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RELATED STORIES
Part 1
 
Alpha Company: Their War Comes Home
 
Alpha Company hit hard by post-traumatic stress
Part 2
 
Rebuilding their lives
Part 3
 
Haunted, again and again
Part 4
 
The Battles Past and Ahead
 
Certain of their own action if not the mission
 
Series home page
 
How this series was reported
Videos
 
Dan South: Thrown from a humvee
 
Inquirer reporter Tom Infield on the series
 
Mike Sarro and John Ashenfelder: Ambush aftermath
 
Robert Jackson: Can’t shake images of Iraq
 
Lorenzo Martinez : The war outside his window
 
Anthony Callum: 'Flying by the seat of our pants'
 
Allan Dempster: A sword on S. Broad St.
 
Harold Myers: ‘Every night I cried’
Previous Alpha coverage
 
From deployment to return
Graphics
 
Timeline: Starting with the mobilization
 
Profiles of Alpha Company members
 
How the ambush happened
 
Alpha Company survey: What they're doing now
From the front lines
 
A Guard member shares e-mails to his family
Discussion boards
 
Being a soldier at war
 
Soldiers returning home from war
 
Getting help with PTSD
Getting help for PTSD
 
National Center for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
 
Pennsylvania Army National Guard
 
Army Behavioral Health
 
Tricare Behavioral Health Plan (Military Health System)
 
David Baldwin's Trauma Information Pages
More about traumatic brain injury
 
What it is, treatment, prognosis
Getting help
 
Links to information on PTSD and TBI


Alpha Company: Their War Comes Home

How This Series Was Reported

Staff writer Tom Infield first reported on Alpha Company, a National Guard unit based in Northeast Philadelphia, in November 2004, when the soldiers were preparing to depart for Iraq. In the years since, he has revisited the company many times and written about the deaths of six members in 2005; deployment in Iraq at Forward Operating Base Summerall, which he visited in September 2005; the guardsmen's return to the United States; and the early readjustment at home.

Beginning last March, Infield, later assisted by correspondent Will Hobson, contacted 130 of the 131 survivors on the company roster; 126 of them agreed to be interviewed or to complete a survey of questions about how they were coping since coming home. Some were interviewed more than half a dozen times.

In addition to the guardsmen, Infield interviewed wives, girlfriends, parents and children of the soldiers; experts and officials in the Department of Veterans Affairs, the Department of Defense, and the National Guard; and medical authorities on post-traumatic stress disorder.

 

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