Depleted Uranium
Important D-U Websites And Current Newspaper Articles

The Invisible War: Depleted Uranium (on YouTube) Parts 1-7

International D-U Study Team: IDUST

NOTINKANSAS : DU FOR DUMMIES

Traprock Peace Center: D-U Resource Page

Support The Truth: The Depleted Uranium News - DU News

08/06 Depleted Uranium: OIF Veterans Sue US ARMY

New York Area Contacts For Speaking

Or For Information On Depleted Uranium

Gerard Matthew : U.S. Army National Guard at al-Samawah

Herbert Reed : Ret.SSGT US Army

Hector Vega : 442nd Military Police U.S. Army National Guard

Debbie Anderson : Military Families Speak Out

From Joan Walker
- - - - - - - - - -

It is official. The NY National Guard Testing/Task Force Bill is Law. It is also known as the Military
Toxins Bill and in the halls of Albany as the DU Bill.

See Laws of New York 2005-2006 Session, Chapter 743.

The first step we can take to insure that this bill is effective in focusing preventive and post deployment
attention on the health of our National Guard members who have served in the Middle East is to influence the
composition of the Task Force. One of its tasks is to develop, "in conjunction with the NY Department of
Health", a NY Army and Air Force National Guard Health Registry. It must be based in the state and include
long term follow up.

 

The bill specifies that the composition of the Task Force include two Vets with "knowledge of or
experience with exposure to toxic materials or harmful physical agents such as depleted uranium."

The bill also specifies that four members of the Task Force be "physicians or scientists with knowledge of
or experience in the detection of or health effects of exposure to toxic materials or harmful physical agents
such as depleted uranium."

If anyone can provide names, contacts of vets, physicians or scientists who fit that description, and
whom you trust, please forward them to joanwalker@gmail.com. We have been asked by the bill's
sponsors for our input as soon as possible.

This bill promises NY State's assistance to any soldier or veteran experiencing health problems if he
or she is "eligible," and eligibility includes those who "have reason to believe that he or she was exposed
to toxic materials or harmful physical agents such as depeleted uranium during such service" (in the Persian Gulf).

Because there are no appropriations attached to this bill and because the Army does not follow its own
regulations (such as AR700-48) to inform and protect soldiers about the dangers of depleted uranium, we
have a lot of work ahead of us to make it effective. We should begin with self-education about uranium
weapons and the symptoms of heavy metal and radiation illness and getting the word out to the returning
soldiers and vets and their families.

Our Sincerest Thanks and Love to Joan and all of the veterans that worked to get this bill to Gov. Pataki's desk!

Joan Walker
NO DU Coalition of the Hudson Valley.
845-679-6938 845-399-6955, joanwalker@gmail.com
Angela Morano
845-246-8952

A9116, The NY National Guard Testing Task Force Bill passed the NY Assembly Monday, June 19!! The NY Senate passed it last Thursday.

Poisoned?

Shocking report reveals local troops
may be victims of america's high-tech weapons

By JUAN GONZALEZ
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

Four soldiers from a New York Army National Guard company serving in Iraq are contaminated with radiation likely caused by dust from depleted uranium shells fired by U.S. troops, a Daily News investigation has found.
They are among several members of the same company, the 442nd Military Police, who say they have been battling persistent physical ailments that began last summer in the Iraqi town of Samawah.

"I got sick instantly in June," said Staff Sgt. Ray Ramos, a Brooklyn housing cop. "My health kept going downhill with daily headaches, constant numbness in my hands and rashes on my stomach."

A nuclear medicine expert who examined and tested nine soldiers from the company says that four "almost certainly" inhaled radioactive dust from exploded American shells manufactured with depleted uranium.

Laboratory tests conducted at the request of The News revealed traces of two manmade forms of uranium in urine samples from four of the soldiers.

If so, the men - Sgt. Hector Vega, Sgt. Ray Ramos, Sgt. Agustin Matos and Cpl. Anthony Yonnone - are the first confirmed cases of inhaled depleted uranium exposure from the current Iraq conflict.

The Full Story:
http://www.nydailynews.com/front/story/180333p-156685c.html

BATTLEFIELD RADIATION


DU vet: 'My days are numbered'


By ERIC PRIDEAUX


Staff writer
Gerard Matthew has broad shoulders and beefy hands. He's built like a bear. Yet as sturdy as this 31-year-old may look, he is a very sick man.


Iraqi armor in a Baghdad dump in June 2003. Some of the vehicles may have been hit by the depleted-uranium munitions Gerard Matthew blames for his and his daughter's affliction.

Matthew suffers, for example, from facial swelling, double and triple vision, muscle weakness, bouts of extreme anger that sometimes cause him to lash out at his wife, erectile dysfunction and, most serious of all, a tumor in the pituitary gland at the base of his brain.

"And these are just the big ones," he told the audience at the Foreign Correspondents' Club Japan in Tokyo earlier this month.

At home in New York, he said, he's got "a pharmacy" of medication -- and he worries both for himself and his family that his "days are numbered."


Gerard Matthew hugs his daughter, Victoria.

All the more reason to speak at this media venue now, before things get worse.

Matthew was a specialist in the U.S. Army National Guard's 719th Transport Unit, and his job, from April-September 2003, was to drive trucks collecting war debris from around southern Iraq. He thinks that Samawah, the city where Japan has some 550 SDF members participating in the U.S.-led "coalition of the willing," was among the many locations he passed through.

Matthew believes the dust from spent depleted-uranium (DU) ammunition in his cargo accumulated in his lungs, irradiating his body and causing most of the ailments that trouble him today. Urine tests taken as part of a New York Daily News story investigation in 2004 showed that DU levels in his sample were up to eight times higher than in control samples from Daily News journalists. Matthew showed reporters a letter from the Department of the Army that rejected this claim.

Most pertinent to his audience at the FCCJ: Matthew worries that radiological contamination may be afflicting Japanese troops posted to Iraq -- not to mention local Iraqis.

"I came all the way to Japan to convey the message," said Matthew, who, with his wife Janise was the guest of Tokyo-based activist group Campaign for Abolition of Depleted Uranium Japan. In other words, he believes that Japanese troops should be warned: "They may be susceptible to it."

With Janise, also 31, seated beside him on the dais, the couple together held up glossy photographs of their 1-year-old daughter Victoria, who was born without a right hand. It is a birth defect they both blame on DU.

"Yes, the military has paid for my education," said Matthew. "But I would give all of that up to have my daughter with five fingers on her hand."

The Matthew family is caught up in a raging worldwide debate over DU that extends into areas both scientific and geo-political.

Depleted uranium, an enormously dense and hard biproduct of converting naturally occurring uranium into fuel for nuclear reactors, is used by the U.S. military both in supertough armor plating for fighting vehicles and in "penetrators" -- ammunition fired against armored vehicles and concrete emplacements that, instead of mushrooming on impact as regular bullets do, grows sharper as it bores forward and through.

According to the U.S. Department of Defense, 290.3 metric tons of DU projectiles were fired by U.S. forces during the 1990-91 Gulf War. By press time, the department had not responded to repeated requests for comment on Matthew's case and current use of DU by the U.S. military.

Whatever the strategic benefits of DU ammunition, critics -- including many in the scientific community -- claim that particles of it released upon impact are easily inhaled by humans, either then or much later, and remain in the body for years, possibly causing cancers and many other health problems. With local Iraqis in mind in particular, Matthew said: "We're hurting innocent civilians, and we don't need to do that."

The United Nations would seem to agree.

A 2002 working paper by the UN Commission on Human Rights itemized a long list of diseases and birth defects among Gulf War veterans, Iraqis and the offspring of both -- linking them strongly to the use of DU.

The same UN working paper concluded that use of DU in warfare contravenes the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights; the Charter of the United Nations itself; and, "in certain situations of armed conflict," the Genocide Convention. The working paper, if read closely, also suggests violation of the Hague and Geneva Conventions.

The Pentagon, for its part, says on its Web site that radiation is not a "primary hazard" with DU "under most battlefield exposure scenarios." Citing its own and several high-profile international studies, it concludes that DU is "40 percent less radioactive than natural uranium," and is "not considered a serious external radiation hazard."

That stance is, in large part, supported by the World Health Organization which, in its 2003 fact sheet No. 257, title "Depleted Uranium," said that "for the general population, neither civilian nor military use of DU is likely to produce exposures to DU significantly above normal background levels of uranium."

Consequently, some tough questions were to be expected at the Matthews' news conference.

"How can you scientifically establish that the syndrome you claim has been caused by depleted uranium was caused by depleted uranium?" asked Naoaki Usui, a freelance reporter who described himself as a proponent of nuclear energy.

Matthew fixed his eyes squarely on his questioner. "Look at my daughter, and that should answer your question about the exposure," he said. "My daughter is the evidence."

Matthew said that his and Janise's other children from earlier relationships were born without deformity, while genetic screening at a New York hospital turned up no predisposition to birth defects on either side of the family.

That being the case, Matthew said that he and eight other soldiers with similar symptoms -- all of whom, except Matthew, were stationed at Samawah -- have each sued the Department of Defense for $ 5 million. His daughter Victoria, who to date has been denied disability benefits by the Social Security Administration, is also a coplaintiff with her father -- claiming an additional $ 5 million. The cases are pending.

The plaintiffs are not alone in their battle. For years, U.S. and British veterans of the first Gulf War have demanded that their governments grapple more aggressively with the mysterious illnesses collectively known as Gulf War Syndrome -- symptoms of which Matthew says match his own.

Movement on this front is afoot: BBC News reported earlier this month that the Pensions Appeal Tribunal in Britain had ruled that Daniel Martin, an ex-soldier and Gulf War veteran, could use Gulf War Syndrome as an umbrella term to cover the diverse health problems afflicting him. As a result, other British veterans hope this will improve their access to disablement pensions.

At his FCCJ talk, Matthew said he expected news from his lawyer upon his return home to the Bronx.

While he was still here, though, there was something else Matthew wanted to tell the Japanese. Describing his visit to the Hiroshima Peace Memorial some days earlier, he said: "I felt like I made a connection . . . because I was exposed to radiation just like they were. My own government did it to them.

"My government probably would not say sorry," he added. "But I say sorry."

The Japan Times: Nov. 20, 2005

CAUTION Clinician's Guide to D-U : Review by DOUG ROKKE _ This sheet on depleted uranium is full of misinformation and omits all references to the DU team reports, the DU project, and simply lies about our actual adverse health effects from uranium weapons exposures.

Many of us who are enrolled in the VA DU MEDICAL PROGRAM HAVE SERIOUS DU RELATED- DIAGNOSED MEDICAL PROBLEMS. However, we have been abandoned. VA physicians have only tested a few hundred individuals (Gulf War Review volume 13, #1, page 12; www.va.gov) out of thousands who were supposed to received testing and medical care as required by numerous orders and regulations. The October 1993 DOD DU medical care directive mandated testing within 24 hours of initial exposure using the radio-bioassay not weeks, months, or years later as done now if done at all. Once this test is done an extrapolation from
mesured to actual dose must be done too but that has been ignored.


I recommend that everyone read- study the Pentagon's own 2002 staff briefing on adverse health effects of uranium exposures. If you have questions just ask me.
http://www.traprockpeace.org/du_dtic_wakayama_Aug2002.html

DOD, DA, USAF, USN, USMC, USCG, VA, MOD (British), CND (Canadian), AND (Australian) and NATO officials have for years continued with delayed
and denied care in order to maintain the cover up of the always known serious adverse health and environmental effects and to sustain uranium weapons use while avoiding all liability as specified in the March 1991 Los Alamos memorandum written by LTC Mike Ziehmn (http://www.traprockpeace.org/twomemos.html). The March 1991 memo written by LTC Greg Lyle was also very clear in citing serious health risks. I am the Army officer who received these two directives. LTC Lyle is
correct. However I refused and still refuse to comply with LTC Ziehmn directive in order to sustain uranium weapons use. As the former director of the U.S. Army
Depleted Uranium Project, the U.S. Army health physicist who cleaned up the mess following Gulf War 1, who recommended the initial medical care, and who is
a confirmed DU casualty I am fed up with the continued lies and refusals by our leaders to comply with all known provisions of U.S. Army Regulation 700-48, LTG Peake's April 29, 2004 order mandating medical care for all exposed individuals, and refusals to comply with all of the numerous medical orders over the years.

Dr. Doug Rokke
Major, retired/ disabled, USAR

 

IMMEDIATE NEED:

Depleted Uranium Situation Requires Action By President Bush and Prime Minister Blair
by Dr. Doug Rokke, Ph.D.
former Director, U.S. ArmDepleted Uranium projecty

January 6, 2006

While U.S. and British military personnel continue using illegal uranium munitions- America's and England's own "dirty bombs" U.S. Army, U.S. Department
of Energy, and U.S. Department of Defense officials continue to deny that there are any adverse health and environmental effects as a consequence of the
manufacture, testing, and/or use of uranium munitions to avoid liability for the willful and illegal dispersal of a radioactive toxic material - depleted
uranium. They arrogantly refuse to comply with their own regulations, orders, and directives that require United States Department of Defense officials to
provide prompt and effective medical care "all" exposed individuals [Medical Management of Unusual Depleted Uranium Casualties, DOD, Pentagon,
10/14/93, Medical Management of Army personnel Exposed to Depleted Uranium (DU) Headquarters,U.S. Army Medical Command 29 April 2004), and section 2-5 of AR 70-48]. They also refuse to clean up dispersed radioactive Contamination as required by Army Regulation- AR 700-48: "Management of Equipment Contaminated With Depleted Uranium or Radioactive Commodities" (Headquarters, Department Of The Army,
Washington, D.C., September 2002) and U.S. Army Technical Bulletin- TB 9-1300-278: "Guidelines For Safe Response To Handling, Storage, And Transportation
Accidents Involving Army Tank Munitions Or Armor Which Contain Depleted Uranium" (Headquarters, Department Of The Army, Washington, D.C., JULY 1996). Specifically section 2-4 of United States Army Regulation-AR 700-48 dated September 16, 2002 requires that:
(1) "Military personnel "identify, segregate, isolate, secure, and label all
RCE" (radiologically contaminated equipment).
(2) "Procedures to minimize the spread of radioactivity will be implemented
as soon as possible."
(3) "Radioactive material and waste will not be locally disposed of through
burial, submersion, incineration, destruction in place, or abandonment" and
(4) "All equipment, to include captured or combat RCE, will be surveyed,
packaged, retrograded, decontaminated and released IAW Technical Bulletin
9-1300-278, DA PAM 700-48" (Note: Maximum exposure limits are specified
in Appendix F).

The previous and current use of uranium weapons, the release of radioactive components in destroyed U.S. and foreign military equipment, and releases of
industrial, medical, research facility radioactive materials have resulted in unacceptable exposures. Therefore, decontamination must be completed as required
by U.S. Army Regulation 700-48 and should include releases of all radioactive materials resulting from military operations. The extent of adverse health
and environmental effects of uranium weapons contamination is not limited to combat zones but includes facilities and sites where uranium weapons were manufactured or tested including Vieques; Puerto Rico; Colonie, New York; Concord, MA; Jefferson Proving Grounds, Indiana; and Schofield Barracks, Hawaii. Therefore medical care must be provided by the United States Department of Defense officials to all individuals affected by the manufacturing, testing, and/or use of uranium munitions. Thorough
environmental remediation also must be completed without further delay.

I am amazed that fourteen years after was asked to clean up the initial DU mess from Gulf War 1 and over ten years since I finished the depleted uranium project that United States Department of Defense officials and others still attempt to justify uranium munitions use while ignoring mandatory requirements. I am dismayed that
Department of Defense and Department of Energy officials and representatives continue personal attacks aimed to silence or discredit those of us who are
demanding that medical care be provided to all DU casualties and that environmental remediation is completed in compliance with U.S. Army Regulation 700-48.
But beyond the ignored mandatory actions the willful dispersal of tons of solid radioactive and chemically toxic waste in the form of uranium munitions is
illegal (http://www.traprockpeace.org/karen_parker_du_illegality.pdf) and just does not even pass the common sense test and according to the U.S. Department
of Homeland Security, DHS, is a dirty bomb. DHS issued "dirty bomb" response guidelines, http://www.access.gpo.gov/su_docs/aces/fr-cont.html , on January 3, 2006 for incidents within the United States but ignore DOD use of uranium weapons and existing DOD regulations. These guidelines specifically state that: "Characteristics of RDD and IND Incidents: A radiological incident is defined as an event or series of events, deliberate or accidental, leading to the release, or potential release, into the environment of radioactive material in sufficient quantity to warrant consideration of protective actions. Use of an RDD or IND is an act of terror that produces a radiological incident." Thus the use of uranium munitions is "an act or terror" as defined by DHS. Finally continued compliance with the infamous March 1991 Los Alamos
Memorandum that was issued to ensure continued use of uranium munitions can not be justified.
In conclusion: the President of the United States- George W. Bush and The Prime Minister of Great Britain-Tony Blair must acknowledge and accept responsibility for willful use of illegal uranium munitions- their own"dirty bombs"- resulting in adverse health and environmental effects. President Bush and Prime Minister Blair also should order:
1. medical care for all casualties,
2. thorough environmental remediation,
3. immediate cessation of retaliation against all of us who demand compliance
with medical care and environmental remediation requirements,
4. and stop the already illegal the use (UN finding) of depleted uranium
munitions.

GI's Beware of Radioactive Showers!
(Over the Rainbow Blog Part 4)
www.notinkansas.us
Irving Wesley Hall

GI's Beware of Radioactive Showers!
Irving Wesley Hall


Bush's impending, insane nuclear attack on Iran has provoked an unprecedented rebellion within the top leadership of the United States military. At the same time, depleted uranium (DU) is steadily taking down our troops in Iraq and Afghanistan. It's time for the soldiers to follow the lead of their commanders in order to end the war.
Was Army Sergeant Michael Lee Tosto the first American victim of the Bush Administration's March 2003 "Shock and Awe" attack on Iraq? The 24-year old North Carolina tank operator died "mysteriously" in Baghdad on June 17, 2003. The Iraqi capital was saturated with radioactive dust from the initial explosions of 1,500 American bombs and missiles, many of them made from solid depleted uranium. After the saturation bombing, the city was the scene of street battles with M-1 Abrams tanks, Bradley Fighting Vehicles, A-10 Warthog attack jets and Apache helicopters, all firing DU munitions.
The army told Sergeant Tosto's family that he died from pulmonary edema and pericardial effusion, or cardiac failure, after showing flu-like symptoms.
Young Michael Tosto believed George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, and Condoleezza Rice. He believed he had been deployed to Iraq to stop Saddam Hussein from nuking the United States. Michael died before we all learned that Bush, Cheney, and Rumsfeld are nuking the world.
Michael Tosto died, young and innocent, when they nuked him. After Michael 's funeral, a fellow soldier contacted Michael’s wife Stephanie and told her that his buddy started coughing up blood, his lips turned blue, and he was dead within 48 hours after the first symptoms.
According to Tom Flocco, upon whose story this account is based, ". . . the Tostos say their GI was in excellent health--in his prime of life. And Stephanie Tosto told United Press International, 'When my husband died, the casualty officer asked me, ‘Is it possible that Michael had heart problems?’ Michael did not have heart problems. One other time they asked me if he had asthma. He was never sick.”
Inhaling depleted uranium causes pulmonary edema. Symptoms include bleeding lungs, bronchial pneumonia, and vomited blood. Pericardial effusion is a common cause of death among leukemia patients. Michael's mother, Janet Tosto, reported that military officials told her that her son Michael’s military autopsy exhibited elevated levels of white blood cells. Exposure to depleted uranium can cause Lymphocytic leukemia.
Tom Flocco consulted Dr. Garth Nicolson of the Institute for Molecular Medicine in Huntington Beach, California who said, "Just one microscopic particle--let alone thousands--trapped in a soldier’s pulmonary system for one year can result in 272 times the annual whole body radiation dose permitted U.S. radiation workers."
Gulf War Illness: the Sequel

It is happening again to a new generation of veterans. Some of today's soldiers were in day care centers in 1991 when Dick Cheney first authorized the wholesale use of radioactive munitions. It is happening again despite the fact that 70% of all Gulf War I veterans are on medical disability fifteen years after the end of the first war against Saddam Hussein.
We are witnessing the same symptoms of radioactive poisoning today as fifteen years ago. We are hearing the same denial of reality from Donald Rumsfeld's Department of Defense (DoD).
The government spokesman in Michael's death claimed, “We don’t think depleted uranium has anything to do with it."
After the publication of "Depleted Uranium For Dummies" last month, a reader emailed me with a demand. "You claim that half million soldiers are sick because of the tons of depleted uranium used in 1991. I'd like to hear the government's side of the story."
Well, the Department of Defense's estimate, as you might expect, is lower.
Much lower.
According to the Pentagon, depleted uranium hasn't caused even one GI's illness or a single veteran's death.
If you still believe that the Bush Administration doesn’t lie to its citizens or Rumsfeld's Department of Defense doesn’t lie to the troops, please click to another website. I don't want to be the first to break the news to you.
Soon you might begin to doubt Condoleezza Rice's warning about Saddam Hussein's imminent nuclear attack on America or Dick Cheney's claim that Hussein was responsible for taking down the Twin Towers. You might question why on 9/11 acting Commander-in-Chief Dick Cheney couldn’t find one available U.S. fighter jet to send aloft during the hour that, allegedly, nineteen Saudis and Egyptians with box cutters were crisscrossing the East Coast in hijacked commercial airliners!
These are the stories Sergeant Tosto took to his grave. But no one ever told him that the depleted uranium munitions packed into his tank could kill him.
That's right. As far as the Department of Defense is concerned, depleted uranium is "40 percent less radioactive than natural uranium," is "not a serious external radiation hazard," and thus is not considered dangerous
According to the military's pamphlet, "Depleted Uranium Information for Clinicians"revised on September 17, 2004, a year and a half after Michael Tosto's death, "Findings have shown no kidney damage, leukemia, bone or lung cancer, or other uranium-related adverse health outcomes."
The Pentagon commissioned several studies in the 'nineties as hundreds of thousands of Gulf War vets were becoming "mysteriously" sick. One published in 2000, concluded that DU "could pose a chemical hazard" but that Gulf War veterans "did not experience intakes high enough to affect their health."
According to Pentagon spokesman Austin Camacho, the only soldiers meriting the military's concern are those wounded by depleted uranium shrapnel or those who were inside tanks during an explosion, and "studies of about 70 such cases from the first Gulf War showed no long-term health problems."
This stupefying— vets call it criminal—DoD denial helps explain the military's reaction to Michael Tosto's death. They would not allow Stephanie Tosto to see her husband's body until after the autopsy in Germany and after he was packed in a casket for burial.
Dan Tosto, the dead soldier’s father, wondered why Michael was wearing white gloves, appropriate for dress blues but not for Michael's green burial uniform. At the funeral, Stephanie reached under a glove and found Michael's wedding ring missing. The army later explained that the dead soldier’s belongings were possibly contaminated.

Wedding Ring Contaminated With What?

Perhaps the mysterious metal "contamination" explains why the Army sent the family brand-new dog tags, rather than Michael's original set, and why they didn’t immediately call his wife at the emergency phone number he was carrying.
After the tank driver was buried, Stephanie received her husband's medical records. They described his arms as red and swollen, classic signs of exposure to depleted uranium dust.
Dr. Rosalie Bertell, Secretary General of the International Commission of Health Professionals, and President of the International Institute of Concern for Public Health, commented on Michael Tosto’s symptoms. She said that the armed services investigation was incomplete without a thorough “testing for potential depleted uranium [which] includes chemical analysis of uranium in urine, feces, blood and hair; tests of damage to kidneys, including analysis for protein, glucose and non-protein nitrogen in urine; radioactivity counting; or more invasive tests such a surgical biopsy of lung or bone marrow.”
As you will read in the next installment, according to the DoD's own Regulation #700-48, such tests are mandatory. Surprised? Wait until you read next time how the government responds to living contaminated soldiers who request tests for radiation poisoning.
We cited Dr. Doug Rokke in previous installments of the "Over the Rainbow" blog. He was the military's top expert on all aspects of depleted uranium, until he was fired for telling the truth. He was the chief biological, chemical, and nuclear weapons safety officer in the first Gulf War, and he reports that many American deaths were from "friendly-fire" DU weapons.
The Tosto family will never know if this was Michael's fate.
According to Gay Alcorn of The Age, "Rokke was ordered to decontaminate shot-up vehicles and tanks and to investigate health effects on troops. Dressed in protective gear and masks, he and his team crawled over tanks and other vehicles, sending some back to the US. Those considered too radioactive to move were buried in a giant hole in the ground.
"The US Army made me their expert," Rokke told reporter Julie Flint. "I went into the project with the total intent to ensure they could use uranium munitions in war, because I'm a warrior. What I saw as director of the project led me to one conclusion: uranium munitions must be banned from the planet, for eternity, and medical care must be provided for everyone - those on the firing end and those on the receiving end."
According to Flint, Rokke "suffers from serious health problems including brain lesions and lung and kidney damage. When government doctors finally agreed to test him in November 1994, three-and-a-half years after he fell ill, while he was director of the Pentagon's Depleted Uranium Project, he was found to have 5,000 times the permissible level of radiation in his body - enough to light up a small village."
Rokke's crew -- 100 employees -- was devastated by exposure to the fine dust. "When we went to the Gulf, we were all really healthy," Rokke said. "However, after performing clean-up operations in the desert. . .30 staff members died, and most others -- including Rokke himself --developed serious health problems. Rokke now has reactive airway disease, neurological damage, cataracts, and kidney problems."
I conducted a telephone interview with Doug Rokke last month, after sending him "Dummies" to fact-check. He described the permanent rashes on his arms. "They're weeping as we speak," he said.
I recalled Michael Tosto's autopsy report. What was hidden under the white gloves?
The papers Rokke wrote describing his findings are sobering. He recorded levels of contamination that were 15 times the army's permissible levels in tanks hit by DU, and up to 4.5 times such levels in clothing exposed to DU.
Rokke told Alcorn, "After everything I've seen, everything I've done, it became very clear to me that you just can't take radioactive wastes from one nation and just throw it into another nation. It's wrong. It's simply wrong. . .
"One way or another, the Pentagon will pay a price. DU is a war crime. It's that simple. Once you've scattered all this stuff around, and then refuse to clean it up, you've committed a war crime."
According to Gulf War vet and retired Air Force Major, Denise Nichols, there are many reasons why Rumsfeld's Department of Defense won’t admit that DU is harmful.
"They don’t want to assume responsibility for the astronomical healthcare costs of so many poisoned veterans. . .and they don’t want the rest of the world to know that they have essentially poisoned two entire nations."

If They Admit It's Killing Our Troops, They Can't Use It

Doug Rokke gave journalist Vince Guarisco another reason. "We warned the Department of Defense in 1991 after the Gulf War. Their arrogance is beyond comprehension. Once they acknowledge that there are actual health effects of depleted uranium munitions, then they can't use them any more; the house of cards falls apart."
Now, can you understand the DoD's secrecy about the details of Michael Tosto's death? Can you understand the strange silence last month of Maj. Richard J. McNorton, the CENTCOM's special officer in charge of helping bloggers obtain accurate information? He is still ignoring my requests to confirm or to allow me to disprove the following account in "Dummies":
"An official June 2005 United States Central Command communiqué reported that soldiers of the 62nd Quartermaster Company from Fort Hood, Texas were supplying Camp Forward Danger's water from the Tigris River. . .it seems that it is not tested for radioactivity.
"Our men and women of the New York State National Guard have just spent six months taking radioactive showers and washing small open wounds in a depleted uranium broth. They've eaten over 500 meals with food, plates, and silverware washed with hot water, in two senses of the word. . . without knowing it."
Given the serious implications for my neighbors in the Rainbow Division, they expected a prompt response from McNorton. Not a word.
Does it still seem strange to you that the Pentagon maintains that, from 1991 to 2005, only 7,035 Gulf War vets—were "wounded" in the conflict?
In the opinion of those now responsible for defending our country, the discrepancy between 7,000 and 518,000 vets on disability (many with Gulf War Illness's "ill defined symptoms") is just a "mystery."
What is no mystery is that, within the last month, seven high-ranking retired military officers have publicly called for the resignation of Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. Most are immediate retirees high in the chain of command in the Middle East deeply involved in Cheney and Rumsfeld's war.
On Democracy Now! April 17, 2006, retired Col. Sam Gardiner, respected lecturer at several United States military war colleges, called these denunciations "unprecedented in United States history."

Unprecedented Officers' Revolt

The military revolt against the Bush Administration's catastrophic Middle East policies surfaced last November when previously hawkish Pennsylvania congressman John Murtha channeled the top brass's opposition to the war. Col. Gardiner suggested that the seven recently retired officers were being encouraged to speak out by those still in service. The brass is horrified by the military consequences of bringing Iran into a war we've already lost. Nothing like this happened even during the military's darkest days when Nixon secretly invaded neighboring Cambodia during the Vietnam War.
In another first, a group of West Point graduates, has denounced the war. The graduates pledged to refuse to serve in Iraq. Additional reports suggest that the Joint Chiefs have made clear that they oppose an attack on Iran. Another group of officers has threatened to resign if the United States continues its plans to expand the war in the Middle East to a second major oil producer.
Think about that next time you pump gas.
It's time for the troops to seize this brief opportunity to transform American history. Why? Let's examine the price our brave citizen-soldiers are paying for the arrogance of the Bush Administration and Donald Rumsfeld's DoD. In future articles we'll show in detail what the troops in Iraq can do legally when we review the recent documentary, "Sir! No Sir!" It shows the critical role of Vietnam GIs in ending that earlier war of aggression against a people who posed no threat to the United States.
Last February, Juan Gonzales of the New York Daily News reported that "nearly 120,000 veterans - more than one of every four who served in Iraq and Afghanistan - have already sought treatment at Veterans Health Administration hospitals for a wide range of illnesses, according to an internal study the VHA completed late last year.
"An additional 35,000 - more than 29% of the total - were diagnosed with 'ill-defined conditions,' according to the study, which was prepared in October by VHA epidemiologist Dr. Han Kang but has yet to be publicly released."
"'Those numbers are way higher than during the Persian Gulf War for 'ill-defined' symptoms,'" said one Department of Veterans Affairs official who asked not to be identified."
As we detailed in "Dummies," depleted uranium contamination causes virtually every known illness from acute skin rashes, severe headaches, muscle and joint pain, and general fatigue, to major birth defects, liver infection, kidney failure, depression, cardiovascular disease, brain tumors, and almost every type of cancer.
In fact, the figure of 35,000 sick vets coming home from Iraq and Afghanistan with "ill-defined conditions" may be too low.
Gonzalez reported that, "more than 30% of those sick veterans are afflicted with some type of mental disorder, mostly post-traumatic stress and depression. . . a far higher rate of mental problems among our troops than during the Persian Gulf War, and levels comparable to what was found among U.S. troops during the Vietnam War."
Two previous military studies of combat troops in Iraq found that 17% to 25% of U.S. soldiers suffer from major depression or combat stress."
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is defined as a debilitating change in the brain's chemistry that includes flashbacks, sleep disorders, panic attacks, acute anxiety, emotional numbness, and violent outbursts. Dozens of soldiers have committed suicide or murdered their spouses,
Can PTSD, in some cases, be another phrase for Gulf War Illness?
Sara Flounders reported in August 2003, shortly after Michael Tosto's death, "For years the government described Gulf War Syndrome as a post-traumatic stress disorder. It was labeled a psychological problem or simply dismissed as mysterious unrelated ailments. In this same way the Pentagon and the Veterans Administration treated the health problems of Vietnam vets suffering from Agent Orange poisoning."
Dr. Leuren Moret reports that a medical doctor in Northern California told her that he and other doctors, trained by the Pentagon before the 2003 war, were advised to diagnose and treat soldiers returning from Afghanistan and Iraq for mental problems only.

What's Going To Happen To All These Sick Vets?

How can so many get the specialized care they need? The half million Gulf War vets who are already on medical disability have never received adequate care from the VA.
Paul Rieckhoff is a former lieutenant with the 1st Infantry Division in Iraq and founder and executive director of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America. Juan Gonzalez quoted him as saying, "With numbers this high, the problem is going to grow fast. We're seeing system wide there are major problems. Most local VAs [Veterans Administration centers] just aren't prepared for the influx of sick veterans."
In February the U.S. General Accounting Office reported that the Department of Veterans Affairs "does not have sufficient capacity to meet the needs of new combat veterans while still providing for veterans of past wars."
What's worse is that, since 1998, veterans are eligible for free health care for only the first two years after being demobilized. After that, an ailing veteran has to prove his or her illness is service-connected. In the next article we'll describe what that burden has meant to ailing Iraq vets.
Medical professionals in hospitals and facilities treating returning soldiers from Iraq and Afghanistan have been threatened with $10,000 fines and jail if they talk about the soldiers or their medical problems.
Reporters have been prevented access to more than 14,000 medically evacuated soldiers flown nightly from Germany to Walter Reed Hospital near Washington, D.C. What is the DoD hiding?
As you know from reading "Depleted Uranium For Dummies," all of us may eventually become victims of Bush's "Shock and Awe" campaign against the Iraqi people, because the radioactive fallout has already permeated the world's atmosphere. We reported the February findings of Dr. Chris Busby, scientific secretary of the European Committee on Radiation Risk, who was able to obtain official UK readings of the astounding spike in European radiation levels after the massive bombings in Iraq.
Depleted uranium particles traveled 2400 miles in nine days from Iraq to Aldermaston England. The invisible cloud quadrupled Europe's atmospheric radiation. According to Dr. Busby, "This research shows that rather than remaining near the target, as claimed by the military, depleted uranium weapons contaminate both locals and whole populations hundreds to thousands of miles away."
Bush, Cheney, and Rumsfeld's "time-release poison" from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan took only a year to mix completely into the world's atmosphere. Take a deep breath, and recall your initial reaction to the stunning TV images of a city of five million people engulfed in a firestorm, with mushroom-shaped clouds of radioactive debris illuminating the skyline.
Take a minute to check on your kids playing outside the window in the fresh spring air. Dr. Katsuma Yagasaki, a Japanese physicist, has estimated that depleted uranium munitions since Cheney's 1991 Gulf War has contaminated the global atmosphere with radiation equivalent of 400,000 Nagasaki bombs. Greenpeace has just estimated that 93,000 deaths occurred because of the 1986 meltdown at the Chernobyl nuclear plant in the Ukraine.
UK environmental scientist Busby was quoted as saying, "To my mind, it’s a human rights issue. Originally, it was an issue relating to whether or not it should be used in Iraq and if the population of Iraq is being contaminated and possibly the Gulf War veterans being contaminated, but now we are seeing that everybody is being contaminated. We are all Gulf War veterans."

Soldier Says Bush Worse Than Bin Laden

Veterans and soldiers have been contacting "Over the Rainbow" after we guaranteed anonymity. A soldier serving in Iraq, already showing the symptoms of Gulf War Illness, expressed his bitterness.
"I came over here thinking I was fighting to protect our freedoms. It was all bullshit. I'm sick and probably dying. I want to come home. But, that's really scary because I'm contagious. If I come home I'll give this shit to my wife and kids.
"This was a suicide mission for all of us. Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, and the bunch of them are no better than Osama bin Laden and those sleezebags. The government took patriots and turned us into terrorists.
"It's just like Osama bin Laden and 9/11. They sent us over here on a suicide mission to murder innocent people.
"Actually our government is worse than bin Laden. At least when a car bomber volunteers, they tell the guy the truth. He knows he will die quickly and painlessly. When he's blown to bits, he knows his people will take care of his wife and kids.
"Nobody told me I was volunteering to be nuked by DU. The recruiter never said I was going die slowly and painfully. And when I'm dead they'll dump on my family just like they're dumping on the people over here."
The soldier asked if I had heard from public relations officer, Maj. Richard J. McNorton, about the radioactive showers at Camp Forward Danger.
I wonder if the major thinks he lives a charmed life. He's sucking up depleted uranium particles from Iraq whether he's stationed downwind in CentCom headquarters in Qatar or across the Atlantic in Florida. Right now GI's in Iraq and Afghanistan are hunkered down as Cheney's bloody adventure collapses around them. Our men and women are primarily concerned about looking out for each other. Who is McNorton looking out for?
Obviously Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld wants to keep depleted uranium and the radioactive showers a secret from the officers and troops. If the Jews of Europe had known the Nazi shower rooms were poison gas chambers, it would have been much harder to get them to board the trains.
DU must be the stuff of nightmares for Bush, Cheney, Condoleezza Rice, and Rumsfeld. Can you imagine the four of them trying to corral United States Army, Reserves and National Guard troops into transport planes bound for Iraq after they find out about depleted uranium?

[END]

This is the fourth in a comprehensive series on depleted uranium dedicated to the New York National Guard to appear on the website We're Not in Kansas Anymore, where you will find sources, a bibliography, and suggestions for citizen action to eliminate DU munitions. www.notinkansas.us.
Copyright 2006 Irving Wesley Hall.


 

 

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