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Fort Carson soldiers killing spree after Iraq combat |
25.08.10 14:59 |
Iraq War, "War on terror" |
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By Daniel Edge
Seventeen US soldiers from a Colorado military base who mostly served in Iraq have been linked to violent killings and attempted killings since their return to US soil. Three of them came from one platoon - highlighting how a generation of American soldiers are struggling to cope with life after military service.
"I was having a total mental breakdown. Every day we were getting in battles, and never having a break, it seemed like, it was just crazy.
"I just got to where I couldnt take it. I tried to go to mental health, and they put me on all kinds of meds, too. And I was still going out on missions... they tried different medications, different doses, and nothing worked." Kenny Eastridge was a decorated gunner, but is now serving 10 years in prison for his role in the murder of fellow soldier Kevin Shields in Colorado Springs.
In November 2007, Eastridge along with two other soldiers, Louis Bressler and Bruce Bastien, were out drinking in a nightclub with Mr Shields after returning from a rough combat tour in Baghdad.
Drunk and stoned, they drove off to find more alcohol. Minutes later, Specialist Kevin Shields lay dead, gunned down in a drunken argument, and left in a pool of blood by the side of the road.
Bressler and Bastien were sentenced to 60 years in prison for the murder and a string of other crimes in Colorado Springs.
Kevin Shields murder was not a unique case. At Fort Carson military base, 17 soldiers have been charged or convicted of murder, attempted murder or manslaughter in the past four years.
For over a year, This World has been tracking down the members of Third Platoon, Charlie Company, 1st battalion, 506th infantry, the regiment known as the "Band of Brothers", which is based at Fort Carson, Colorado, trying to make some sense of the killings that have occurred since their return to the US.
The majority of Third Platoon served multiple combat tours with distinction and managed to adjust to life after Iraq. But a significant minority have not. Four of the platoon have ended up in prison. Two are dead - one died from an overdose, another was killed by a suicide bomb.
In all, 15 out of 42 soldiers from Third Platoon left the army after a single Iraq tour. Four were kicked out for failing drug tests, and one was sent to prison for driving while drunk and fleeing the scene of an accident. Five were medically discharged. Only five left the army because their service had ended. More than half of the platoon said they suffered from psychological problems after Iraq.
Trigger happy
The platoons youngest member, Jose Barco, is serving 52 years in jail for shooting and wounding a pregnant woman when he opened fire at a party in Colorado Springs. He was convicted on two counts of attempted murder. Barco said he became desensitised to death and killing during the vicious combat of the "surge" in 2007, when his battalion were tasked with driving al-Qaeda out of Baghdad.
It was Third Platoons job to move mutilated bodies every morning. "It got to the point where it was like seeing a dead dog or a dead cat. If youre not numb in those moments, youre going to go crazy. I guess it just follows me," he said from his prison cell.
As Third Platoons tour wore on, discipline deteriorated. Jose Barco said that for some soldiers, casual brutality became the norm, and that he routinely shot unarmed Iraqis. "We were trigger happy. Wed open up on anything. They even didnt have to be armed. We were keeping scores," he said.
The US army investigated, but no soldier from Third Platoon has been charged with killing civilians in Iraq. While in Iraq, Eastridge had exhibited signs of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), was taking anti-depressants and sleeping pills, but was also taking valium, smoking pot and drinking whisky. He had a history of aggression, and been charged with assault before he went on his second tour, but he was still deployed.
He said Iraqi civilian deaths did not bother him at all: "You disassociate. To you theyre not even people, you know. Like, theyre not humans." The platoons first battalion commander Colonel David Clark, accepted that the price of "success" on the battlefield could take a psychological toll.
"Its got to have an impact," he said. "Is that a reason not to do the surge? No. The surge worked. We needed to do the surge. War is a dangerous thing," he added.
The number of Fort Carson soldiers failing drug tests rose by 3000% in the first three years of the Iraq war. Ryan Krebbs, the platoon medic, admitted abusing medication in Iraq, stockpiling sleeping pills to calm himself down after missions.
He never forgave himself for the death of one of his sergeants, and eventually tried to kill himself with an overdose of preion anti-psychotic drugs when he returned home. "In the first six months youre just happy to be home. And then after that... problems start. "Depression, anxiety, paranoia, getting the feeling that youre in Iraq all over again. "I just couldnt take it anymore," he said.
Before the Iraq war, American soldiers on psychiatric medications were not allowed to deploy to a combat zone. But by the time of the surge, more than 20,000 US troops in Afghanistan and Iraq were taking anti-depressants and sleeping pills to cope with the stresses of combat. The military has come under fire for medicating troubled soldiers rather than taking them away from the front line.
Dr Joseph Glenmullen warned that such medication could be dangerous in war. "All of these anti-depressants now carry in recent years a black box warning. "The black box warning for these anti-depressants say that they can make people suicidal and a variety of other side effects that include insomnia, anxiety, agitation, irritability, hostility, impulsivity and aggression, all of which obviously could become critical in a combat situation," he said.
The vice-chief of the US army, General Peter Chiarelli defended the policy, but said that the army needed every soldier it could get. "Its a supply and demand problem," he said. "I cannot do anything about the demand, I only have a finite supply, and when the demand goes up, and orders are given, we provide the soldiers."
Spurred by the public outrage, the armys medical command last year conducted an investigation in to the violence. It found that most of the soldiers had experienced unusually intense combat in Iraq, six of them had criminal records before they joined the military, 11 had a history of substance abuse and nine were taking psychiatric medications. It concluded that the intensity of battle and shortcomings in mental health treatment may have converged with "negative outcomes" such as alcohol and drug abuse.
Last week the final American combat brigade pulled out of Iraq after more than seven years of war. But for many soldiers, the end of combat operations is just the beginning of a different kind of struggle back home.
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