"Multiple Deployments Contribute to Suicide Among Veterans." Veterans, edited by Dedria Bryfonski, Greenhaven Press, 2015. Opposing Viewpoints. Opposing Viewpoints in Context, link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/EJ3010686244/OVIC?u=coll72001&xid=07aa4ac5. Accessed 7 Apr. 2017. Originally published as "US Military Struggling to Stop Suicide Epidemic Among War Veterans," Guardian, 1 Feb. 2013. In this article Libby Busbee shares her son's tragic story. Her son, William Busbee, served three year long tours in Afghanistan before retiring from the military. When he arrived home he wasn’t the same person he was when he left. William once said to his mother, “You would hate me if you knew what I’ve done out there.” He had nightmares frequently and eventually began sleeping in the closet for a better sense of security. On one occasion William was so startled that he lept out of a moving vehicle after a nearby train sounded its horn. On the date of March 20th, 2012, William Busbee locked himself in his car and shot himself in the head. Opposing Viewpoints in Context states that “In 2012, for the first time in at least a generation, the number of active-duty soldiers who killed themselves, 177, exceeded the 176 who were killed while in the war zone”. This article shows the tragic reality of a traumatized veteran and the shocking…