From Military.com:
“Army
Releases More Details on New 'Missing Soldier' Policy”
Soldiers will
not be declared absent without leave until a search is conducted, an
investigation is launched, and family or friends contacted under a new Army
measure to track soldiers when they go missing. Army leaders said Thursday they
have spoken to commanders about the plan, which will designate a soldier as
missing, rather than immediately as absent without leave, and will issue a
written policy in the next two weeks to revitalize the urgency for finding
soldiers who don't show up for physical training or work.
Rather than
assume troops are absent without leave, units should be "talking about
taking care of soldiers, talking about aggressively looking for them. That's
the philosophy we want in the Army. We wouldn't leave soldiers behind in
combat. We don't want to leave them behind in garrison," Army Chief of
Staff Gen. James McConville said Thursday during a media briefing with
reporters. The initiative follows a series of disappearances and deaths at Fort
Hood, Texas, and elsewhere in which soldiers went missing but weren't found for
weeks or even months.
Spc. Vanessa
Guillen went missing in April; her body was found more than two months later.
Her family has said she was being sexually harassed, and they have criticized
the Army for not acting quickly enough to find her. The suspect in the case,
Army Spc. Aaron Robinson, died by suicide June 30, and his girlfriend, Cecily
Aguilar, has been charged as an accomplice.
At Fort Bliss,
Texas, Pvt. Richard Halliday went missing July 24 and was listed as AWOL, but
Army investigators believe he may have left the base earlier than reported. His
parents said they didn't know their son was missing until more than a month
later, when they called his unit. His whereabouts are unknown.
Last year, Pvt.
Gregory Wedel-Morales went missing; he was declared a deserter roughly a month
later. His remains were found in a shallow grave not far from Fort Hood, where
he was assigned.
Army officials
told The Associated Press that suicides among active-duty soldiers are up 30%
this year, to 114 as of Sept. 27 compared with 88 at the same time last year.
Those deaths include Sgt. Elder Fernandes, who went missing from Fort Hood in
mid-August and whose remains were found a week later. The attorney for
Fernandes' family said the soldier had been harassed and bullied after
reporting a sexual assault by a superior. He had been hospitalized for
behavioral health issues before he disappeared. Army officials are directing
leaders to reach out to families to get to know them "before something
happens." "The families may have a better idea of what's going on in
the soldiers' lives ... so we can establish that relationship -- Mom, Dad,
spouse can say, 'Hey, my son or daughter is having some issues. I need to get
some help,' McConville said. The service has not instructed leaders to
investigate every AWOL case in the last "three to five years,"
McConville said. But, he added, if a family has concern about an AWOL soldier,
the Army will assist them and work with law enforcement to try to locate that
service member.
Commanders have
always been able to decide how an investigation into a missing or AWOL person
should proceed, and this policy will not alter that, officials said. The new
emphasis is designed to establish a new "mindset" among leadership
that forces them to pay attention rather than simply consider them AWOL and, by
association, deserters or malingerers. "And the policy we had in place was
somewhat confusing for some of our commanders," McConville said. "But
basically, what [the new policy] says is if a soldier is not present for duty
or missing, they only become AWOL after a thorough investigation, thorough
looking for the soldier, dealing with the family, dealing with law enforcement,
so we can prove that they are absent without leave."
^ The US Army
desperately needs to update its Missing Soldier Policy and hopefully this will
fix the major problems that currently plague the Army. More needs to be done to
keep Soldiers safe and alive and to get them any help they may need before things
go to a place that they can’t return from (ie. suicide or murder.) ^
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