ian wrote on Oct 30
th, 2013 at 5:29pm:
Are these volunteers or conscripts? Forced to go or choose to go?
Volunteers. So was my grandfather in WWI, and countless others.
Your point is? It matters not whether or not a man/woman is a volunteer - they still are entitled to the same treatment and receive the same impact from incidents on the battlefield.
PTSD is a very pernicious thing - many people don't realise they are suffering from it, even when it is as plain as day to others. A good rule of thumb is 'ask their wives' (or husbands these days).
Try years of not sleeping at night and getting maybe an hour's sleep before going to work in an office, socially isolating yourself, jumping at sudden sounds and then later when you begin to realise you are deaf as well, jumping at sounds but having no real idea where they come from, or diving under the dash of your car while driving when a jackhammer goes off next to you on a busy street, early onset of heart and similar troubles and so forth...
I've known men who washed out bloodied APCs who went into the same... battle fatigue, shock, whatever you want to call it, and still had it thirty years later.
Viet Vets had a 32% rate with a tail-to-tooth ratio of around 10:1. - i.e. around 10% combat troops. Ghan and Rack Vets in-house say around 25% and counting - the Defence Force says 6% at this time, the same as the general military community, as if they somehow can't see those eyes, or don't want to.