DEPLETED URANIUM ALERT!
http://www.apfn.org/apfn/du.htm
by Don Monkerud The Case Against Depleted Uranium
http://unconfirmedsources.com/index.php?i
When the US Army advertises for recruits, it emphasizes jobs and
benefits the Army offers, but nowhere are prospects informed
about the risk of illness, sickness and death caused by the
Army's use of radioactive munitions.
On September 7, in the first court case on Gulf War I to reach
Federal Court, nine veterans from a National Guard unit argued
their case before a judge in New York, claiming the Army
violated its own safety protocols by exposing them to
radioactive depleted uranium and refusing to provide medical
care. Representing the US Army, Assistant US Attorney John
Cronan asked the court to dismiss the lawsuit immediately
because courts can't decide "sensitive military matters" and a
1950 Supreme Court decision ruled that soldiers can't sue the
government for injuries caused by their military service. The
Court has not reached a decision. Depleted uranium remains a
nagging problem for the US Army, which extensively used such
munitions during fighting in Gulf War I, Yugoslavia, Afghanistan
and Iraq. DU is a chemically toxic, radioactive element with a
half-life of 4.5 billion years that damages the kidneys and
lungs, causes genetic mutations and cancer, and is associated
with a
number of medical problems.
The US nuclear industry has produced 1.2 billion pounds of DU
waste as a by-product of nuclear energy and weapons production.
This nuclear waste is being recycled into DU munitions, which
many believe were given to Israel in the form of armor piercing
shells for use in the 1973 Sinai war. Since then, DU has been
tested, manufactured and sold to a number of countries by US
arms manufacturers. Considered highly-effective in penetrating
armor, uranium munitions are used by the main US Abrams battle
tanks, Bradley Fighting vehicles, A-10 attack aircraft and a
host of other ammunition, including bunker busters.
Upon impact, DU munitions burn at 3000 to 6000 degrees
Centigrade and combust into a radioactive gas of fine particles
of uranium oxide dust, which remain suspended in the air and,
once inhaled, become a chronic source of uranium heavy metal and
contact radiation poisoning. Estimates vary on the total tonnage
of DU used by the US and include: during the US bombing of
Yugoslavia, 34 tons of DU; in Gulf War I, up to 375 tons; in
Afghanistan in 2001, 1,000 tons; and in Gulf War II in 2003, up
to 2,200 tons.
The release of radioactive and chemically toxic dust and uranium
fragments causes serious medical problems. According to Leuren
Moret, an independent scientist and international radiation
specialist, depleted uranium is considered a factor in Gulf War
syndrome, which affects many of the 325,000 Gulf War I veterans
who are on permanent medical disability.
In August 2004, the VA reported that over 518,739 Persian Gulf
veterans were on medical disability since 1991. Moret attributes
many of these disabilities to DU exposure. Although some remain
controversial, Moret compiled a list of 100 illnesses that
veterans associated with DU, including brain tumors, Hodgkin
lymphoma, leukemia, rectal cancer, Parkinson's disease,
respiratory problems, rashes, kidney and eye problems, and
thyroid cancer. Others point to definite connections between DU
and brain tumors, and Hodgkin and non-Hodgkin lymphoma.
"Under international law, depleted uranium meets the definition
of WMD and violates US military law as well as the Geneva and
Hague conventions," says Moret. "There has been a cover-up by
three administrations including Bush Senior, Clinton and Bush
the younger because reparations, which the countries attacked
are entitled to, would bankrupt the US."
The Pentagon asserts that DU "is only mildly radioactive" and a
White House website stated that reports of health problems and
cancers caused by DU are propaganda, although a US Army report
by Col. E. Wakayama in August 2002, confirms serious health and
environmental problems. The report recommends long-term sampling
of water and milk from sites heavily contaminated with DU and
the removal of contaminated soil from populated areas.
Vietnam and Gulf War veteran and former US Army Depleted Uranium
Project director Doug Rokke charges that the Department of
Defense (DOD) deliberately ignores its own orders for testing
soldiers who come in contact with DU. In August, 1993, General
Eric Shinseki issued an order requiring training for anyone who
"may come in contact" with DU equipment, complete medical
testing for solders "exposed to DU contamination," and the
development of "a plan for DU contaminated equipment." Rokke
cites a number of other orders including an April 2004 Surgeon
General's order and US Army regulations requiring medical and
environmental clean up from DU contamination.
Rokke charges government and political officials with a
deliberate cover-up to limit liability and to ensure uranium
munitions use during combat. He insists that DOD officials
provide medical care for all DU casualties, complete
environmental mediation, and complete decontamination of all DU
damaged equipment, structures, and terrain as required by US
regulations. He also emphasizes that documented health problems
exist in many of the 55 US locations where DU is stored,
processed and tested.
"Clinton and Bush totally were aware of the use of DU and made
conscious choices to disregard the law," said Rokke. "The world
needs to know about it: It's a horrible mess and it will
continue until someone holds these people accountable for what
they've done and demands compliance. The children of the world
don't deserve this."
The Pentagon took 25 years to acknowledge problems with the
corrosive defoliant Agent Orange, used in Vietnam to destroy the
jungle. It took 40 years before sick WWII veterans were
compensated for exposure to atomic bomb radiation. Officials
today can't say, "We didn't know," because they are fully aware
of the dangers of DU. How long will it take them to stop using
radioactive ammunition and exposing soldiers and civilians to
genetic damage, cancer and other illnesses?
http://unconfirmedsources.com/index.php?i
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(REPOST) CASE AGAINST DEPLETED URANIUM
Free Market News Network, FL - 14 hours ago
... argued their case before a judge in New York, claiming the
Army violated its own safety protocols by exposing them to
radioactive depleted uranium and refusing ...