[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 112 (Wednesday, July 25, 2012)]
[House]
[Pages H5206-H5207]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
START WINNING THE WAR ON MILITARY SUICIDE BY ENDING THE WAR IN
AFGHANISTAN
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
California (Ms. Woolsey) for 5 minutes.
Ms. WOOLSEY. Mr. Speaker, more than 2,000 U.S. troops have been
killed in the line of duty in Afghanistan. Unfortunately, that
dramatically understates the human cost of this war, a war that is now
nearly 11 years old.
A recent Time magazine cover story details the silent killer of our
brave servicemembers--the tragically high suicide rate among Iraq and
Afghanistan veterans and other members of the service. The article
describes how one Army helicopter pilot, who had flown 70 missions in
Iraq over 9 months--70 missions over 9 months--waited on the phone for
45 minutes to speak to the Pentagon crisis line when he was in severe
distress. The last communication his wife received from him was a text
in which he said, ``Still on hold.'' Several hours later, she found him
in their bedroom with a fatal gunshot wound to the neck.
A second victim, an Army doctor who wasn't deployed to Iraq or
Afghanistan, wrote an email to his wife minutes before hanging himself.
It read:
Please always tell my children how much I love them, and
most importantly, never, ever let them find out how I died.
Mr. Speaker, we can no longer deny the devastating mental health
impact of repeated deployments, of continued exposure to explosions,
horror, carnage and destruction. Of course, in an institution like the
U.S. military that values courage and toughness, there's a reluctance
to admit to depression and anxiety.
Sometimes that manifests itself in the worst possible ways. For
example, one Army major general wrote an angry diatribe on his blog
about the selfishness of troops who killed themselves or were leaving
others to ``clean up their mess.'' He admonished:
Act like an adult, and deal with your real-life problems
like the rest of us.
It's about time, Mr. Speaker, that we lost that attitude because
we're losing brave Americans at a terrifying clip. In fact, according
to the Time article, more soldiers have taken their own lives than have
died in Afghanistan. While veterans make up 10 percent of the adult
population, they account for 20 percent of the suicides.
We are starting to see more awareness of this problem, thank Heavens.
Secretary Panetta says the right things, but it's time to back up
rhetoric. It's time to back it up with more resources because the fact
is only 4 percent of the Pentagon's medical budget is devoted to mental
health, about the same amount that we spend on the Afghan war every day
and a half. We spend $2 billion a year to treat servicemembers
suffering from psychological trauma, but we spend $10 billion a month
on the war that is the root of much of that trauma in the first place.
Even if the Afghanistan war ended tomorrow, Mr. Speaker, so much
damage is already done. We would still be left with a huge crisis that
will require more resolve than we are seemingly prepared to muster. I
would expect every Member who has enthusiastically supported this war
to just as eagerly support what it takes to fight the suicide epidemic
this war has caused. It's
[[Page H5207]]
time to stop the bleeding to make sure our heroes are removed from the
conflict that is inflicting so much damage. We can start winning the
war on suicide by ending the war in Afghanistan.
Let's bring our troops home now.
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