Re: U.S. soldier in Baghdad kills four fellow troops before killing himself
Re: U.S. soldier in Baghdad kills four fellow troops before killing himself
Looks like the guy didn't kill himself and he's in custody. He did shoot 5 of his fellow soldiers.
LINK
Re: U.S. soldier in Baghdad kills four fellow troops before killing himself
How anyone can hope to comprehend the reasons behind something like this is beyond me. Its impossible...
Re: U.S. soldier in Baghdad kills four fellow troops before killing himself
Quote:
Originally Posted by
MaNuMaNiAc
How anyone can hope to comprehend the reasons behind something like this is beyond me. Its impossible...
The kind of reason you are supposing implies rationale. Rationale implies logic. There is nothing logical about this situation, or any case where a man purposely kills allies.
Re: U.S. soldier in Baghdad kills four fellow troops before killing himself
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Cry Havoc
The kind of reason you are supposing implies rationale. Rationale implies logic. There is nothing logical about this situation, or any case where a man purposely kills allies.
or takes his own life for that matter
Re: U.S. soldier in Baghdad kills four fellow troops before killing himself
Quote:
Originally Posted by
MaNuMaNiAc
or takes his own life for that matter
There CAN be a kind of logic in that. If someone is in pain, a great deal of distress with no end in sight, and wants to end that situation, there is reason in that, however malformed.
Re: U.S. soldier in Baghdad kills four fellow troops before killing himself, senior d
Quote:
Originally Posted by
FaithInOne
I know numerous soldiers who will continue asking to go back until they are physically unfit to do so.
Even so, if they are displaying signs of PTSD, they shouldn't go back over. Yes, even if they WANT to. That can be a sign/symptom of PTSD.
Re: U.S. soldier in Baghdad kills four fellow troops before killing himself, senior d
Quote:
Originally Posted by
mrsmaalox
A soldier may very well be initially fit for service, but after the experience of the war become unfit. The problem is in the follow up evaluations. Soldiers returning from a 12-15 month deployment are screened mostly like this: As their plane lands at their US base, they are handed a card asking if they feel they would benefit from counseling from a mental health professional. Check yes or no. Check no, and they will be in the arms of their loving families in a matter of minutes. Check yes, and they are detoured onto a bus to be taken to a mental health clinic and a possibly 2 week delay of being reunited with their families. So what are they most likely to check?
Not to mention the near-universal stigma of mental disability in the Armed Forces.
Re: U.S. soldier in Baghdad kills four fellow troops before killing himself
BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- A U.S. soldier fired on his fellow troops at a counseling center at a base outside Baghdad, Iraq, on Monday, U.S. officials said, killing five people in the worst such attack of the six-year-old Iraq war.
The shooting occurred at 2 p.m. at a stress clinic at Camp Liberty, near Baghdad International Airport, two senior defense officials said. Though initial reports indicated the attacker was killed in the incident, the U.S. command in Baghdad said late Monday a suspect in the killings was in custody.
Neither the suspect nor any of the victims had been identified, but a defense official with access to the latest reports on the incident told CNN that the suspect had been a patient at the treatment center.
"Any time we lose one of our own, it affects us all," Col. John Robinson, a U.S. military spokesman, said in a written statement.
President Obama said that he was "shocked and deeply saddened" by the "horrible tragedy."
"My heart goes out to the families and friends of all the service members involved," he said in a written statement. "I will press to ensure that we fully understand what led to this tragedy, and that we are doing everything we can to ensure that our men and women in uniform are protected."
The president said he discussed the issue in a meeting with Defense Secretary Robert Gates on Monday afternoon.
And Gates expressed his own "horror and deep regret" at a press briefing. Video Watch the defense secretary talk about the incident »
"If the preliminary reports are confirmed, such a tragic loss of life at the hands of our own forces is a cause for great and urgent concern," Gates said. "And I can assure you that it will get this department's highest priority attention."
Adm. Michael Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, added the incident shows a need to "redouble" efforts regarding troop stress levels.
Camp Liberty is tightly guarded, and U.S. troops are required to clear their weapons of ammunition while on the base. The only service members who have loaded weapons are those guarding high-ranking officers and military police.
Monday's attack marks the sixth incident in which a service member was killed by a fellow service member since the launch of Operation Iraqi Freedom, the March 2003 invasion of Iraq.
# In March 2003, Capt. Christopher Seifert and Maj. Gregory Stone of the Army's 101st Airborne Division were killed in a grenade attack at Camp Pennsylvania, Kuwait, that wounded 14 other officers. Sgt. Hasan Akbar was convicted by a court-martial in 2005 and sentenced to death..
# Sgt. Joseph Tackett was fatally shot in June 2005 by a fellow soldier in Baghdad. Lt. Willie Brown later pleaded guilty to a charge of negligent homicide and was sentenced to 30 months in prison, the independent Army Times reported.
# The same month, Capt. Phillip Esposito and Lt. Louis Allen were killed in an explosion at a base in Tikrit, north of Baghdad. The military charged a sergeant in their company, Alberto Martinez, with murder in their deaths, but a military jury acquitted him in 2008.
# Two U.S. sailors based in Bahrain, Seaman Anamarie Camacho and Seaman Genesia Gresham, were shot and killed by a third sailor who then shot himself in October 2007, the Navy said.
# A 39-year-old soldier was charged with killing Staff Sgt. Darris Dawson and Sgt. Wesley Durbin in Tunnis, Iraq, in September.
Camp Liberty is part of the Camp Victory Complex, one of the largest U.S. military bases in Iraq. It lies just northeast of Baghdad International Airport and is also near the massive al-Faw palace of executed former dictator Saddam Hussein.
Once known as Camp Victory North, the base was renamed Camp Liberty in September 2004, or Camp Al-Tahreer in Arabic, according to GlobalSecurity.org, a Web site that provides background on military and security issues.
Like other American facilities in Iraq, Camp Liberty provides a host of amenities for the thousands of U.S. troops who call it home during their combat tours.
The base resembles a giant trailer park, dotted with air-conditioned two- or three-person units that house thousands of service members. It boasts several dining facilities catered by a private company, fully equipped gymnasiums, recreation centers and a post exchange that rivals Wal-Mart.
advertisement
In recent years, a number of fast food restaurants such as Burger King and Pizza Hut have opened, as well as private stores and a bazaar that sells local wares.
The military set up several chapels, and each unit operates stress-relief clinics -- such as the one at which the shootings occurred Monday -- where troops can request counseling.
Re: U.S. soldier in Baghdad kills four fellow troops before killing himself
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Cry Havoc
There CAN be a kind of logic in that. If someone is in pain, a great deal of distress with no end in sight, and wants to end that situation, there is reason in that, however malformed.
So is that why we have more crimes of this nature at schools?
Re: U.S. soldier in Baghdad kills four fellow troops before killing himself