Suicide statistical information informs Congress, researchers, and senior leaders across the services on efforts to combat military suicide, a persistent problem. In 2023, there were 523 suicides among US servicemembers, averaging over one per day.
On Friday Fire Controlman 1st Class Alonzo Tablet Martin Jr, a sailor located at Naval Station Norfolk, VA, was discovered dead inside the command's building. He was an instructor at Surface Combat Systems Training Command Detachment Middle Atlantic and his cause of death is under investigation.
The 2023 DOD suicide report showed that young enlisted men accounted for the largest share of suicide deaths in the US military. That mirrors broader national trends. American men are nearly four times more likely to die by suicide than women.
Firearms were involved in roughly half of all US suicide deaths in 2023, and previous military reports have repeatedly identified access to firearms as a risk factor, particularly for younger enlisted personnel.
Some military leaders recently emphasized suicide prevention needs during the holiday season. In November, Army Secretary Dan Driscoll directed supervisors across the Army to conduct daily check-ins with their subordinates through mid-January.
Though the initiative was initially lauded, some supervisors and troops online have described the mandatory directive as unintentionally burdensome.
The broader Pentagon reporting delays coincide with certain organizational changes inside the Army. A September Army memo highlighted plans to disband its directorate responsible for overseeing soldier quality-of-life issues, known as a G-9, citing "administrative convenience." The responsibilities of that office have since been folded into the service's human resources directorate."
Alcoholic second rate Faux News TV tumor Pete Hegseth, a blatant racist and misogynist, should NEVER have been confirmed by the US Senate to lead our brave young men and women serving in the US Military. NEVER.
