July 17, 2010 11:23 PM

Army Suicides Rise; Prevention Strategy Changes

By
David Martin
(CBS)  A record 60 Americans were killed in Afghanistan last month. The military is also grappling with an equally devastating problem, suicides by service members.

Special Section: Afghanistan

June was not only the worst month ever for American combat deaths in Afghanistan. It was the worst month ever for suicides in the Army, CBS National Security Correspondent David Martin reports.

A total of 32 soldiers, both active duty and reserve, took their own lives in those 30 days. So far this year, 145 soldiers have committed suicide compared with 130 during the first six months of last year, which at the time was the worst on record.

In an attempt to reverse the trend, the Army released a suicide prevention video in which Spc. Joseph Saunders, distraught over the breakup of his marriage, described how he tried to kill himself.

"I put the rifle up to my chin, put it on semi, and I pulled the trigger," Saunders said in the video.

But the gun didn't go off. He was saved by a buddy who had spotted the warning signs.

"He says, 'Yes, I took your firing pin; I took it last night,'" Saunders said in the video. "He says, 'You were worrying me.'"

The new video replaces an earlier attempt at suicide prevention using actors, which Army officials now admit soldiers viewed as a joke. The Army hopes hearing real soldiers talk about their close encounters with suicide will help remove the stigma of admitting to mental problems.

"I laid on the floor of my bedroom while my wife pleaded with me not to take my life," another soldier said in the video.

"If you do this, who benefits?" his wife asked in the video.

Not all the soldiers who committed suicide in June had served in Iraq or Afghanistan, but there is no doubt it is the stress of nine years of war which has driven the Army suicide rate above the national average. Sgt. Coleman Bean had done two tours in Iraq.

"I was so grateful that he come home in one piece that I was willing to say that drinking too much was blowing off a little bit of steam," his mother Linda Bean said.

Until one day in 2008, he killed himself. For Bean, the latest suicide numbers confirm the tragic lesson she learned: for all the efforts the Army is making to prevent suicide, soldiers need more help than they are getting.

"We are going to continue to lose young men and young women and daughters and sons, and I think it's a damn shame," Bean said.

Web Extra: Linda Bean Talks about Her Son

Like the wars themselves, Army suicides seem like a problem with no end in sight.

Copyright 2010 CBS. All rights reserved.
  • David Martin

    David Martin is CBS News' National Security Correspondent.

Add a Comment See all 35 Comments
by thejoker12 August 6, 2010 2:12 AM EDT
Do soldiers families get the 400,000 dollars in suiside cases?
Reply to this comment
by ers1949 July 31, 2010 3:13 PM EDT
As an Viet Nam veteran, I've seen all this before. Isn't insanity defined as, "doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result?". The politicans want the soldiers to stay till we "win", but can't tell you what a "win" looks like. Doing 2, 3, 4, tours of Afganistan or Iraq is just making our guys and gals targets with their odds of surviving lower each tour they serve. Pressure? You try it!
Reply to this comment
by UForgotPoland July 19, 2010 5:10 AM EDT
I got a good prevention, how about pulling out of the ******** known as the "Middle East"?
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by pussbump July 18, 2010 1:53 PM EDT
Chief7777 is correct. These young people that join the DOD in today's world are not raised to be self sufficient and when encountering a problem/situation they give up. Not to mention the fact that that many have no religion.

When your in the DOD mommy can't kiss it and make it all better. You have to deal with it on your own.
Reply to this comment
by democracy5 July 18, 2010 9:33 PM EDT
You're probably too stupid to realize that you are a completely heartless moron.
by rightbehind July 18, 2010 1:21 PM EDT
I imagine a lot of them are feeling the catch 22 syndrome and realising these are corporate wars.
Reply to this comment
by doctajim July 18, 2010 12:37 PM EDT
When in Grad School, I volunteered to counsel Vets at the local VA and VA Psych Center. Though drafted in VN, I did not see combat but remember all the stories of the men I worked with - and after my hours requirement was over I stayed friends and "unofficial" counselor with dozens. After the formal time was over, I lost 2 (one 8 years after the war's end) and came close to losing 4 others. The reasons in all 6 were the same - the were ashamed. Each man had done something they believed was unforgivable (harmed someone innocent, left someone they cared about behind, watched a child under about 9 get killed or horribly wounded by US efforts, or didn't stand up for an innocent civillian nor stopped an atrocity from occurring). Many had lost their dearest friends who they buddy-enlisted with, lost wives who "dear-johned" them when they were in country, and more than one confessed thay had fragged a zealous officer who was going to "kill us all" - but that, in itself wasn't enough. What killed them was the shame!
Reply to this comment
by democracy5 July 18, 2010 12:48 PM EDT
That's really sad. Seriously.
by newsterI July 18, 2010 11:39 AM EDT
by rationall7
Their parents, kids, vets and a lots of other people care including myself."

Well if you REALLY cared you'd STOP your kid from joining in the FIRST place, this war is a FARCE, always has been. This is not about protecting America, you cant stop radical nuts bent on suicide bombing and hate by bombing another country, ALL that does is build up MORE hate and resentment and propagates more intense quest for *** for tat style REVENGE.
We've learned NOTHING from the Israel/Palestine wars and conflicts, NOTHING!
Secure OUR borders, STOP imigration, that's how you protect the country.
If we didn't set ourselves up to be the global POLICEMAN meddling in every other country's business and affairs, we wouldn't be so hated and in so much of a mess as we are now.
We wouldnt be throwing away $10 BILLION every month into a rat's fat azz for a country that totally hates us.
It is these pissants who JOIN the military now who are making this whole fiasco continue now into 9 YEARS, enough already, if a substantial number of troops just say NO and "walk" the military will be FORCED to cease operations and withdraw. They CANT try or jail 50,000 people walking off the job en masse, there's power in NUMBERS!
Time to just say HEL1 NO and walk away from this krap!
Reply to this comment
by ouchitatom July 18, 2010 10:12 AM EDT
When we as nation fail to take proper care of our veterans when they return from combat or after expierencing a traumatic expierence or after having to kill other humans then the enemy has succeeded in thier efforts to kill our srvice men and woman. Wether thier life is taken in battle or as a result of battle they have still met thier goal.They have completed thier mission.
Reply to this comment
by democracy5 July 18, 2010 11:22 AM EDT
Yet all these hypocrites scream at the rest of us to "support the troops"!
by whatisit21 July 18, 2010 9:53 AM EDT
the US military doesn't give people the time nor the freedom to seek help. If someone came forward and said they were thinking about suicide, they would be considered a fake because command would think they wanted to duck out of duty. If the military did give them help, it would be in the form of imprisonment complete with physical and verbal abuse.

why anybody would join the military is beyond me. America rewards the enemy but gives the vet a minimum wage job.
Reply to this comment
by newsterI July 18, 2010 11:29 AM EDT
by whatisit21
If someone came forward and said they were thinking about suicide, they would be considered a fake because command would think they wanted to duck out of duty. "

Yup, but then that begs the question of why keep someone who so obviously doesnt want to be there and is going to be a disruption and heavy baggage?

"why anybody would join the military is beyond me. America rewards the enemy but gives the vet a minimum wage job."

Yeah, because they are stupid, or when the Bush regime was in power they joined to help the regime, nothing but a bunch of BUSH REGIME enablers who made it possible for that madman to invade Iraq, threaten Iran, almost restart the cold war with Russia, threaten Chavez and on and on it went.
That was why gas went to $4 a gallon- the instability and THREATS to the middel east.
Far as Im concerned the vets who joined during the Bush regime's tenure can STAY over there or come back in pine boxes.
by wyodutch July 18, 2010 9:13 AM EDT
Last year, a record-breaking 245 soldiers committed suicide. The Army seems on track to surpass that number this year, as 145 soldiers have taken their lives in the first half of 2010.
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Well, they *are* volunteers after all.. right? At least no-one of any importance will be on that suicide list... No Bush, Obama, Cheney, Perle, Pelosi, Wolfowitz or Boehner... Just a few working-class kids from West Virginia or New Mexico.
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America... you ought to be ashamed of yourself for not having the guts to shoulder the burden along with these *volunteers*.
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