For more information: Special Report: Depleted Uranium
http://www.news-journalonline.com/special/uranium/index.htm
Soldier Health Scare Back in News
By Audrey Parente
Daytona Beach News Journal
Sunday 15 April 2007
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/042007B.shtml
Lori Brim cradled her son in her arms for three months before he
died at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington.
Dustin Brim, a 22-year-old Army specialist had collapsed three
years ago in Iraq from a very aggressive cancer that attacked
his kidney, caused a mass to grow over his esophagus and
collapsed a lung.
The problems she saw during her time at Walter Reed, including
her son screaming in pain while doctors argued over medications,
had nothing to do with mold and shabby conditions documented in
recent news reports. What this mother saw was an unexplainable
illness consuming her son.
And what she has learned since her son's death is that his was
not an isolated case.
Lori Brim has joined other parents, hundreds of other sick
soldiers, legislators, research scientists and environmental
activists who say the cause of their problems results from
exposure to depleted uranium, a radioactive metal used in the
manufacture of U.S. tank armor and weapon casings.
Health and environmental effects of depleted uranium are at the
heart of scientific studies, a lawsuit in the New York courts
and legislative bills in more than a dozen states (although not
in Florida).
News stories claiming negative signs of depleted uranium's
impact, including death and birth defects, are surfacing from
Australia to England to the Far East. The controversy rages
within government bodies and underlies the theme of TV shows
like a recent episode of the medical series "House."
While the military continues to deny the connection of depleted
uranium to sicknesses plaguing returning servicemen and women, a
newly mandated study stemming from legislation signed by
President Bush in October is just getting under way.
Opposition
The new study, which began in March, follows several that have
been completed by the military into depleted uranium, a
byproduct left when enriched uranium is separated out for use in
nuclear power and atomic weapons. The Department of Energy gives
it to arms makers, where its extreme density is valuable in the
manufacture of armor and casings.
Despite a 1996 U.N. resolution opposing its use because of
discovery of health problems after the first Gulf War, the
military studies have concluded there was no evidence that
exposure to the metal caused illnesses.
To the military, the effectiveness of weapons and armor made
with depleted uranium outweighs any residual effects. Their
bottom line: Depleted uranium saves soldiers' lives in combat.
Robert Holloway, president of Nevada Technical Associates Inc.,
a firm that specializes in radiation safety training, disputes
any concern over depleted uranium.
"I have no financial interest in promoting depleted uranium,"
Holloway wrote in an e-mail to The News-Journal. "There really
is no substitute for depending on the judgment of professionals
in this field."
Holloway and others who believe depleted uranium is safe to use
say the best authority in the scientific community would be
individuals connected to the Health Physics Society.
Doug Craig of Ponce Inlet, a retired radiation biophysics
scientist, is such a person. He doesn't believe low doses of
radiation from depleted uranium are a problem.
"Uranium occurs in a lot of places," Craig said, "and man has
been exposed to low concentrations of uranium for a long time."
Laws and Lawsuits
But Brim and others think there will not be enough known until
soldiers are tested for exposure. They compare the debate over
depleted uranium to the controversy surrounding Agent Orange,
the toxic herbicide used to defoliate the jungles of Vietnam.
Speculation over its effects continued for more than two decades
before the Defense Department agreed to compensate veterans who
suffered from ailments linked to its use.
Brim often comforts other mothers whose sons and daughters are
suffering from unexplainable, aggressive cancers, like a
Michigan mother Brim met on the Internet.
The Michigan mom says she believes malignant tumors that
resulted in removal of her Marine son's ear, ear canal and half
his face may be linked to depleted uranium. But the woman asks
that her name not be used because her son still is a Marine -
battling cancer, not bullets. And he has not been tested for DU
exposure, she says.
In addition to consoling other mothers, Brim has tried
unsuccessfully to raise awareness of the issue either through
legislation or a lawsuit.
She recently traveled to Tallahassee with cancer lobbyists and
left plate-size booster buttons with her son's image, trying to
raise the consciousness of Florida legislators. But she says she
has not been able to interest anyone in creating a bill similar
to one passed last year in Connecticut - the first state law in
the nation aimed at helping National Guard personnel returning
from Iraq to get tested for exposure to depleted uranium.
Other veterans are seeking help from legislators in states
around the country, like Melissa Sterry, 44, of Connecticut, who
served during the Persian Gulf War and suffers from multiple
symptoms, including chronic headaches, infections and multiple
heart attacks.
Sterry is an activist who keeps track of more than a dozen
states that have introduced bills. That includes her home state,
where a veterans' health registry is being created as a database
for the federal government. Among the current list of states
working on individual legislation, Arizona has state Rep. Albert
Tom, a Democrat. For three years he introduced the issue of
testing National Guardsmen, each time a bit differently. He
patterned a bill after the Connecticut law this year.
"Again it was heard (in committee), but it just didn't go
anywhere," Tom said.
Veterans might have better luck in court. Brim is closely
following a trial in New York, where - despite a precedent that
prevents military personnel from suing the government for
injuries resulting from their service - eight National Guard
veterans have won the right to be heard about their depleted
uranium exposure.
One veteran in that suit, Gerard Matthew, says not only is he
sick, but contends his little girl's birth deformities are
related to his exposure to depleted uranium. The deformity,
Matthew said, is similar to many being reported within the Iraqi
population since the first Gulf War.
Depleted Uranium News Update
Oct. 2006: President George W. Bush signed the Department of
Defense Authorization legislation. The House amendment was
authored and introduced by Rep. Jim McDermott (D-Wa.) ordering a
comprehensive study - with a report due in one year - on
possible adverse health effects on U.S. soldiers from the U.S.
military's use of DU - Depleted Uranium. The Senate companion
bill was backed by Joe Lieberman of Conn., a democrat at the
time. (McDermott's Web site: www.house.gov/mcdermott)
Feb. 6, 2007: The New York newspaper, The Post Chronicle,
reported that U.S. government scientists at the Ames Laboratory
in Iowa say they are close to developing nanostructured material
of tungsten and metallic glass to eliminate the use of depleted
uranium in ammunition. In a recent phone call by The
News-Journal to senior scientist Dan Sordelet, reported to be
leading the research team, he said he is "no longer working on
that" and declined to give any further information.
March 23, 2007: The Tico Times of San Jose, Costa Rica, reported
that the U.S. and Costa Rican activists are lobbying to enlist
Costa Rica's Nobel Peace Prize winner and disarmament defender
to lead their uphill battle against the military use of a
popular radioactive weapon.
April 3, 2007: ABC News Online, Australia, reports that the
Australian Veterans Affairs Minister Bruce Billson says he is
concerned the group "Depleted Uranium Silent Killer," which is
opposed to the use of depleted uranium weapons, is using Gulf
War veterans to run an anti-uranium scare campaign. The group
says overseas tests confirm two Sunshine Coast veterans from the
first Gulf War - one in the Army and the other in the Navy -
were exposed to the heavy metal during their service 15 years
ago.
April 10, 2007: Star Tribune (Minn., Mn.) reports a state Senate
committee OK'd a bill providing for testing veteran national
guardsmen returning from Iraq to see if dust from spent-uranium
munitions has harmed them. Link:
www.startribune.com/587/story/1112856.html.
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For more information: Special Report: Depleted Uranium
http://www.news-journalonline.com/special/uranium/index.htm
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ALSO SEE:
DU ALERT REPORT.....
http://www.apfn.org/apfn/du.htm
http://wwww.apfn.org/apfn/du2.htm