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Killing Me Softly: How Agent Orange Murders Vietnam's Children
Political Affairs Magazine, NY - 3 hours ago
... children, she returned to rural Que Lam Hamlet, where her
sick, elderly mother ... report submitted to Secretary Derwinski
of the Department of Veterans Affairs on ...
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The US war on Vietnam has been the subject of controversy. The
unprovoked invasion of Vietnam after assisting the French in an
attempt to preserve their frustrated effort to defend
colonialism, the installation of a dictator in the southern part
of a fraudulently partitioned country and the use of cluster
bombs, napalm and other weapons make fascinating intellectual
debate. The debate, however, takes on a more somber mood when
the victims of the war continue to march on the world stage to
remind us that for millions the war did not end in 1975. A stark
example of this is the enormity of those casualties from the use
of Agent Orange.
The use of Agent Orange during the Vietnam war violated a number
of international conventions and related agreements. With full
knowledge of its implications, its inhumane consequences and its
insidious effects, the US government used the deadly poison
dioxin. It was a desperate attempt by Washington in collusion
with US corporations to harm enemy combatants, innocent
civilians and the cause of Vietnamese liberation.
The real experts on Agent Orange are the victims, and a clear
understanding of the issue may be seen through their eyes. A few
of them live in an isolated mountain hamlet, not visited by many
outsiders.
Nguyen Thi Thach lives in Que Lam hamlet, Que Son District,
Quang Nam Province. She was five years old when the war ended.
The man she eventually married about 15 years ago was 12 when
the war ended. He was from Dien Ban, near My Son in Quang Nam
Province. Their memories of the war were childhood memories,
shrouded in the innocence of childhood and the fear, confusion
and chaos of adults attempting to cope with war.
Thach and her husband hoped for a prosperous and peaceful
future. He worked in the gold mine at Phuoc Son, with no
knowledge of the massive quantities of Agent Orange sprayed
there. He drank the water and labored in the soil. The spraying
over their communities was not an issue that they understood.
Their focus was making a living, sharing a relationship and
creating a family. In 1992, their first child, Thang, was born,
followed in 1997 by their son Tung. He suffered severe
developmental disabilities. In 2000, their daughter Vy was born.
She was severely disabled and failed to develop physically. Tung
and Vy spent their days and nights lying next to each other,
unable to develop normally, gain weight or communicate with
others. As any caring mother, Thach sensed their pain and
discomfort.
Five years ago, Thach’s husband died in a traffic accident.
Since his family was unwilling to assist Thach and her three
children, she returned to rural Que Lam Hamlet, where her sick,
elderly mother lived on the banks of the Song Thu Bon river.
Thach gathered firewood to support her children, lived in a
small shack and desperately tried to provide food and clothing
for her children. Thang soon stopped going to school in order to
care for her disabled brother and sister while her mother
worked.
Thach heard of the work being done both to provide some aid to
Agent Orange disabled children and their families and of the
opportunity to tell people in the US about it. I received her
letter in May 2004:
…My name is Nguyen Thi Thach and I was born in 1970. I am living
in Que Lam, Que Son, Quang Nam. I was born and raised up in the
area where the US troops had dumped lots of chemicals. We were
not aware of the effects of these deadly chemicals. So we
continued to eat and drink all of the contaminated vegetables
and water. Since then, I have begun having diarrhea, headaches,
dizziness, ulcerous skin and arthritis.
My parent was also affected by AO and he passed away at early
age. I married in 1991. My first daughter, Nguyen Thi Thang, was
born in 1992. She is a normal and healthy kid. My second son,
Nguyen Son Tung, was born in 1997. His head is very soft, he has
seizures all the time, and his muscles are atrophying. He cannot
recognize anyone or anything. My third child, Nguyen Thi Vy, was
born on July 10, 2000. She is experiencing the same symptoms as
her brother. My family life is very difficult now. My hope is
that my letter will be read by humanitarian organizations and
caring individuals.
Prof. Hermann, please forward my letter to the companies that
produced Agent Orange. Tell them that they must assume the
responsibilities for what they have caused to my family and
millions of other Vietnamese families.
Thank you.
Little Vy died in January 2005. Neighbors made a coffin and
buried her tiny, emaciated body near the small, dilapidated
shack that served as the family home. Thach reported that Tung
seemed to respond in small ways when he would lie next to his
little sister at night. These ended when Vy died and were
replaced by slight, plaintive moans. Almost unnoticed seizures
began, followed by recurrent bleeding from his ears and frequent
fevers. The family had little food, no cooking pans and no
blankets for the cold mountain nights. The wind would blow
through the holes in the walls of their one-room house, and the
rain would turn the dirt floor to mud, as Thach and her young
daughter desperately tried to help themselves and Tung survive.
(illustration by Victor Velez)
Tung was taken recently to a hospital in Tam Ky because of his
increased hemorrhaging and a growing severity of his seizures.
He was diagnosed with a brain tumor. The Danang/Quang Nam Fund,
a small US non governmental organization (NGO), had provided
repairs for their home, food, clothing and some money to allow
the mother to care for Tung while Thang returned to school. The
three of them traveled to the hospital in Tam Ky. The NGO
assisted with medical care.
The doctors spoke of brain surgery but finally concluded that
Tung’s severe disabilities and fragile condition precluded such
an operation. They traveled back to their mountain hamlet to
continue their daily struggle, to share their love for each
other and to await the certainty of Tung joining his sister Vy.
After the NGO gave the mother some money before they had left
Tam Ky for the journey home, Thach asked her daughter if she
would like to have new clothes, a first for the child. Thang
began to cry. Her mother asked her why she was crying when
offered new clothes. Thang said, “I don’t want you to use my
brother’s medicine money for my clothes.” The child had
mistakenly thought the money was intended for Tung’s drugs.
Thach’s family is one among millions. Read the 4,000 letters
from Vietnamese families affected by Agent Orange at
www.danangquangnamfund.org. One mother states, “We have
continued to cry orange tears since the war.” Confronted by
insurmountable disabilities, unable to join in the economic
progress of their nation, prevented from what seems an
inevitable consequence of the invaders’ willingness to win at
any cost, many ascribe their situation to be a result of fate.
Many harbor no hatred for the US, but rather believe that fate
caused exposure to these deadly chemicals.
The courage and heroism of the victims and their families cannot
be emphasized enough. Each day is filled with a lack of hope,
reminders in many cases that their family ancestry will end with
their death, a struggle providing the necessities of life and an
acceptance of their plight. There are many more people in
Vietnam and across the globe each day, however, who are
beginning to be involved in replacing tears with smiles and
hopelessness with hope.
While Agent Orange is named after the orange stripe on the
55-gallon metal drums in which it was shipped, there were also
other herbicides used during the war. This insidious rainbow of
colors included Agent White, Agent Green, Agent Purple and Agent
Pink, each based on a different compound containing the deadly
poison dioxin. First authorized by President Kennedy, the US
military sprayed them in Vietnam from 1962 to 1971. The Saigon
regime continued to use the toxins supplied by the US until the
end of the war in 1975. The term Agent Orange came to be a
generic reference for all such herbicides. These were sprayed
for general defoliation, grassy plant control, rice destruction,
crop destruction and forest defoliation.
The effects of the chemicals, however, were no mystery to
Washington. In a classified report submitted to Secretary
Derwinski of the Department of Veterans Affairs on May 5, 1990,
Admiral E.R. Zumwalt Jr., who was acting as a special assistant
to the secretary concluded that the US corporations that
manufactured Agent Orange not only knew that the herbicide was
dangerous but actually falsified their research in an attempt to
show that the chemical was less dangerous than they knew it was.
He notes in the report:
Dow Chemical, a manufacturer of Agent Orange, was aware as early
as 1964 that TCDD was a byproduct of the manufacturing process.
According to Dow’s then medical director, Dr. Benjamin Holder,
extreme exposure to dioxins could result in “general organ
toxicity” as well as “psychopathological” and “other systemic”
problems.
The report states Dow knew of the threat to humans posed by
Agent Orange years before the US military build up in Vietnam.
It also notes that US government agencies conducted research on
Agent Orange in such a skewed manner as to make it appear
harmless. The Zumwalt report notes “dioxin is regarded as one of
the most toxic chemicals known to man.”
During the war, many people understood some of the dangers and
protested the use of Agent Orange. Congressman Robert W.
Kastenmeier urged discontinuing the use of herbicides in
Vietnam, a demand echoed by an editorial in the Washington Post.
In 1967, Dr. Arthur W. Galston, often referred to as the man who
discovered dioxin in 1943, joined with other scientists to plead
with Washington not to use Agent Orange in Vietnam. The
Federation of American Scientists, members of the National
Academy of Sciences, 17 Nobel laureates, the Rand Corporation
and others urged terminating this form of chemical warfare. In
fact, in 1969, United Nations Resolution No. 2603-A declared
that the use of chemical agents in a manner used by the US in
Vietnam was a violation of the 1925 Geneva Protocol, a war
crime. The UN General Assembly passed this resolution by a vote
of 80 to 3.
After Lyndon Johnson assumed the presidency, he ordered an
increase in the use of herbicides. In 1968, Dr. Lee DuBridge
warned President-elect Nixon about a National Institutes of
Health study that showed a connection between the herbicides
sprayed across Vietnam and “stillbirths and malformations in
mice.” Yet by 1970, 200,000 gallons a month of Agent Orange were
being used. “Defense Secretary Melvin Laird considered
curtailing the use of such herbicides,” says historian C.B.
Currey, “but General Creighton Abrams, commander in Vietnam, and
his boss, Admiral John S. McCain, Jr., Commander-in-Chief,
Pacific, as well as Admiral Thomas H. Moorer, acting Chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, reaffirmed the necessity for its
use.”
During the war, US soldiers were exposed to Agent Orange. Over
400,000 veterans have since been tested for related health
problems. US soldiers typically spent one year in Vietnam, and
many were exposed to spraying only once or twice during their
tour of duty. Some were exposed more than others, especially
those doing the spraying. The US government agreed to pay
compensation to veterans with the presumption that Agent Orange
contributed to the development of a variety of medical
conditions. These veterans receive between $112 and $2,393 each
month, depending on the degree of disability. Many others were
compensated from a settled lawsuit brought by veterans against
the chemical corporations that developed Agent Orange.
The US government still refuses, however, to assume any
responsibility for the victims of Agent Orange in Vietnam. It
even refuses to accept research findings that show a severe
problem in Vietnam, resulting from the millions of gallons of
dioxin sprayed and dumped on that nation and its people. While
US soldiers on the whole were only briefly exposed, millions of
Vietnamese never left, eating food from the soil and fish from
lakes and river and coping with the enduring effects.
Washington’s refusal to admit the contradiction in recognition
and denial of responsibility goes beyond insult.
Amid great publicity in 2001, the US government announced the
beginning of an era of cooperation in researching the connection
between Agent Orange and the millions of disabled in Vietnam. US
and Vietnamese scientists prepared to join in a scientific
investigation that promised to help children like Tung and their
families. After a few years of negotiating protocols and
process, the US National Institute of Environmental Health
Sciences terminated the research effort in January 2005 before
it had begun.
Meanwhile, volunteer US attorneys filed a lawsuit in a US
district court on behalf of Vietnamese victims of Agent Orange
seeking reparations from the manufacturers. The judge assigned
to the case was the same judge who presided over the US
veterans’ lawsuit against the manufacturers of Agent Orange,
which had ended in favor of the veterans. The judge dismissed
the lawsuit that sought assistance for the Vietnamese, saying
that he found no evidence linking Agent Orange exposure to
disabilities suffered by the Vietnamese.
At present, however, the US government agrees with Dow Chemical
and its fellow corporations: either Agent Orange is relatively
harmless or the disabilities suffered by the Vietnamese have no
connection with Agent Orange. But those suffered by US veterans
do. They apparently conclude the people from these two countries
belong to different species and respond to dioxin in different
ways.
Tung and the other children and their families continue to wait
in a desperate attempt to survive until tomorrow. Is this fate
or a blatant disregard for human rights and simple justice by
the US government and US corporations?
The dangers of dioxin are well known to the scientific
community. It is classified, with a special comment about Agent
Orange by the World Health Organization, as a major cancer
causing substance. A variety of studies show a direct link
between health problems and exposure to dioxin and the chemical
known as Agent Orange. Some of these studies have been conducted
without collaboration among scientists from many nations. It
would be useful to bring together these scientists to advocate
for increased cooperation by the US government and by the United
Nations. International cooperation in the emerging avian flu
threat is an example of how such cooperation might proceed.
Past prohibitions by the US government prevented assistance for
the disabled in Vietnam. According to Currey, they found
themselves facing “obstacles…by various agencies of the US
government acting on orders of successive American presidents;
Ford, Carter, Reagan, and Bush – they have all obstinately
refused to allow direct aid or shipment of goods to Vietnam.”
Aid organizations now operate relatively freely. NGO’s and other
private sector aid efforts in Vietnam often operate in a focused
yet individual approach. While their forms of aid (medical care,
education, direct aid, housing, etc.) may be specialized with a