-Caveat Lector-

http://www.truthout.org/docs_02/012603A.mass.graves.htm

(*Editors Note | As we stride towards an open war in Iraq, there is a
quieter sort of battle being waged between the Pentagon and the White
House. There are a great many Generals in the Defense Department who
are deeply concerned about this coming war, as described in a truthout
report from yesterday. In that report, Defense Secretary Rumsfeld is
described as telling the Generals to get in line or find new jobs, and Mr.
Bush is described as believing that any resistance to his plans is
tantamount to treason. Today, the Washington Times carried a report
detailing a bitterly critical memo written by Rumsfeld regarding the very
Generals he told to get in line. Now comes this ghoulish story below,
straight out of the Pentagon. Why? Perhaps it is an attempt to give the
American people a glimpse of what may be coming, a glimpse of the
dangers that arise when we charge off into unnecessary war. Perhaps it is
a warning from those same Generals, a warning delivered both to Mr.
Rumsfeld and to the citizenry. These soldiers cannot speak publicly about
their concerns for fear of being labeled disloyal. Stories like this, however,
show that someone is talking, and is deeply concerned. - wrp)

Go To Original

Pentagon Eyes Mass Graves Option Would Fight Contamination After
Bioterror Deaths
By Greg Seigle
The Denver Post

January 24, 2003

The bodies of U.S. soldiers killed by chemical or biological weapons in Iraq
or future wars may be bulldozed into mass graves and burned to save the
lives of surviving troops, under an option being considered by the
Pentagon.

Since the Korean War, the U.S. military has taken great pride in bringing
home its war dead, returning bodies to next of kin for flag-draped, taps-
sounding funerals complete with 21-gun salutes.

But the 53-year-old tradition could come to an abrupt halt if large numbers
of soldiers are killed by chemical or biological agents, according to a
proposal quietly circulating through Pentagon corridors.

Army spokesmen said the option to bury or even burn bodies contaminated
by chemical or biological weapons is being considered, along with the
possibility of placing contaminated corpses in airtight body bags and
sending them home for closed-casket funerals.

"All due care is taken to honor the remains of our fallen comrades," said
Maj. Chris Conway, an Army spokesman. "It's just too premature to
speculate on any plan or policy."

Lt. Col. Ryan Yantis, an Army spokesman, said, "Military planners look at an
operation in the full spectrum from the best-case scenario to the worst,
and you have to make plans accordingly."

Yantis said that if a biological or chemical attack occurs, "we're going to
treat the wounded with the best possible medical care. Those who are,
unfortunately, deceased, we're going to treat with the utmost dignity and
respect. ... We're going to have to take care of the mission and we're
going to have to ensure the safety of the force."

Iraq admitted to United Nations inspectors in 1995 that it had produced
large amounts of chemical and biological weapons during the 1980s and
1990s. American and British intelligence agencies say Iraqi President
Saddam Hussein has continued to produce the deadly weapons covertly
since then, despite Iraqi denials.

U.N. inspectors have found no proof Iraq is hiding weapons, but the U.S.
insists they are there and is massing troops in the Persian Gulf for a
possible war.

The U.S. had a plan for mass burials during the Gulf War in 1991, said Lt.
Gen. William "Gus" Pagonis, the chief logistician for that conflict and the
man who conceived the plan.

"The bulldozers were all lined up and ready to go," to deposit
contaminated bodies in "mass graves," Pagonis said.

"You'll use whatever equipment is necessary to avoid contaminating more
people," Pagonis said in a recent interview. "You don't want anybody else
to die."

Pagonis said that before the Gulf War, he sent the plan simultaneously to
commanding Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf and the Department of the Army
and no one responded. "When you send a plan and no one gets back to
you, you assume it's been approved," he said.

Army spokesman Capt. Ben Kuykendall said the Pagonis plan is similar to the
option currently under consideration - except that bodies infected by
biological agents might be both cremated and buried.

If soldiers are killed by "something like smallpox in which bodies cannot be
decontaminated, we would have to cremate them right there," Kuykendall
said. He said he recently discussed the option in detail with Brig. Gen.
Steve Reeves, program executive officer for the Army's chemical and
biological defense office. Reeves declined to comment.

"You would have to protect the living, so you'd have to get rid of the
(contaminated) bodies as quickly as possible," Kuykendall said. "You don't
want to contaminate any survivors who are not already contaminated."

It is possible to decontaminate bodies, but such efforts would be "very
sensitive, expensive and time-consuming," particularly for corpses infected
with contagious biological agents, Kuykendall said.

But even if a body was believed to be decontaminated, it could not be
sent stateside for fear it might still contain lethal germs or viruses that
could fester deep inside and seep out later, he said. "That just would not
be worth the risk."

If bodies contaminated with biological agents such as smallpox or anthrax
were flown home, they could pass potentially lethal contaminants to every
vehicle, aircraft, building and person that came in contact with them,
Kuykendall said.

Bodies infected with chemical agents such as VX and mustard gas, which
are very persistent, could also contaminate others, said Jonathan Tucker,
a Washington-based senior scholar at the Monterey Institute of
International Studies who has written extensively about chemical and
biological agents.

It is easier to decontaminate chemically contaminated bodies for shipment
and traditional burials than those infected by biological agents, Tucker
said.

But in the heat of battle, Pagonis said, a field commander doesn't have
time to make the distinction. "You want to do away with this (biological
threat) as quickly as possible," he said.

Military veterans said they hope those commanders will never have to make
such a choice.

"I know this is a plan to protect people and to make sure that we don't
bring back any biological agents, but we're more concerned with how the
(living) soldiers are going to protect themselves on the battlefield," said
Steve Robinson, a retired Army Ranger and executive director of the
National Gulf War Resource Center.

"It makes sense" to bury or burn contaminated bodies, Robinson said, "but
it's still going to be hard on the families. ... If you are told your son was
killed in Iraq but buried in a mass grave, you are going to be forever
speculative on how he died."

Mass burial is "a sensitive issue, and we don't want to think about it
because our hopes and prayers are that it won't happen," said Tom Corey,
president of the Vietnam Veterans of America who was wounded in
Vietnam and now uses a wheelchair.

A top Army mortuary official said he is confident his nearly 700 soldiers
could decontaminate any corpses and send them home for proper burial.

"They would process them as best they could and move them to the rear,"
said Douglas Howard, deputy director of the Army Mortuary Affairs Center
in Fort Lee, Va., which is responsible for handling the bodies of soldiers.

"If we bury on the battlefield, it will only be as a last resort," Howard said.

But mortuary teams would have to be wary of charging into areas filled
with noxious fumes or deadly germs.

"The primary difficulty is concern for the safety of the mortuary affairs
soldiers," said Howard, who has been an Army mortician for 30 years. "We
never launch forth into a contaminated area without the advice and
consent of the chemical community."

Pentagon officials declined to reveal exactly how many people staff the
decontamination teams. The Army mortuary affairs center has only one
such group - the 246th Quartermaster Mortuary Affairs Company, a 220-
soldier reserve unit based in Puerto Rico.

Kuykendall said the Army's limited decontamination assets would have to be
concentrated on survivors. Pagonis and other defense experts agreed.

"The military's first concern would be its own people - if they're still alive
they would be the top priority. Next would be civilian noncombatants.
People who are already dead would not be at the top of the triage," Philip
Coyle said.

Coyle served as an undersecretary of defense from 1997 to 2001 and
oversaw the testing and evaluation of much of the military's new
decontamination and protective gear but said he was never informed of
the option for cremation or mass burial of casualties.

Decontamination teams use large, showerlike pressure washers to spray
victims with special disinfectants, cleaning solutions or even water. The
teams, which can operate together or in small subgroups, rely on the
guidance of specialists in chemical-biological warfare and sometimes even
transport from other units.

Soldiers contaminated by chemical weapons would need to leave the
scene as quickly as possible to limit their exposure. Those contaminated
by biological agents would need to stay put to avoid spreading germs or
viruses to their colleagues or civilians, Tucker said.

Chemical weapons generally contaminate relatively small areas, while
biological weapons such as smallpox, which is highly contagious and lethal,
can spread for long distances if contaminated people, bodies, gear or
equipment are moved around, Tucker said.

Every U.S. soldier deployed to a potential combat zone carries an
advanced gas mask and at least one air-tight, charcoal-lined protective
suit. But such gear is useless if ripped open by bullets or shrapnel, or if
troops are caught without all their garb on. Experts worry that the troops
might be tempted to remove some or all of the bulky, uncomfortable
equipment, particularly in the searing heat of the gulf region.

U.S. troops also carry auto-injecting needles that can inject atropine and
oxine to counteract the effects of chemical nerve agents. But those must
be applied immediately after contamination to be effective, Tucker said.

Tucker said the Iraqis are believed to have large, hidden stockpiles of
chemical weapons, including "very high quality" mustard gas, a blistering
agent, and nerve agents such as sarin, cyclosarin and VX. The chemicals
are liquids that can be administered in person, or by aircraft, missiles or
artillery shells.

"A drop (of VX) on the skin can kill within 15 to 20 minutes unless antidotes
are immediately administered," Tucker said. "In the case of smallpox it
would be impossible to decontaminate the body ... or the linens or
anything else the body comes in contact with."

Iraq also has produced "significant quantities" of highly lethal biological
agents such as anthrax, botulinum toxin, aflotoxin, gas gangrene and ricin,
Tucker said. The Iraqis are also believed to harbor lesser amounts of
smallpox.

The possibility of U.S. troops having to bulldoze or burn comrades killed by
chemical or biological weapons foreshadows the possibility that similar
methods would have to be used on civilians caught in similar attacks,
Pagonis said.

That could happen overseas during wartime or even in the United States in
the event of a terrorist attack, he said.

Most Army officers deflected questions about the mass graves option to
Pentagon superiors, who in turn deferred to the White House. White
House officials also declined to comment, saying any such plan is a
Pentagon issue.

"I'd have to refer you to the Defense Department," Sean McCormick,
spokesman for the White House's National Security Council, repeated
several times during a brief telephone conversation. "We don't comment on
military plans, operations or procedures."

A final decision on the option would have to be made by President Bush or
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, Kuykendall said.

"Not everybody's going to support whatever we do," he said.

(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed
without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving
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