Collateral Risk: DU Research Gap Could Impact Vermont Troops  

by Kathryn Casa 
  
By the end of June, more than 600 Vermont National Guard members will be
deployed in and around heavy combat areas in Iraq, where battlefield
exposure to depleted uranium - a highly toxic and radioactive battlefield
poison widely used by the United States in combat zones - has now become
routine, military watchdogs say.

During the recent legislative session, Vermont lawmakers and state leaders
turned aside a modest proposal to assess the impact of Vermont National
Guard members deployed in dangerous and highly stressful war zones. However,
other legislatures have been aggressively pursuing measures aimed at
safeguarding their troops.



They have used hundreds of tons of DU over there. We are overwhelmed with
phone calls from people who have just returned from Iraq who are not getting
treatment. 
 
Joyce Riley
American Gulf War Veterans Association 
Louisiana last week became the first state to require returning troops to be
tested for exposure to depleted uranium. And, like both the Louisiana House
and Senate, the Connecticut House unanimously passed similar legislation
earlier this month. That bill, which has broad bipartisan co-sponsorship, is
now before the state's Senate. Lawmakers from at least seven other states
interested in drafting similar legislation have contacted Rep. Patricia
Dillon, D-New Haven, the Connecticut author of the bill.

Ninety Vermonters are currently serving in combat zones, including 25
assigned to a military police company based in the Sunni stronghold of
Tikrit, the hometown of former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein; and 65 are
attached to a Mississippi National Guard unit in Najaf, according to Lt.
Veronica Saffo, a National Guard spokeswoman in Colchester.

Twenty Vermont soldiers are in Iraq working as support staff; 600 are based
in Kuwait, where they rotate in and out of combat; and 65 are guarding
civilian security contractors in Saudi Arabia.

On Thursday, another 400 Vermont troops are scheduled to leave for Iraq as
part of a brigade combat team. Their base is not identified ahead of time
for security reasons, Saffo said. But "they will be in the combat areas,
definitely in the villages and working with the Iraqi police as part of a
significantly sized brigade combat team," she confirmed.

The Department of Defense said depleted uranium use in Iraq is significantly
lower than the 320 tons fired during the first Gulf War. Outside watchdogs
say up to 150 tons of DU have been fired during the current Iraq conflict.

No DU weapons systems have been used in Afghanistan, according to the
Pentagon, where six Vermonters are stationed and another 50 are headed later
this month.

"Previous to the Gulf War, no special training was mandated concerning DU,"
according to Barbara Goodno with the Defense Department's deployment health
office. "Soon after the Gulf War, awareness training was instituted for
service members who may be exposed to DU weapons, specialized teams . who
may have higher than average exposure receive increased training."

But according to a 2000 study by the nonpartisan Government Accountability
Office, a survey two years earlier by the Army's Special Assistant for Gulf
War Illnesses of more than 1,600 personnel, found that only 65 percent
received required DU training. "We also found a great deal of disparity
among units in that three units had not conducted the required DU training
at all," the GAO reported.

None of the branches of the military had made sufficient progress in
implementing DU training, the study found, concluding that "service members
were only marginally better prepared to contend with DU hazards than they
had been during the Gulf War."

Saffo said all Vermont troops participate in annual DU training and get more
intensified training prior to their deployment. "There is a list of specific
core training requirements mandatory for all units in the Army. Every year
the commanders of every unit in the state have to make sure the soldiers get
the specialized training provided by the Army." 

But Joyce Riley, a Gulf War National Guard veteran and executive director of
the American Gulf War Veterans Association in Versaille, MO, calls the
Pentagon's claim of better training "a lie."

"They have used hundreds of tons of DU over there," said Riley, who hosts a
daily radio talk show. "We are overwhelmed with phone calls from people who
have just returned from Iraq who are not getting treatment."

Just 180 Vermont National Guard members have returned from Iraq and
Afghanistan thus far. Although they are given physical and mental health
screening, they are not routinely tested for DU exposure, said Anselm Beach,
a spokesman for the Veterans Administration Hospital in White River
Junction.

Returning troops are reporting primarily "readjustment issues," noted Beach.
"Some muscular skeletal problems because you have soldiers wearing 60 pounds
of gear, some issues with hearing from explosions . the regular things with
combat, but nothing out of the ordinary."

The hospital would test for DU exposure only if symptoms prompt a doctor to
recommend it, Beach said.

However, a group of congressional Democrats would like to see DU testing
standardized. On May 17, Washington Rep. Jim McDermott, a Vietnam veteran,
and 21 other Democrats introduced a bill in Congress that would require the
Environmental Protection Agency and the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) to report to Congress on the health effects of DU exposure,
not only on veterans but also on their children born after exposure to DU
munitions.

"There are countless stories of mysterious illnesses, higher rates of
serious illnesses and even birth defects," McDermott said on the floor of
the House. "We do not know what role, if any, DU plays in the medical
tragedies in Iraq, but we must find out." 

In 1997, federal medical researchers at the Naval Health Research Center and
the CDC determined that babies born to Gulf War veterans were more likely to
suffer from certain birth defects including malformations of the eyes, jaw,
and spine. 

DU danger

Depleted uranium, a highly toxic and radioactive byproduct of the uranium
enrichment process, is widely used in U.S. weapons systems because of its
ability to penetrate steel and its low cost. It is also used to line tanks,
and advocates say its strength and efficiency as a weapon is a benefit for
U.S. troops.

But the term "depleted" is a misnomer, since DU contains about 60 percent of
the radioactivity found in natural uranium, according to Tod Ensign, a
veteran and attorney with the veterans advocacy group Citizen Soldier in New
York.

"When a DU shell strikes its target, up to 70 percent of the depleted
uranium vaporizes into fine dust, which then settles out in the surrounding
soil and water," he wrote. "Over half of the aerosolized particles are
smaller than 5 microns and anything smaller than 10 microns can be inhaled.
Once lodged in the lungs, these particles can emit a steady dose of alpha
radiation."

Goodno said all service members in the field carry protective masks for use
against chemical or biological attack, which could also be used "in extreme
cases" to prevent DU inhalation. "Protective equipment is only required as a
precaution for those who have repeated, prolonged exposure" to DU, she
noted.

Some veterans of the first Gulf War say DU exposure has led to a battery of
debilitating symptoms including headaches, fatigue, joint pain, sleep
disturbance, and frequent urination, which they call Gulf War syndrome.

Ensign reports that months before the first Gulf War, the Army's Armament,
Munitions, and Chemical Command published the following warning: "Following
combat, the condition of the battlefield and the long term health risks to
natives [sic] and combat veterans may become issues in the acceptability of
the continued use of DU for military applications." The report added that DU
has been "linked to cancer when exposures are internal."

Iraqi doctors and researchers have reported dramatic increases in cancer and
childhood leukemia since the early 1990s.

Of the nearly 700,000 troops who fought in the first Gulf War, more than
187,000 had been granted some level of disability status for injury or
illness related to their service, according to Veterans Administration
statistics for February 2005. More than 10,000 of the returning Gulf War
veterans have died.

The Defense Department continues to insist that there is no scientific
evidence that links exposure to depleted uranium to any of the symptoms, and
that no single diagnosis explains the symptoms.

Of the 104 soldiers known to have been hit by "friendly fire" DU munitions
during the 1991 war, according to Goodno, 70 participated in a VA follow-up
program. All of them had inhalation exposure, and about one third had
embedded DU shrapnel. "Those veterans with retained DU shrapnel continue to
excrete elevated levels of urinary uranium," she noted. "To date, none of
these individuals have developed kidney abnormalities, leukemia, bone or
lung cancer, or any other uranium-related health problems."

But McDermott asks, "If DU is so safe, why do American soldiers need to wear
protective clothing in the first place?" 

He urged Congress, "Let the Pentagon prove that it is safe."

C Copyright 2005 The Vermont Guardian
 
http://www.vermontguardian.com/local/0105/CollateralRisk.shtml









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