Stressed US troops in Iraq 'turning to drugs'

fruitfly

Bluelight Crew
Joined
Oct 28, 2003
Messages
8,071
Two years into the occupation of Iraq the menace of drug abuse appears to be afflicting American troops.

Aware of the debilitating effect drugs had on the morale and effectiveness of GIs in the Vietnam War, the authorities are attempting to stifle a repeat in Iraq.

Aside from random urine tests and barrack room searches, commanders have asked their troops to inform on colleagues.

In the past month a soldier has been arrested for selling cocaine and two per cent of the troops from one brigade have been charged with drug and alcohol abuse.

According to US army figures, out of the 4,000 men of the 256th Brigade Combat Team, 53 faced alcohol-related charges and 48 were charged with drug offences.

Since the overthrow of Saddam's regime the borders that have been so porous for insurgents have been equally open for heroin and hash smugglers from Afghanistan and Iran providing a cheap market for troops. With colleagues being killed or wounded on a daily basis, some US soldiers have turned to drugs to escape the horrors of fighting insurgents.

In one case, according to Stars and Stripes, the in-house US forces newspaper, Sgt Michael Boudreaux was found with drugs, four bottles of whiskey and 22 videos of Iraqi pornography. He received a seven month confinement, was demoted to private and given a bad conduct discharge.

In another case, Pte Emily Hamilton told a court martial that she used a hashish pipe belonging to a colleague because "it helped me go right to sleep". She was given a year's confinement and a bad conduct discharge.

"Some of these young soldiers just can't handle the stress," said Capt Christopher Krafchek, a military defence lawyer.

The majority of drug-users are in their teens or early 20s, and sometimes get their drugs from local Iraqis while on patrol in Baghdad.

Troops caught in possession of illegal substances are either jailed, demoted or discharged from the forces.
-----------------------------------------------
Stressed US troops in Iraq 'turning to drugs'
By Thomas Harding, The Telegraph (UK)
July 23, 2005


Link
 
The majority of drug-users are in their teens or early 20s, and sometimes get their drugs from local Iraqis while on patrol in Baghdad.

Wow. Talk about bravery... accepting white powdery substances from IRAQIS and sniffing them!
 
Not only that, but correct me if I am not mistaken that buying or selling drugs in any muslim country is punishable by death ?
 
That's pretty lame. I think using drugs in this case should be overlooked. It's not the crime of the century, and using a few drugs every once in a while is certainly acceptable to me if your risking your life to protect America.

In Vietnam, nearly all the troops smoked marijuana, nearly all the time in order to escape the reality of the situation.

Modern combat as in Iraq isn't exactly easy; drugs should not be what the higher positions are worrying about.
 
If I was stuck over there I would use as many drugs as possible just to lessen the misery of being stuck in a foreign country fighting an unnecessary war thousands of miles away from my family and friends.

The ones who get caught get a dishonorable discharge and up to a year in prison. That would be better than spending years in a hell hole like Iraq.
 
"Not only that, but correct me if I am not mistaken that buying or selling drugs in any muslim country is punishable by death ?"

Turkish Republic (Turkey) is a Muslim country and this isn't the case; actually there is no capital punishment in Turkey.
 
In one case, according to Stars and Stripes, the in-house US forces newspaper, Sgt Michael Boudreaux was found with drugs, four bottles of whiskey and 22 videos of Iraqi pornography. He received a seven month confinement, was demoted to private and given a bad conduct discharge.

In another case, Pte Emily Hamilton told a court martial that she used a hashish pipe belonging to a colleague because "it helped me go right to sleep". She was given a year's confinement and a bad conduct discharge.

so one guy that HAS drugs on him, plus booze and porn... gets less time than another one that just confesses having smoked hash??

oooh wait... the first guy happens to be a sgt while the second is just a private... now THAT spells justice to me...
 
Tryptamine*Dreamer said:
If I was stuck over there I would use as many drugs as possible just to lessen the misery of being stuck in a foreign country fighting an unnecessary war thousands of miles away from my family and friends.

The ones who get caught get a dishonorable discharge and up to a year in prison. That would be better than spending years in a hell hole like Iraq.

If you get a dishonorable discharge, it's hard to get a job later.
 
That's kinda like the scarlet letter. Once you get that, you are fucked for life. I would rather get demoted or spend a year in jail than get a dishonorable discharge.
 
You can't spell dumbass without ass. Your point is?

How is the war in Iraq unnecessary? Why don't you tell that to the victims in London, Madrid, New York, or D.C.? I cannot believe the shortsight some people have....

A hellhole? I hardly believe that, maybe you've been watching too much CNN.
 
^^^ Please stay on topic, we have enough threads in CE&P about justifiability of IRAQ WAR.
 
what do terrorist attacks in other places have to do with Iraq? The war in Iraq should have been a last option, instead it was a first, our motives have been switched around so many times i dont even know what the current reason is, but we have found no WMD's and now we are there bc if we leave we will have raped and pillaged Iraq, and it will fall to pieces and the international community will not appreciate that, try telling that to the non southern parents of dead soldiers.
 
^i like this guy

creativerandom-theyre idiots cuz they disagree, right?
 
did anyone see the episode of iraq when one guy, so pissed off at alcohol use, made the camp dry.

in the end basically their was a huge uproar because everyone used alcohol to self medicate because of the stress associated with the horrors of war. its so much more tempting for troops to abuse alcohol and drugs, I think a little more compassion should be shown instead zero tolerance.
 
Tryptamine*Dreamer said:
If I was stuck over there I would use as many drugs as possible just to lessen the misery of being stuck in a foreign country fighting an unnecessary war thousands of miles away from my family and friends.

The ones who get caught get a dishonorable discharge and up to a year in prison. That would be better than spending years in a hell hole like Iraq.

Never seen the inside of a Federal prison have you?
 
Aware of the debilitating effect drugs had on the morale and effectiveness of GIs in the Vietnam War, the authorities are attempting to stifle a repeat in Iraq.

right...

In one case, according to Stars and Stripes, the in-house US forces newspaper, Sgt Michael Boudreaux was found with drugs, four bottles of whiskey and 22 videos of Iraqi pornography. He received a seven month confinement, was demoted to private and given a bad conduct discharge.

In another case, Pte Emily Hamilton told a court martial that she used a hashish pipe belonging to a colleague because "it helped me go right to sleep". She was given a year's confinement and a bad conduct discharge.

is it just me or did the female get a larger punishment for a smaller crime? (after reading the replies, i suppose it could also be because oneis a sgt.)

also, why are pornography and booze illegal? do soldiers lose their freedoms upon enlisting or something?
 
Top