It was just another tragic headline in a Florida newspaper: Area woman killed in Iraq -- Father confirms
his daughter is third casualty in past three months. The article went on to
describe how Army SPC Oprah Nestling, aged 26, (not her real name or age) had
been killed in combat overseas in January 2006. No details were provided by the
Department of Defense and her father declined to make any further comment.
However, a few days later her name was removed from the website of Iraq
Coalition Casualty Count and no further information appeared in the local
paper. Further investigation revealed that SPC O. Nestling had not been killed
on active service in Iraq but was supposedly found slumped dead on the floor of
a barrack room at Ft. Bragg, N.C.
Fast forward 30 months and two applications submitted through the
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) and the army released a partial report with
key pieces of information withheld, listing the cause of death as ‘undetermined.’
So how did an active 26 year-old female soldier die alone in a total
stranger’s barrack room on a US Army base? How come the manner and cause of her
death is still undetermined? Why have the authorities failed to come to a
satisfactory conclusion concerning her demise? Why are they still withholding
vital information?
The heavily censored details in the partial report reveal the tragic
story of a young woman with chronic psychological problems which begs the
question, how did such a person with so many problems come to be accepted into
the military in the first place? Was her psychological entry-screening really
so inadequate or has the desperate need to put boots on the ground meant that
standards had been lowered to such an extent that severe depression and bazaar
self-destructive behavior are no longer seen as being a disqualification for
entry?
You don’t have to dig far into the Army documents to find that Nestling
had severe psychological problems prior to and after entry into the service.
Even before being sent overseas she was mixing prescription anti-depressants
with alcohol and once had her stomach pumped in what may have been a failed
suicide attempt.
Whilst stationed in Egypt, she again attempting suicide and was
evacuated to a medical center in Germany where she was diagnosed with a
borderline personality disorder and medicated for depression.
An Army mental health counselor who knew her during this period later
incongruously commented to investigating officers that Nestling was ‘chronically suicidal, but at the time had
no desire to kill herself, but ‘based
on her history and our conversations I felt she would kill herself with[in] a
year.’
Nestling was repatriated to mainland USA but was again reported as
making suicidal gestures. She spent about two months at Walter Reed Hospital
where she signed a Suicide Prevention Agreement.
The Army decided that Nestling would be chaptered out of the service and
she was sent to Ft.Bragg, N.C. for processing and discharge. In early December
2005, she was again drinking in barracks and later hospitalized for cutting
herself, and held for yet another psychological evaluation.
In early January 2006, she failed to turn up for duty and was
subsequently reported absent without leave. A few days prior to this, it is
known Nestling was found asleep on a couch in the barrack-block day room she
shared with fellow soldiers. She awoke for an incoming phone call and asked
them to leave so she could hold a private conversation. On their return the
door was locked and despite banging loudly for quite awhile they had to resort
to using a credit card to slip the lock and gain entry. Nestling was passed out
on a couch with the phone still pressed to her ear. She continued to sleep most
of the day and this was the last time she was seen alive. About midday, five
days later, her body was found fully clothed and slumped on the floor of
another barrack room (not her own). Evidence suggests she had been living in
the vacant room for a couple of days.
Nestling’s own room had been checked for her whereabouts the previous
late afternoon after she was posted missing. An unmade bed covered with pill
bottles was found together with strange journal entries/letters (which were not
thought to be suicidal). Conflicting witnesses statements to investigating
officers both deny and claim Nestling was drinking heavily.
Nestling’s death may or may not be a suicide. We will only know when the
authorities finally release all the relevant documents and reveal the manner
and cause of this young soldier’s death. What’s certain is that the number of
Army suicides has doubled in the past four years and is symptomatic of an
organization in severe crisis.
SPC Nestling was dumped alone into a decommissioning facility with total
strangers, where odd behavior like sleeping all day, locking oneself inside a
shared day-room, binge drinking and abusing prescription drugs were ignored, or
worse, accepted as normal behavior. A place where she did not make friends or
socialize and where fellow soldiers forgot the first rule drummed into them
during basic training, i.e., you look after each other -- that’s what keeps you
alive.
Was Nestling’s death just another avoidable cock-up or
is there something more sinister going on here? Either way, plenty of people in
the military appeared to be aware that she had serious psychological problems
and its leadership clearly failed in its basic duty of care by allowing a
vulnerable confused young female soldier to slip thru the cracks.