BAGHDAD — An Army sergeant who was due to leave Iraq soon
after three tours has been charged with murder and aggravated assault
in the fatal shooting of five fellow soldiers at a military counseling
clinic in Baghdad, a U.S. official said Tuesday.
Sgt. John M.
Russell was taken into custody outside the clinic following Monday's
shooting at Camp Liberty, said Maj. Gen. David Perkins. It was the
deadliest case of soldier-on-soldier violence since the Iraq war began
in 2003.
Perkins gave few details of the shooting and said there were conflicting accounts of what happened.
He said Russell was referred to the clinic by his superiors, presumably because of concern over his mental state.
Perkins said the assailant's weapon had been taken away, but somehow he got a new gun, entered the clinic and opened fire.
In
Washington, a Pentagon official said Russell was escorted to the
clinic, but once inside argued with the staff and was asked to leave.
After he and his escort drove away, Russell apparently seized the
escort's weapon and returned to the clinic, said the official, speaking
on condition of anonymity because the investigation was ongoing.
Russell
is on his third tour of duty in Iraq, according to his service record.
He was due to go home in three weeks, the official said.
Excerpts
of the service record, obtained by The Associated Press, show that
Russell previously did two one-year tours of duty here, one starting in
April 2003 and another beginning November 2005.
Russell's
hometown was listed as Sherman, Texas, when he enlisted. He entered the
Army National Guard in 1988 and served until 1994. Russell became an
active duty soldier in 1994, the record shows.
It also says Russell served in Serbia through the last half of 1996 and Bosnia and Herzegovina in the last half of 1998.
Russell
received several medals and commendations, which an official described
as typical for Russell's rank and time in the military. The official
spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to speak
on the record.
Russell has no criminal record in Texas except for
a conviction for criminal trespassing in 1988, according to Department
of Public Safety Records.
No one answered the door Tuesday at the
one-story brick home that records indicate is owned by Russell's
parents. The house, located in an unincorporated area of Grayson County
several miles outside Sherman, not far from the Oklahoma border.
A
man who answered the phone listed for Russell's ex-wife and 20-year-old
son declined to identify himself and said "No comment."
Perkins
said two of the dead were officers from the 55th Medical Company, a
reserve unit from Indianapolis. The others were enlisted personnel
seeking treatment at the clinic. He did not identify the victims by
name.
Russell, of the 54th Engineer Battalion based in Bamberg,
Germany, was charged with five counts of murder and one count of
aggravated assault in Monday's shooting, Perkins said.
He said a
probe has also begun into whether the Army has enough mental health
facilities in Iraq, where the attack at Camp Liberty has drawn new
attention to the issue of combat stress and frequent deployments to
battle zones.
The U.S. military is coping with a growing number
of stress cases among soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan — many of whom
are on their third or fourth combat tours. Some studies suggest that
about 15 percent of soldiers returning from Iraq suffer from emotional
problems.
"One thing if we've learned from this war, we learned
from World War II, Korea, Vietnam, the previous wars, is not all
injuries are physical," said Maj. Gen. Daniel P. Bolger, commander of
Multi-National Division-Baghdad.
President Barack Obama, who
visited an adjacent base last month, said in a statement that he was
"shocked and deeply saddened" by the report.
At the Pentagon,
Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the
shooting occurred "in a place where individuals were seeking help."
"It does speak to me about the need for us to redouble our efforts in terms of dealing with the stress," Mullen said.
Violence has dropped sharply in Iraq since the high point in 2007, but attacks continue, especially in the north.
Also
Tuesday, a suicide bomber rammed his car into an Iraqi police truck in
the northern city of Kirkuk, killing five policemen and a civilian.
Kirkuk is the center of Iraq's oil production in the north and is contested between its Kurdish, Turkomen and Arab populations.