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Her staff is also responsible for noncombat deaths, such as auto accidents or illness and sometimes suicides or homicides. She has learned to set aside her own pain over the loss of so many young men and women. Her focus, she said, is on supporting the widows and parents and children. "We have a job to do for those families and we owe it to them and the commander," McKenzie said. Still, she says she cannot ignore the large numbers of soldiers who have died and the sorrow she bottles up sometimes spills over. On average, 11 Fort Campbell soldiers have died each month in combat since March. "At the end of the month, it's almost sickening to me as a person," she said. This month the division lost six soldiers in a building leveled by an explosives-packed vehicle at a southern Afghanistan base. In November, six other soldiers were shot and killed by a gunman from the Afghan Border Police during a training mission in eastern Afghanistan. Maj. Gen. Francis "Frank" Wiercinski, the senior commander at the post during the division's deployment, said at a news conference this month that everyone at Fort Campbell feels the loss of each soldier. "One hurts. Everybody knows one. The level of grief that goes through everybody is incredible," he said. These days combat deaths don't always make front pages, although the Kentucky governor orders flags to half-staff on the days of soldiers' funerals. But McKenzie says she refuses to believe there's any lack of respect and honor for the fallen soldiers outside Fort Campbell's gates. "That one loss of a soldier is like a nerve center, or a spider web," she said. "It's not restricted to Fort Campbell and our community. It reaches so many lives and impacts them." Within months, thousands of soldiers from the 101st will begin returning to Fort Campbell to be greeted with cheers and hugs and McKenzie will feel some sense of comfort. But that relief is tempered by the knowledge that soldiers from other units have taken the place of those Screaming Eagles in the combat zone. An internal White House review of war strategy released this month showed that the addition of 30,000 U.S. troops this year has halted Taliban momentum in many parts of Afghanistan, but tough combat is expected to continue for years. "Until they are all home, whenever that happens, there's always going to be someone in harm's way," she said.
[Associated
Press;
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