Sunday, January 13, 2008

Across America, Deadly Echoes of Foreign Battles

New Your Times: Jan. 13th. - Town by town across the country, headlines have been telling worrying stories. Lakewood, Wash.: “Family Blames Iraq After Son Kills Wife.” Pierre, S.D.: “Soldier Charged With Murder Testifies About Postwar Stress.” Colorado Springs: “Iraq War Vets Suspected in Two Slayings, Crime Ring.” Individually, these are stories of local crimes, gut-wrenching postscripts to the war for the military men, their victims and their communities. Taken together, they paint the patchwork picture of a quiet phenomenon, tracing a cross-country trail of death and heartbreak.

The New York Times found 121 cases in which veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan committed a killing in this country, or were charged with one, after their return from war. In many of those cases, combat trauma and the stress of deployment — along with alcohol abuse, family discord and other attendant problems — appear to have set the stage for a tragedy that was part destruction, part self-destruction.

Three-quarters of these veterans were still in the military at the time of the killing. More than half the killings involved guns, and the rest were stabbings, beatings, strangulations and bathtub drownings. Twenty-five offenders faced murder, manslaughter or homicide charges for fatal car crashes resulting from drunken, reckless or suicidal driving. About a third of the victims were spouses, girlfriends, children or other relatives, among them 2-year-old Krisiauna Calaira Lewis, whose 20-year-old father slammed her against a wall when he was recuperating in Texas from a bombing near Falluja that blew off his foot and shook up his brain.

A quarter of the victims were fellow service members, including Specialist Richard Davis of the Army, who was stabbed repeatedly and then set ablaze, his body hidden in the woods by fellow soldiers a day after they all returned from Iraq.
By Deborah Sontag & Lizette Alvarez

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Comment from Mozlink: It is tragic to read of these events and I am left thinking again of what going to war has done to these young men, most of whom as teenagers just a few years ago, had their own expansive dreams for their lives. Then they encountered war, killing, death, body bags, hatred, prejudice, racism, torture, Abu Grave and disorder. And everything changed and would never be the same again. How easy it is to hide such a stark reality behind the ideals of patriotism, nationalism, the war on terror, support our troops, the military etc.
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