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Author: TriSec    Date: 08/31/2010 10:35:09

Good Morning.

Today is our 2,722nd day in Iraq and our 3,238th day in Afghanistan.

We'll start as we always do, with the latest casualty figures from our ongoing wars, courtesy of Antiwar.com:

American Deaths
Since war began (3/19/03): 4416
Since "Mission Accomplished" (5/1/03): 4277
Since Capture of Saddam (12/13/03): 3955
Since Handover (6/29/04): 3557
Since Obama Inauguration (1/20/09): 188

Other Coalition Troops - Iraq: 318
US Military Deaths - Afghanistan: 1,249
Other Military Deaths - Afghanistan: 784
Contractor Employee Deaths - Iraq: 1,457
Journalists - Iraq : 338
Academics Killed - Iraq: 437

We find this morning's cost of war passing through:

$ 1, 073, 224, 275, 000 .00


Even as more of our troops come home from Iraq, they face an uncertain future. While many of them will finally end up at home, many more of them will eventually re-deploy to Afghanistan. With our limited core of volunteer soldiers, there will be many that will be heading overseas for the 3rd, 4th, or 5th time...or more.

In WWII, soldiers often spent years away from their families. My own great-uncle had but one weekend at home from when he enlisted in early 1942 up until Japan surrendered 3 years later. But their war was different....there was a clear goal, as articulated by FDR...the "unconditional surrender" of Germany and Japan.

Our wars have been going on for the better part of a decade...with no clear goal given by anyone, and a seemingly endless engagement ahead.



Families of those soldiers know what to expect, but it doesn't make it any easier on them. I've recently learned of an interesting statistic; of the estimated 2 million US children affected by one or both parents going to war, more than 40% of them are under 5 years old.

Think about that for a minute...for some parents and children, they've possibly been away for half a lifetime. Not only does it affect the soldier, but what does that do to the child? Perhaps because of the new face in the Oval Office, there's been a little bit of motion towards helping those children cope with war. Some big names are getting involved, and while it might seem a bit corny to us on the outside, the Muppets have gone to war...paid for by Wal-Mart, of all people.


It's a Muppet family picnic in the park, but Elmo is sad and confused: His Uncle Jack won't be there, because he's dead, and Elmo can't quite grasp that he's never coming back. For Elmo's moptop cousin Jesse, it's hard to even talk about the loss: Jack was her dad.

The story line may seem highly unusual for "Sesame Street," but when Elmo and friends aren't on their day job being cute, colorful and cuddly, they've taken on another mission: helping children of military families struggling with loss, grief and fear.

With some deep-pocketed sponsors like Wal-Mart, Sesame Workshop has been steadily expanding a program called "Talk, Listen, Connect" aimed at kids of all ages, including the youngest and most vulnerable. More than two million U.S. children have been affected directly by a parent's military wartime deployment to Iraq or Afghanistan; 40% of these children are younger than 5 years old.

According to the Defense Department, in the past 8½ years more than 12,000 military children have experienced the death of a parent. Research shows that even the toll of military deployments is steep; a study last year by the Rand Corp. found that children in military families were more likely to report anxiety than children in the general population, and that the longer a parent had been deployed in the previous three years, the more likely their children were to have difficulties in school and at home.

*snip*

Talking to support groups, Sesame officials learned that military families often had little help in communicating with children about the realities of war. "A lot of military support programs are more for the parents, but kids really relate to Elmo and 'Sesame Street,'" says Heidi Malkowski, who works at McGuire Air Force Base as the secretary to the 305th Medical Group Commander. Before her husband, Air Force Master Sgt. Edward Malkowski, was deployed to Yongsan Air Base in Korea last year, the couple watched the video about deployment with their three boys, ages 3, 10 and 13.

Though the two eldest children were more sophisticated than the average Muppet target audience, "all of them benefited," says Ms. Malkowski. "It gave them a feel for what was going to happen, and that it was OK to have feelings about it and talk about any problems they were having with it." Since the family doesn't live on a military base and the children attend public schools, "there isn't the same connection that you'd have on a military base with other kids going through the same thing," she adds.

Kim Ruocco's Marine husband, who flew 75 helicopter missions in Iraq, came home in December 2004, and was told he would be returning to combat four months later. Suffering from symptoms of depression, he committed suicide in February 2005. With two boys, now 13 and 15, "I wish I'd had something like the Sesame video to help them then when I was wondering what I was going to tell the kids and how I was going to get them through this," Ms. Ruocco says. Now deputy director of suicide education and support for TAPS, the Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors, she says the program helps kids understand that "it won't always hurt this bad, there is another side of grief, and you will one day feel joy again and some peace."




You'll note in the last paragraph above, a reference to a soldier-suicide. It's yet another unfortunate reality of war that some soldiers reach the end of their rope, and with easy access to firearms, make a solemn decision. This has gone on in every war, but it is reaching near-epidemic proportions in this day and age. A story recently posted at IAVA notes that there is now one soldier-suicide about every 36 hours. With the military's mental-health net bursting at the seams, and the overall macho attitude of the service, it's a problem that could potentially only get worse.


This week a congressionally mandated task force released its final report on military suicides to the Pentagon citing “heightened operational tempo, repeated deployments and insufficient quantity and quality of dwell time” as contributing to incredibly high suicide rates in the military.

The report noted that from 2005 to 2009, more than 1,100 servicemembers committed suicide—an average of 1 suicide every 36 hours. Suicide rates in the Marine Corps and Army have severely increased and the Army rate has more than doubled. Since 2001, 252 servicemembers have killed themselves in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The task force recognized efforts made by all military branches to prevent suicide, but concluded that they are a falling short because the programs are not centrally organized. The rush to respond to the challenge and the lack of strategic planning has led to unintended consequences. These include, inefficient programs and missed prevention opportunities.

To address this fundamental problem the task force recommended creating a “Suicide Prevention Policy Division” at the Office of the Secretary of Defense to centralize planning and implementation. Additionally, the task force had 49 findings and made 76 targeted recommendations, including:

-Reduce stress on the force
-Focus on overall servicemember well-being (mind, body, and spirit)
-Develop Comprehensive Stigma Reduction Campaign Plan
-Hold leaders accountable to ensure positive command climate
-Develop skills-based training regarding suicide prevention
-Coordinate and leverage the strengths of installation and community support services for both Active and Reserve component servicemembers
-Standardize suicide investigations
-Support and fund ongoing DoD suicide prevention research

The task force, established by the 2009 National Defense Authorization Act, was composed of seven DoD officials and seven non-DoD officials with broad military and civilian expertise. Co-chairs included Major General Philip Volpe, Commanding General of the Army’s Western Regional Medical Command and Ms. Bonnie Carroll, Director of the Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors (TAPS). The report now goes to Defense Secretary Gates, who has 90 days to approve the report and submit it to Congress.


In the civilian world, we're facing the end of the summer, and the routine of back-to-school. There is no routine in the military family...only hardship and worry. While the President is preparing to address the nation this evening about the "end of combat operations", the reality is still 50,000 troops in Iraq with no end in sight.


 

63 comments (Latest Comment: 09/01/2010 02:00:11 by wickedpam)
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