at least 10 people and three soldiers.


3 soldiers among 10 killed in Afghan bombing
By Amir Shah and Patrick Quinn
The Associated Press Posted : Wednesday Apr 4, 2012

KABUL, Afghanistan — A suicide bomber on a motorcycle killed at least 10 people, including three American soldiers, at a park in a relatively peaceful area of northern Afghanistan on Wednesday, part of an increase in violence at the start of the spring fighting season.

The Taliban, which claimed responsibility for the attack, are targeting Afghan and NATO security forces as they fight to assert their power and undermine U.S. efforts to try to build up the Afghan military, who will take the lead in combat responsibility over the next couple of years.

Shortly before noon, the bomber detonated his explosives at the gate of the park in Maimanah, the capital of Faryab province, police spokesman Lal Mohammad Ahmad Zai said. His target was unclear, but Zai said four of the 10 killed were Afghan police officers.

At least 20 people were wounded, officials said.

In Kabul, NATO said three of its service members were killed in a bombing Wednesday in northern Afghanistan. It provided no other details about the attack or the nationalities of the three. read more here


Now that you have seen the picture and read the story, you need to be aware of the rest of the story you won’t read about.

For the last ten years the military has been telling the men and women sent into combat that they can “train their brains” to become resilient to traumatic events like this, thereby telling them that if they end up with PTSD, it is their fault because they didn’t train right and were weak. Once they hear they can be “mentally tough” that message lives on and destroys those who were not able to just get over it.

Every single one of them has been given the same education in nonsense so that when PTSD hits, they look at the others they were with, seemingly able to move past it and they are ashamed to admit they cannot.

The generally accepted rate of PTSD is 1 out of 3, but some use 1out of 5, exposed to the same traumatic event. After the shock wears off, that means 2 will work it out on their own terms but one will not. That leaves the “1 “wondering what is wrong with them. They internalize that blame after being told it is their fault for not “training their brains” to handle it.

They cover it up instead of addressing it with drugs and alcohol to numb what they don’t want to feel. How can they open up when they think they are weak? How can they feel comfortable to talk to their buddies when all of them lived through the same event but the others are “fine” afterwards?

They can’t. No matter how much they trust the other members of their unit with their lives, they cannot trust them with this deep dark secret that will make others wonder about their courage and mental toughness.

While “1” sees the others as getting over it, they are not aware of the fact that for some, a day will come when the event becomes alive again and they finally understand that they did not get over either.

A suicide bomber got onto a motorcycle and traveled down the same street they drove on then blew himself up. Back home, one day comes when they are driving on the road, hear the roar of a motorcycle engine and it will hit.

They will be taken back to April 4, 2012 when they heard the roar of the motorcycle, saw the bomb blow up and the carnage of 3 soldiers laying dead on the ground with 20 others wounded. They will smell the same thing again. They will feel the heat of the fire on their face. They will hear the screams. That day will happen all over again but they thought they just got over it aside from dreams from time to time.

Another “1” will go on without bad dreams because the memory is living in the back of their mind but a year from now, they will suddenly feel very sad. The anniversary date is not something they are aware of but subconsciously the alarm is sounded warning them of things to come. It is all coming back in full force taking them by surprise.

They won’t talk about it when talking is the first step to healing. No one will tell them that what is happening to them is a human, normal reaction to something totally abnormal to their daily lives back home. No one will tell them that it does not make them weak to feel what they are feeling but they simply feel it at a different level than others. No one will remind them what else happened that day, the things they were not in control over any more than they will remind them of what they managed to do afterwards no matter how much pain they are already in.

No one will help them recover, heal, forgive or forgive themselves. No one will help them restore their families because they were made to believe it was their entire fault. That is what “resiliency” training does. It is one of the biggest reasons they will not seek help.

If the military really wants to stop military suicides, they need to understand that this type of training has been setting up the survivors for a hard fall they are not prepared to fight.

Homes For Our Troops Gunnery Sgt. John Hayes

Homes for our Troops
Marine Gunnery Sergeant John Hayes was on his 4th deployment when he lost both of his legs and suffered life-threatening injuries after stepping on an IED in Sangin, Afghanistan on December 28, 2010. An Explosive Ordinance Disposal Technician, GySgt Hayes was on a routine mission, when his comrade located an undetonated ordinance. While retracing his steps to return and assist his partner, GySgt Hayes stepped on a buried IED resulting in the traumatic amputations of both of his legs.

During transport out of Afghanistan to Landstuhl, Germany, GySgt Hayes required lifesaving resuscitation multiple times. Once stabilized, he was brought to Bethesda National Naval Medical Center where the long road to recovery began. During his first week in the hospital, Hayes miraculously survived a series of grueling surgeries before a serious infection led to a rare hemi-pelvectomy amputation, leaving Hayes without a leg or pelvis on his left side.

GySgt Hayes has endured over sixty surgeries thus far, and remains at the newly renamed Walter Reed National Military Medical Center for continued treatment and physical therapy.

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Iraq War Vet charged with murdering his friend

Iraq War Vet charged with murdering his friend; Claims self defense
Posted: 4:17 p.m.
Monday, April 2, 2012
Police have arrested an Iraq War veteran from Reno and charged him with the murder of his friend in a shooting that occurred last July 3rd in downtown Reno.

24-year-old Matthew Mahaffey was arrested on Monday and will likely be arraigned Tuesday in Reno Justice Court, said Chief Deputy District Attorney Bruce Hahn. A preliminary hearing will be scheduled for later in the month.
read more here

Twice-injured sergeant among those honored by Wounded Warrior Regiment

Twice-injured sergeant among those honored by Wounded Warrior Regiment
By JENNIFER HLAD
Stars and Stripes
Published: April 4, 2012

QUANTICO, Va. — Sgt. Than Naing’s Afghanistan deployment in 2010 ended much like the Iraq deployment that preceded it, with the Marine medevaced out of the country and nursing battle wounds.

Machine gun fire from an ambush at a vehicle checkpoint in Marjah left him with serious internal injuries. He faced a long recovery back in the States and another assignment to Wounded Warrior Battalion East.

His response to the adversity has not gone unnoticed.

Naing was among those honored Tuesday during an awards ceremony that marked the Marine Corps’ Wounded Warrior Regiment’s fifth birthday. Naing received the Wounded Warrior Regiment’s Wounded, Ill or Injured Service Member Award for his “perseverance and drive.”

“We have Marines out there who still have that spirit, still have that fire in their eye” that they had when they stood on the yellow footprints at boot camp, said Lt. Col. Michael Corrado, the unit’s executive officer. But in some cases, they must learn to take that spark and use it in a different way. read more here

Complaint says KBR knew of toxins in Iraq

Complaint says KBR knew of toxins in Iraq
By Nigel Duara
The Associated Press
Posted : Wednesday Apr 4, 2012
PORTLAND, Ore. — A document uncovered by attorneys for soldiers sickened at an Iraqi water treatment plant shows a military contractor knew a deadly toxin was being stockpiled and used in massive quantities at the facility, despite the contractor’s repeated denials that it had knowledge of the toxin’s presence until soldiers fell ill.

The document, an environmental assessment that Kellogg, Brown and Root completed for the U.S. government before the invasion of Iraq, was finalized in January 2003 — a full five months before the company said it had found evidence of the toxic material, sodium dichromate.

The documents show KBR knew Iraqis ordered 8 million pounds of sodium dichromate to keep pipes from corroding, and that the company expected lax environmental maintenance and “lamentable” conditions.

Phone messages and emails left Wednesday for KBR were not immediately returned.
read more here

Army Surgeon General defends PTSD diagnostic method

Army Surgeon General defends PTSD diagnostic method
April 3, 2012
By J.D. Leipold
WASHINGTON (Army News Service, March 30, 2012) -- The Army's surgeon general last week told Senators that all military services use a standard method to diagnose post-traumatic stress disorder.

Lt. Gen. Patricia D. Horoho testified March 28 at a Senate Appropriations Subcommittee, Defense subcommittee hearing on military health and said military hospitals use the same method as the civilian sector to diagnose post-traumatic stress disorder, known as PTSD.

"It's the one standard that's out in the civilian sector as well as the military. It's the best standard out there for diagnosing PTSD," she said.

Sen. Patty Murray of Washington state said she was aware there were Soldiers at Madigan Army Medical Center at Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash., who were diagnosed with PTSD but then a forensics psychiatry team changed the diagnosis. She asked if Soldiers elsewhere had been misdiagnosed.

Horoho said the Army had just completed its own investigation at Madigan, which is under review by Army attorneys. She said the Deputy Surgeon General's Office under Maj. Gen. Richard A. Stone had initiated the investigation to look into the forensics used in the evaluation of PTSD.

"Then there's another investigation that was launched by the Western Region Medical Command to look into command climate and Madigan Army Medical Center," she said. "I initiated an IG assessment, not an investigation, but an assessment that looked at every single one of our military treatment facilities and the provision of care to see whether we had this practice of using forensic psychiatry or psychology in the medical evaluation process."

Horoho said that since becoming surgeon general, she has focused on care for PTSD, brain injuries and behavioral health.

"Since I took over as surgeon general on the 5th of December, what I've done so far is we're pulling behavioral health up to the headquarters level so that we have one standard of care across all of Army Medicine, and we're able then to shift that capability where the demand is," she said.

read more here

Lewis-McChord medic tries to save insurgent in Afghanistan

Will this story get as much coverage as Staff Sgt. Bales?
Lewis-McChord soldiers in Afghanistan see sudden action
ADAM ASHTON
The (Tacoma) News Tribune
The insurgents didn’t have a chance. Helicopter surveillance spotted them moving to a weapons cache and preparing to bury a powerful homemade bomb. It weighed 45 pounds, and they took turns carrying it. From the air, Apache helicopters laced into the insurgents with automatic cannons. On the ground, an infantry platoon from Joint Base Lewis-McChord marched to find the explosive and complete the job.

 The Stryker soldiers looked to have won the opening round in the Taliban’s annual spring offensive, and it was a fight the enemy picked. But they still had a long night ahead with unknown dangers in the dark. They had to find out whether the insurgents had laid other bombs before they’d been spotted. And they had to secure the weapons cache. “There’s still a mine out there,” said the mission planner, Capt. Brian Rieser of Lacey. Spc. Eric Pollack of Puyallup treaded lightly as the platoon approached the scene, looking for mines, sticking in tight single-file formation.

Pfc. Uriel Velazquez, a medic, made it to a wounded insurgent and tried to give aid, but the man was near death.
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