"Rose Covered Glasses" is a serious essay, satire and photo-poetry commentary from a group of US Military Veterans in Minnesota.
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"Despite
more than a decade’s worth of effort to prevent suicides among
service members, the numbers continue to rise, including a 16-percent
jump during 2020.
To
get a better idea of the scope of the issue, Congress mandated an
independent review commission in the 2022 National Defense
Authorization Act and, on Tuesday, the Pentagon announced it would
begin getting it off the ground."
“It
is imperative that we take care of all our teammates and continue to
reinforce that mental health and suicide prevention remain a key
priority,” Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin wrote in a
memo signed Tuesday.
“One death by suicide is one too many. And suicide rates among our
Service members are still too high. So, clearly we have more work.
The
commission will study suicide prevention and behavioral health
programs across the services, including site visits, focus groups,
interviews and a confidential survey of troops at every location
visited, much in the same way an independent
review commission on sexual assault went
about its mandate last year.
“He’s
seen enough to know that we we’ve got to do something different,
that we’ve got to try to take additional and more creative action
here,” Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said of the secretary’s
concerns.
The
first nine bases on the list are:
Joint
Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska
Fort
Wainright, Alaska
Eielson
Air Force Base, Alaska
Fort
Campbell, Kentucky
Camp
Lejeune, North Carolina
Nellis
Air Force Base, Nevada
Naval
Air Station North Island, California
Camp
Humphreys, South Korea
North
Carolina National Guard
Alaska
has made headlines in recent years with its disproportionate suicide
rate among service members. U.S.
Army Alaska alone
confirmed in December that it had seen 10 confirmed suicides in 2021,
with several more deaths still under investigation.
Austin
“spent a lot of time when he went out to Fairbanks, talking with
troops and commanders about the challenges there with respect to
mental health and suicide,” Kirby said of the secretary’s trip to
Alaska last summer.
The
other installations were chosen in consultation with leaders, Kirby
said.
Alaska
has made headlines in recent years with its disproportionate suicide
rate among service members. U.S.
Army Alaska alone
confirmed in December that it had seen 10 confirmed suicides in 2021,
with several more deaths still under investigation.
Austin
“spent a lot of time when he went out to Fairbanks, talking with
troops and commanders about the challenges there with respect to
mental health and suicide,” Kirby said of the secretary’s trip to
Alaska last summer.
The
other installations were chosen in consultation with leaders, Kirby
said.
“So,
I mean, it was a team effort to come up with this list,” he said.
“And … it’s the initial list of installations. It doesn’t
necessarily have to be the end all list here.”
Despite
more access to behavioral health resources than ever before, some
service members still struggle to push through their concerns about
seeking treatment, while others experience long waits to access care
on their bases.
I think
the secretary believes that one problem that we have to get after is
the stigma of seeking help for mental health problems, which is still
a problem in the military,” Kirby said. Many service members still
have the impression that seeking mental health treatment will
negatively affect their military careers, from favorable assignments
to deployments to promotion chances.
One
specific measure Austin is interested in is firearms storage, Kirby
said.
More
than 60 percent of military suicides are carried out with a
personally owned firearm, according to DoD data. Research
on suicide has shown that the decision to end one’s life
is largely an impulsive one, and that even having to remove a weapon
from a locked safe can give someone enough time to reconsider.
“And
one of the things that he wants to do is is is work with commanders
on storage of the firearms in the home or on base and make sure we’ve
got that,” Kirby said.
The department has 60 days to tap members of the commission, according to the memo. After that, site visits will begin no later than Aug. 1, with an initial report due to Austin by Dec. 20. Congress will receive the findings by Feb. 18."
If you or a loved one is experiencing thoughts of self-harm or suicide, you can confidentially seek assistance via the Military/Veterans Crisis Line at 800-273-8255, via text at 838255 or chat at http://VeteransCrisisLine.net."
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Meghann Myers is the Pentagon bureau chief at Military Times. She covers operations, policy, personnel, leadership and other issues affecting service members. Follow on Twitter @Meghann_MT
After a careful review by the Intelligence Community for Publication, Drone Warrior has performed a stunning service, giving the reader a gut level feel for U.S. War from a decorated soldier's perspective.
Those of us who served in Vietnam and similar conflicts since can totally relate to this masterpiece of honesty.
Brett Velicovich pulls no punches. The mental stress, teamwork, tragedy and after effects in this modern, technological killing process can be felt with every line. The impact on the man himself and on those with whom he worked has not been spared in its detail and its effects.
Having left the service, Brett is now involved in harnessing and controlling the technology for peaceful purposes like wildlife preservation and management. Those of us who have made similar transitions applaud, commend and recommend the book and the man.
Read it to become informed and consider the billions we are spending on this warfare today as well as the impact on our youth and our future. Drone Warrior
“Women have dutifully served
their country since the days of the American Revolution. From breaking
barriers in combat to challenging the status quo across eras, here are
eight female soldiers who changed the course of history for the U.S.
military.“
Pvt. Cathay Williams began her journey with the U.S. military in a
support role during the Civil War, forced to serve due to her status as a
captured slave, the National Park Service noted.
After the war, Williams became the first Black woman to enlist when she
joined the Army under a male pseudonym, William Cathay, in 1866, the
Army noted.
“A young, female, unmarried former slave,” Williams joined the Army
without a full medical examination, and she was assigned to the 38th
U.S. Infantry Regiment – which would become part of the famed Buffalo Soldiers, according to the Wounded Warrior Project.
Suffering from smallpox, Williams was discovered to be a woman while
undergoing treatment and honorably discharged in 1868. She continued in
her work as a military cook at Fort Union, New Mexico. Her story was
documented in the St. Louis Daily Times in 1876.
Williams was the first Black woman to enlist in the U.S. Army and the only known female Buffalo Soldier.
Dr. Mary E. Walker
In 1861, 29-year-old Dr. Mary Walker applied to become a surgeon with
the Union Army, as she had been one of the few female physicians in the
country prior to the start of the Civil War. She was rejected but
remained on as a volunteer, leveraging her skills to treat the wounded,
AUSA noted.
Two years later, Walker finally received an appointment to serve an
assistant surgeon in the Army, after spending additional time as a field
surgeon in Virginia, according to an Army story.
In the latter years of the war, Walker was captured by Confederate
forces, held in squalid conditions as a prisoner of war, yet another in a
long line of abuses due to her status as a woman.
She lobbied for women’s causes and for her service during the war, she was awarded the Medal of Honor in
1865. The award was later rescinded in 1917 due to her status as a
civilian, but President Jimmy Carter restored the award in 1977, the
Army noted.
Dr. Mary Walker remains the only woman to have received the Medal of Honor in U.S. history.
Harriet Tubman
Beyond being the legendary “conductor” of the Underground Railroad,
shepherding enslaved persons to freedom, Harriet Tubman also aided the
Union’s military effort in the Civil War. Early in the war, Tubman
served as a nurse for Union regiments before moving on to a larger role
as spymaster and military scout.
Under the direction of War Secretary Edwin Stanton, Tubman recruited
locals throughout conquered areas in the South to pass information along
to Union commanders and assist in assault preparations. Her group’s
work led to a successful assault on Jacksonville, Florida, and the
Combahee River Raid in June 1863, as Military Times previously reported.
Decades later, Tubman finally received recognition — to a degree —
for her military service during the Civil War, as she had been kept out
of official military documents. In 1899, Tubman was granted a pension,
officially validating her widely known contributions to the Union cause.
Mary A. Hallaren
Col. Mary Hallaren became a member of the first training class of the
Women’s Auxiliary Army Corps (later, Women’s Army Corps, or WAC) in
1942 before commanding the largest all-female unit to serve overseas. In
1948, while serving as WAC’s director, Hallaren “was instrumental” in
advocating for women to be fully integrated as “permanent regular
members” of the military beyond just wartime, according to the National Women’s Hall of Fame.
Hallaren, who had originally enlisted in the military following the
Pearl Harbor attack, later became the first commissioned officer in the
Regular Army, not a medical role, in 1948, according to the Army’s Center of Military History.
“To me there was no question that women should serve,” Hallaren said, as reported by the New York Times.
Marcella A. Hayes became the first black female to receive aviator
wings in the U.S. Armed Forces in November 1979 when she completed Army
helicopter flight training at the U.S. Army Aviation Center, Fort
Rucker, Alabama. (Army)
Marcella Hayes, who began her military career as an ROTC cadet at the
University of Wisconsin, became the first Black female pilot in the
U.S. military in 1979. She graduated Army Flight School at Fort Rucker,
Alabama, earning her paratrooper badge during her training as a
helicopter pilot, the Army Women’s Foundation reported.
Hayes became the 55th woman to earn her pilot wings, before being
assigned to the 394th Transportation Battalion in Germany, the unit’s
first black soldier and first woman leader. She went on to marry Dennis
Ng, also in the Army, retiring in 2000 as a lieutenant colonel.
Linda Bray
Capt. Linda Bray was one of over 700 women to participate in
Operation Just Cause in Panama in 1989, as she led the 988th Military
Police Company, according to the Army. There, she became the first woman
to command American soldiers in battle, a trailblazing role that
launched a reflection about women in the military.
“I joined the Army for the excitement, the challenge, the experience
and loyalty to my country,” Bray said at the time, according to the New York Times. “I haven’t been let down a day.”
Bray’s role in combat forced the U.S. military to reevaluate their
prohibition on women in the role, which ultimately culminated in an end
to the ban by then-Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta in 2013, the
Seattle Times noted.
Kristen Griest & Shaye Haver
Capt. Kristen M. Griest and 1st Lt. Shaye L. Haver became the first
two women to complete Army Ranger School and earn their Ranger tabs in
2015. Both graduates of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, New
York, the two soldiers became the first females of over 77,000 tabbed
soldiers since the Ranger School’s inception in 1950, according to an
Army story.
Griest was a military police platoon leader, and Haver was an AH-64
Apache pilot, who both looked at Ranger School as the highest challenge
to prepare them to lead soldiers.
“The reasons I chose to come were the same as the men here: to get
the experience of the elite leadership school and to give me the
opportunity to lead my Soldiers the best that I can,” Haver told the
Army at the time. “I think if females continue to come to this course,
they can be encouraged by what we have accomplished, but hopefully
they’re encouraged by the legacy that the Ranger community has left.”
Since Griest and Haver shattered this barrier, over 30 female
soldiers have earned Ranger tabs, including enlisted soldiers and
National Guardsmen, Army Times reported.
Ann E. Dunwoody
Retired Army Gen. Ann E. Dunwoody became the first woman to
reach a four-star officer rank in the history of the United States
military in 2008. Dunwoody, who led Army Materiel Command before her
retirement in 2012, remained a pioneer throughout her decades-long
service. In 1992, she became the first woman to command a battalion in
the 82nd Airborne Division during the First Gulf War, according to the Purple Heart Foundation.
“I have never considered myself anything but a soldier. I recognize
that with this selection, some will view me as a trailblazer,” Dunwoody said on
her promotion at the time. “But it’s important that we remember the
generations of women, whose dedication, commitment and quality of
service helped open the doors of opportunity for us today.”
Dunwoody was a fourth-generation Army officer, and she released a book on leadership in 2015.”