Las Vegas Sun

November 22, 2009

Currently: 57° | Complete forecast | Log in

Helping the troops

Saturday, Sept. 1, 2007 | 10 p.m.

Rep. Bob Filner is offering a novel plan to help soldiers who serve in combat zones readjust to life back home.

Filner, chairman of the House Veterans Affairs Committee, figures that as there are boot camps that prepare soldiers for war, there should be “de-boot camps” that help soldiers return to normal life. He said the camps could be a mandatory part of duty when soldiers return from combat. Filner said he is proposing a pilot program to help soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan with brain injuries and post-traumatic stress disorder.

“When you leave the combat zone, you can be in Baghdad yesterday and tomorrow you are taking your kids to a soccer game. There is no time for decompression,” Filner said.

The California Democrat cited high rates of suicide, domestic violence and drug and alcohol abuse in the Army, and said, “We're releasing a time bomb to the community.

Speaking before a crowd filled with Vietnam veterans at the national American Legion convention in Reno last week, Filner said that Vietnam veterans did not receive the support they needed after returning from combat.

“We have to do a better job,” he said, linking that to the high rates of suicide and homelessness among Vietnam veterans. “We have to serve our Iraqi and Afghanistan veterans.”

Filner is smartly trying to separate the soldier from the war, which he said did not happen with the Vietnam War. He said that during the Vietnam era, “many people in this country confused the war and the warrior. If you didn't like the war, you said, ‘To hell with the warrior.'”

Thankfully, although Americans oppose this war, they support the troops, and it is important to continue doing so. Filner's idea is one worth pursuing. The troops need to be brought home and helped to return to normal life.

Discussion: 1 comment so far…

  1. My son just killed himself on 1/22/08 by "self inflicted gunshot" wound. Can you tell me the stats on suicides commited by soldiers on active duty who are being treated for PTSD after returning from Iraq? My son is stationed at Nellis. He returned from his 2nd tour late last summer and just couldn't adjust. He was in security and they had taken him off guns but then allowed him to have them again knowing he was seriously depressed. Eric has always been the happiest easy going guy that everyone would want to be with...he loved everything about life. He was never decompressed. He killed himself and all of his family yesterday. How many of us could have been saved this horror if my child had been thru a "de-boot camp".
    Grieving Mother

Post a comment

Commenting requires registration.

Comments are moderated by Las Vegas Sun editors. Our goal is not to limit the discussion, but rather to elevate it. Comments should be relevant and contain no abusive language. Full comments policy.

Username:
Password: (Forgotten your password?)

OR Create an account (It's free)

  • Most Read
  • Discussed
  • Most E-mailed

Calendar »

  • 22 Sun
  • 23 Mon
  • 24 Tue
  • 25 Wed
  • 26 Thu