A Decade Plus, and counting, Still No 'Sacrifice' nor 'Demand For' by the Country Served and Especially Through Their Representatives as Legislations For Are Blocked!!
Oct 18, 2012 - Army commanders said they expect more soldiers to struggle with mental health problems as deployments to the Middle East become more rare.Many Fort Bragg soldiers have been in a decade-long cycle of deploying to war for a year, then coming home to train for another deployment the next year.
But with the Iraq war over and the Afghanistan war scheduled to end in 2014, that cycle is coming to a close. The entire 22,000-soldier 82nd Airborne Division is back at Fort Bragg, and only 2,000 of those soldiers will see another deployment to Afghanistan.
"We'll have more of our soldiers back, and those soldiers will have more time at home to realize all is not well," Brig. Gen. Timothy P. McGuire, deputy division commander, said Thursday at a conference focused on mental health in the military. "In terms of seeking help, I think you'll see an increase in demand."
McGuire was one of a half-dozen high-ranking soldiers speaking to more than 200 psychologists, social workers and other professionals at the third annual Forward March Conference. read more>>>
No comments:
Post a Comment