Soldier suicide at Schofield Barracks a casualty of war and sexism

The following information about the suicide of Pvt. Galina Klippel has not been verified.   A commenter named Bearcat357 wrote on a forum at officer.com:

Media article sucks……and was just told I could post this…..

Female Solider going through divorce was hopped up on pills/booze…..barricades herself in vehicle…. MPs/DOA Police arrive and shut the area down. CID shows up and talks her down and she gets out of the vehicle….. Once she gets out, change of heart….. .45 to the head…. one shot/one self-inflicted KIA…. End of story……

Pvt. Klippel, who was deployed to Afghanistan in 2009 and 2010, was a casualty of the wars that have destroyed so many individual lives and families.  In January, the Congressional Quarterly reported:

Figures released by the armed services last week showed an alarming increase in suicides in 2010, but those figures leave out some categories.

Overall, the services reported 434 suicides by personnel on active duty, significantly more than the 381 suicides by active-duty personnel reported in 2009. The 2010 total is below the 462 deaths in combat, excluding accidents and illness. In 2009, active-duty suicides exceeded deaths in battle.

In 2009, the Pentagon reported that along with a jump in suicides among troops, “An increasing number are female Soldiers, who rarely committed suicide before but now are killing themselves at a much higher rate.”

Two days ago, the AP published an article that reported that female soldiers have much higher rates of divorce than their male military counterparts or civilian counterparts:

For women in the military, there’s a cold, hard reality: Their marriages are more than twice as likely to end in divorce as those of their male comrades — and up to three times as likely for enlisted women. And military women get divorced at higher rates than their peers outside the military, while military men divorce at lower rates than their civilian peers.

About 220,000 women have served in Afghanistan and Iraq in roles ranging from helicopter pilots to police officers. Last year, 7.8 percent of women in the military got a divorce, compared with 3 percent of military men, according to Pentagon statistics. Among the military’s enlisted corps, nearly 9 percent of women saw their marriages end, compared with a little more than 3 percent of the men.

Like all divorces, the results can be a sense of loss and a financial blow. But for military women, a divorce can be a breaking point — even putting them at greater risk for homelessness down the road.

It has an effect, too, on military kids. The military has more single moms than dads, and an estimated 30,000 of them have deployed in support of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Why military women are more burdened by divorce is unclear, although societal pressure is likely a factor.

“Societal pressure”?  More accurately, sexism and unequal power place greater distress on women soldiers.

Poster Girl, a new film about a female war veteran-turned anti-war activist tells a tragic, yet hopeful story.  It will air on HBO in 2011.   The website describes the film as:

The story of Robynn Murray, an all-American high-school cheerleader turned “poster girl” for women in combat, distinguished by Army Magazine’s cover shot. Now home from Iraq, her tough-as-nails exterior begins to crack, leaving Robynn struggling with the debilitating effects of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

 


 

Navy diver charged with murdering his 14-month-old son

The Star Advertiser reports that a Navy diver stationed at Pearl Harbor was charged with murdering his 14-month-old son back in 2009:

A former Navy diver who worked with SEAL commandos at Pearl Harbor has been charged with murdering his 14-month-old son, nearly a year and a half after the boy died from severe brain injury caused by “abusive head trauma,” officials said.

Matthew McVeigh, 26, was charged by the military on Feb. 9 with one charge and two specifications of murder, one charge and two specifications of involuntary manslaughter, and one charge and one specification of assault in the death of Brayden McVeigh, the Navy said.

The Navy refused to provide documents with details of the accusation.

According to relatives and Honolulu medical examiner reports, Brayden had suffered a broken arm at five weeks, and he once had a black eye. Baby sitters had seen bruises on the little boy.

After being placed in foster care with the family of another Navy man, the boy’s sister was allegedly abused by the foster mother. The foster mom was arrested:

But in a disturbing new development, the Honolulu foster mother appointed to care for his sister Brodi, now 4, was investigated for possible abuse of the girl, according to a state Department of Human Services report obtained by the Star-Advertiser.

The foster mother was arrested after admitting that she hit Brodi and the girl was found to have a bloody lip, according to the Feb. 24 DHS report.

Brodi also had other injuries, including swollen fingertips, bruising of her palm, a swollen left hand, a thumb-size bruise on her cheek, a bump on her forehead and a jaw-line bruise, the report states.

The report said the Honolulu Police Department responded on Feb. 19 to the home of the DHS-licensed caretakers for Brodi.

The foster father, who also is in the Navy, was notified in San Diego and immediately flew back to Honolulu, officials said.

Brodi was placed in a “non-relative resource home” on Oahu and “appears to not be thriving due to the circumstances that led to her recent injuries,” the DHS report states.

The Honolulu Star Advertiser initially reported on this case in August 2010.

U.S. sacks Kevin Maher over his derogatory remarks about Okinawans

Two articles reporting that the U.S. has sacked state department official Kevin Maher over his racist remarks about Okinawans.

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http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/world/2011-03/10/c_13770455.htm

U.S. sacks state department official over racist slurs, apologizes to Japan

English.news.cn 2011-03-10 11:05:01

TOKYO, March 10 (Xinhua) — The U.S. Embassy in Tokyo announced Thursday that the U.S. government has sacked Kevin Maher as head of the Japan affairs office of the State Department following derogatory remarks he made about the people of Okinawa.

A former deputy chief of mission at the embassy, Rust Deming, will replace the abashed Maher, immediately in a bid to rebuild strained ties between the two countries, officials said.

Following the uproar caused by Maher, leading to prefectural and city assemblies in Okinawa calling for Maher to step down, apologize and officially retract his comments, U.S. assistant secretary of state Kurt Campbell was dispatched to Tokyo.

Campbell on Thursday offered a personal apology to the people of Okinawa and Japan and conveyed deep regret on Maher’s behalf, stating that Maher’s views in no way represent those of the U.S. government.

In a meeting held with Japan’s new Foreign Minister Takeaki Matsumoto on Thursday, Campbell said that U.S. Ambassador to Japan John Roos plans to visit Okinawa to offer an official apology to the people there in person.

Local media reported that the people of Okinawa, Japan’s southernmost prefecture, felt shocked, horrified and utterly ridiculed by Maher’s remarks.

The issue arose during a State Department lecture in the U.S. aimed at college students, during which Maher referred to the people of Okinawa as being “masters of manipulation and extortion. ”

He also referred to the people of Okinawa as “lazy and deceptive,” drawing the ire of Japan’s senior ministers and the Japanese population at large.

The Okinawa prefectural assembly said that Maher’s comments trampled on the feelings of the Okinawan people, ridiculing and insulting them and that the disparaging remarks were absolutely unforgivable.

The assembly also said that Maher repeatedly made discriminatory remarks and acted discriminatorily during his time as consul general.

Added to this, one of the students attending Maher’s State Department lecture felt there were definitely racist undertones to the former U.S. consul general’s remarks.

During the lecture, Maher was quoted as saying: “Consensus building is important in Japanese culture. While the Japanese would call this ‘consensus,’ they mean’extortion’ and use this culture of consensus as a means of extortion.”

“By pretending to seek consensus, people try to get as much money as possible,” he said.

He was also quoted as saying that Okinawan people are, “too lazy to grow goya” a traditional summer vegetable in the southern prefecture, according to official accounts.

Maher, 56, served as the consul general in Okinawa from 2006 to 2009 after joining the State Department in 1981. His comments have riled the people of Okinawa who have suffered under the heavy burden of hosting U.S. military bases for 65-years after the war.

 

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http://english.kyodonews.jp/news/2011/03/76139.html

U.S. moves to calm Okinawa’s anger by sacking Maher over remarks

TOKYO, March 10, Kyodo

The United States moved Thursday to calm anger in Okinawa ignited by alleged disparaging remarks about local people made by a senior U.S. official, sacking him and offering an apology to Japan over the incident.

The U.S. government replaced Kevin Maher as head of the Office of Japanese Affairs at the State Department with Rust Deming, a former deputy chief of mission at the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo.

Visiting U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Kurt Campbell offered his personal and the U.S. government’s ”deepest regret for the current controversy” concerning Maher’s alleged remarks when he met with Japan’s new Foreign Minister Takeaki Matsumoto.

Colorado chopper crash cost $25.8 million

As helicopters roar overhead en route from Pohakuloa to Wheeler, I received this article about a helicopter crash in Colorado  from Shannon Rudolph in Kona.   The Army is proposing to do High Altitude Mountainous Environment Terrain Training (HAMET) helicopter training on the slopes of Mauna Kea, which is a bad idea all around.  Mauna Kea is a sacred site to Native Hawaiians, an ecologically sensitive and protected area, and a poor location for the Army to meet its own training objectives.

The article cites an investigation of the crash that says “The investigation was also critical of the training program, designed to prepare Army pilots for Afghanistan… the program “focuses almost exclusively” on landing at high elevations even though helicopters have little need to do that in Afghanistan.”

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http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/03/09/colorado-helicopter-crash_n_833482.html

Colorado Helicopter Crash Cost U.S. Army $25.8 Million

By Dan Elliott, AP

DENVER — An Army helicopter that crash-landed during a high-altitude training mission in Colorado last year suffered $25.8 million in damage, officials revealed this week.

The replacement price for the AH-64D Longbow helicopter from the 10th Mountain Division at Fort Drum, N.Y., is between $25 million and $30 million, the Army said. It wasn’t immediately known whether the Army would try to repair the aircraft.

The helicopter was attempting to land at about 12,200 feet above sea level June 30 when it crashed.

Two pilots were aboard. One suffered two broken legs, a broken nose and internal injuries. The other was treated and released.

READ THE FULL ARTICLE

Ann Wright: Crime and (Disparate) Punishment for US Soldiers

Published on Tuesday, March 8, 2011 by CommonDreams.org

Crime and (Disparate) Punishment for US Soldiers

Army Private Bradley Manning faces a death sentence while Army Specialist who mutilated the body of an Afghan gets “supervised chores”

The U.S. government is clearly signaling that murdering, raping, mutilating and assaulting are not nearly as serious as allegedly making available to the public documents that reveal embarrassing and/or criminal actions of senior government officials.

Last Wednesday, U.S. Army Specialist Corey Moore was sentenced at Fort Lewis, Washington, by a military judge for a mere to 60 days of “hard labor” and a bad-conduct discharge for  mutilating the corpse of an Afghan civilian, assaulting Adam Winfield, a soldier in his unit who whistle blew on the murder and mutilation of Afghan civilians, and smoking hashish over a period of several months.

In contrast, the previous day, March 1, the U.S. Army filed 22 additional offenses, including “aiding the enemy” which is punishable by death, against alleged whistleblower Pfc. Bradley Manning.  The first charges against Manning included leaking classified information, disobeying an order and general misconduct.

If found guilty, Manning could  be sentenced to life imprisonment or death for exposing documents that show numerous criminal acts committed by officials of the U.S. government.

For mutilating a body and assaulting a fellow soldier, according to Army spokeswoman Major Kathleen Turner, Moore’s “hard labor” sentence will be carried out in Moore’s unit, not in a prison. Turner said that a supervisor from his unit will give him a list of tasks and chores to do each day to be performed under guard.

Manning is in his eighth months of pre-trial solitary confinement in a military prison and has been subjected to emotional and psychological torture, most recently being forced to remain nude for extend periods in his isolated cell.

Twelve soldiers, all members of the Bravo Company, 2nd Battalion, 1st Division’s Stryker brigade, based in southern Afghanistan’s Kandahar region, are accused of the executions and mutilations of Afghan civilians.

Moore did not face charges of killing the person whose corpse he defiled by stabbing. None of the soldiers so far convicted were accused of murdering Afghan civilians.

The trial of Specialist Jeremy Morlock, who is the first to face murder charges in the deaths of the Afghan civilians, is facing three counts of murder.  His trial was delayed on March 2.

Moore the Mutilator has “Potential” says his defense attorney

Incredibly in her closing argument, Moore’s defense attorney, Captain Vanessa Mull, said Moore had “incredible potential,” and asked the military judge to recognize that potential by allowing him to remain in the service.

The military judge rejected her request and sentenced Moore to “supervised chores” and a dishonorable discharge from the U.S. Army, but no prison time.

Ann Wright is a 29 year US Army/Army Reserves veteran who retired as a Colonel and a former US diplomat who resigned in March, 2003 in opposition to the war on Iraq.  She served in Nicaragua, Grenada, Somalia, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Sierra Leone, Micronesia and Mongolia.  In December, 2001 she was on the small team that reopened the US Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan.  She is the co-author of the book “Dissent: Voices of Conscience.”  (www.voicesofconscience.com)

Army identifies Schofield soldier who committed suicide

According to an AP article, the Army has identified the Schofield soldier who killed herself on March 4:

The 8th Theater Sustainment Command said Monday Pvt. Galina M. Klippel is survived by her husband and foster mother. The 24-year old laundry and textile specialist is from Anchorage, Alaska.

Klippel enlisted in the Army in 2007 and had been assigned to the 540th Quartermaster Company for one month. She deployed to Afghanistan in 2009 and 2010.

She died at Wahiawa General Hospital Friday evening. The incident began about two hours earlier when military and federal police officers responded to a report of a soldier brandishing a weapon.

After police surrounded the area, Klippel retreated to the inside of a vehicle, where she fired the fatal shot.

Anger Spreads Over Kevin Maher’s Derogatory Comments on Okinawans

Satoko Norimatsu of the Peace Philosophy Centre posted the more information about the derogatory comments made by State Department official Kevin Maher about Okinawans:

Anger Spreads Over Kevin Maher’s Derogatory Comments on Okinawans

Kevin Maher

On December 3, 2010, Kevin Maher, Director of the Office of Japan Affairs and former U.S. Consul-General of Okinawa gave a lecture to the fourteen students of American University (Washington, DC) who were going to visit Okinawa to learn about the issues surrounding US military bases there. Kyodo News Agency, Okinawan newspapers Ryukyu Shimpo and Okinawa Taimusu, and other media reported it on March 7, 2011, and anger quickly spread through Okinawa over Maher’s numerous derogatory remarks about Okinawa and its people. The March 8 edition of Ryukyu Shimpo ran almost five full pages of special reports, analyses, an editorial that calls for dismissal of Maher, a response from US Embassy in Tokyo saying Maher’s views did not represent the US government at all, and critical comments from former Governor of Okinawa Ota Masahide, citizens, politicians and scholars in Okinawa and Japan. Ota says Maher is one who “endorsed the Henoko plan, so we should use this opportunity to crush the plan.”

READ THE FULL ARTICLE INCLUDING THE TEXT OF THE NOTES TAKEN BY AMERICAN UNIVERSITY STUDENTS FROM MAHER’S TALK

U.S. diplomat called Okinawans ‘masters of manipulation and extortion’ on Futenma issue

A U.S. diplomat who had previously been posted to Japan and Okinawa was quoted by students from American University as calling Okinawans ‘lazy’ and ‘masters of manipulation and extortion’ on the issue of the Futenma base.   It no wonder why the Okinawans demanded his removal from Okinawa after he questioned why local authorities were allowing the construction of homes in the vicinity surrounding Futenma air station.
The Japan Times reports:

A U.S. official in charge of Japanese affairs at the State Department is said to have likened the Japanese cultural principle of maintaining social harmony to “extortion” and described Okinawans as “lazy” during a speech in Washington late last year.

According to a written account compiled by students who attended the lecture at the State Department, Kevin Maher, head of the Japanese affairs office and a former consul general in Okinawa Prefecture, described Okinawan people as “masters of manipulation and extortion” when dealing with the central government.

The article goes on:

Maher gave the speech Dec. 3 at the request of American University to a group of 14 students who were about to embark on a roughly two-week study tour of Tokyo and Okinawa.

In the speech, Maher was quoted as saying, “Consensus building is important in Japanese culture. While the Japanese would call this ‘consensus,’ they mean ‘extortion’ and use this culture of consensus as a means of extortion.

“By pretending to seek consensus, people try to get as much money as possible,” he said.

Maher also criticized the people of Okinawa as “too lazy to grow ‘goya’ (bitter gourd),” a traditional summer vegetable in the prefecture, according to the account.

Maher served as the consul general in Okinawa from 2006 to 2009 after joining the State Department in 1981 and being posted to Tokyo and Fukuoka.

In the summer of 2008, while he was posted in Okinawa, Maher sparked controversy after questioning why the local authorities were allowing the construction of homes in the residential area around the Futenma air base. Plaintiffs seeking damages over noise from the U.S. base then presented him with a written demand calling on him to immediately leave Okinawa.

Magosaki, former head of the international intelligence office at the Foreign Ministry, said he had the impression that “U.S. officials in charge of recent U.S.-Japan negotiations shared ideas like those of Mr. Maher,” adding “in that sense, his remarks were not especially distorted.”

READ THE FULL ARTICLE

Who needs Wikileaks when State Department officials are willing to put their own feet in their mouths?   Meanwhile, as the Financial Times reports, Secretary of State Clinton warned Congress about the waning U.S. influence in the Asia Pacific region vis a vis China:

In an appearance before Congress, Mrs Clinton highlighted the “unbelievable” competition with China for influence over islands in the Pacific, with development of Papua New Guinea’s “huge” energy reserves one of the key issues at stake.

Arguing against proposed cuts to the state department budget, she added that the US was already losing an “information war” to al-Jazeera, the Arab news channel, with Russia and China increasing their international broadcasting as Washington and London pulled back.

“We are in a competition for influence with China; let’s put aside the moral, humanitarian, do-good side of what we believe in, and let’s just talk straight realpolitik,” she told the Senate foreign relations committee, as she appealed to its members to keep state department funding intact.

The waning U.S. influence may be more related to the arrogant policies of the U.S. as reflected in the statements of Mr. Maher than any cut in funding for the state department or competition from China.

 

 

 

 

“She committed suicide”: Schofield soldier died of ‘self-inflicted’ gunshot wound

Yesterday, I wrote a short post about a Schofield Barracks soldier who was barricaded in a car with a gun and later went to the hospital from a gunshot wound.  The soldier died shortly after being taken to the hospital.

The Honolulu Star Advertiser and Associated Press carried stories about the apparent suicide.  The identity of the victim has not been released pending notification of the family, but a commenter on this blog wrote:

She commited suicide. She was pronounced dead in Wahiawa last night around 2000.

Other details or circumstances of the incident have not yet been made public.

 

Attempted suicide by Schofield soldier?

According to KHON News, yesterday Army MPs responded to a soldier barricaded in a vehicle with a gun. The soldier suffered a gunshot wound and was taken to the hospital.  Was this an attempted suicide?

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Source: http://www.khon2.com/news/local/story/Army-police-respond-to-barricade-situation/taoTFAYZo0e02IajAhfTWQ.cspx

Army police respond to barricade situation

SCHOFIELD BARRACKS, Hawaii –

At approximately 5:30 p.m., Army law enforcement responded to an emergency call regarding a Soldier brandishing a weapon on post.

Military police cordoned off the area, while the individual was barricaded in a vehicle.

Federal Fire and EMS personnel also reported to the scene.

The individual suffered a gunshot wound was taken to Wahiawa General Hospital for treatment.

The incident is under investigation, and the condition of the individual is unknown at this time.