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Gulf War link to grisly U.S. crimes?

swissinfo
November 13, 2002 3:30 PM



Gulf War link to grisly U.S. crimes?

By Sarah Edmonds

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Beltway sniper, the University of Arizona gunman, the Fort
Bragg murders, the Oklahoma City bomber -- these terrible U.S. crimes vary widely but
experts believe they all share a common thread that may merit a closer look.

With the exception of one of the four Fort Bragg killings, all are alleged to be have 
been
committed by veterans of the 1991 Gulf War.

There are too many unanswered questions to draw broad conclusions about whether the
men connected with these crimes were suffering from the illnesses that research has
shown afflict some 25 to 30 percent of the 697,000 U.S. Gulf vets.

However, studies have turned up evidence of injury to the brain in some ill veterans 
of the
conflict, including damage to the deep brain structures where personality is 
determined.

What caused this damage, and other symptoms vets describe, isn't clear, but researchers
have said possibilities could include environmental toxins, low-level nerve agents, 
depleted
uranium, oil fires, mustard gas, stress as well as vaccines given to soldiers to guard 
against
biowarfare and nerve gas.

Dr. William Baumzweiger, a California neurologist and psychiatrist who specialised in 
Gulf
War ailments, said he was not surprised that so many of the high-profile crimes were 
tied
to Gulf veterans. "Gulf War veterans have a very high frequency of turning to violence 
to
deal with frustration," he said.

A TERRIBLE TOLL

Baumzweiger testified for the defence at the trial of Gulf veteran Jeffrey Hutchinson,
convicted last year of the 1998 murders of his girlfriend and her three children in 
Florida.

But Hutchinson does not win the prize for infamy in this group. That goes to Timothy
McVeigh, executed in 2001 for the 1995 bombing of a federal building in Oklahoma City 
that
killed 168 people and injured hundreds of others.

September and October of this year brought two more high-profile cases involving
veterans.

John Allen Muhammad, along with a young accomplice, has been accused of killing 10
people in and around Washington D.C. He is also charged with shootings in Louisiana and
Alabama and could be linked to others.

Then in late October, failing Arizona nursing student Robert Flores, who served in the 
Army
during the Gulf War, mowed down three of his professors before shooting himself.

Earlier in 2002, four servicemen allegedly killed their wives at Fort Bragg in North 
Carolina,
the base home to the storied 82nd Airborne Division. Three of the four were Gulf War
veterans.

Last week, a military team probing the Fort Bragg deaths blamed marital woes, 
deployment
stress and reluctance to seek counseling.

"REASONABLE HYPOTHESIS"

Privacy Act rules make it impossible to find out if any of the Gulf veterans in these 
high-
profile crimes ever officially complained of symptoms, and researchers are unaware of 
any
statistics that indicate that rates of violence among Gulf veterans are higher than the
general populace or than other combat veterans.

One researcher, who declined to be identified, said of speculation about a link 
between Gulf
War illnesses and the crimes: "It's a very reasonable hypothesis and it's reasonable
because these people came back with personality change, difficulty controlling anger 
and so
forth."

"The question is over 10 years, what is the expected incidence of violent shooters, 
violent
criminals, in the population of 695,000 former military people? I don't know the 
answer to
that. Nobody knows ... although these are such high-profile crimes, you'd expect that 
the
incidence of that would be extremely rare," he added.

Steve Robinson, executive director of the National Gulf War Resource Centre, a 
veterans'
advocacy group, said more study of Gulf War ailments is clearly needed.

"Do Gulf War veterans as a whole demonstrate psychotic, homicidal, suicidal behaviour? 
I
don't think so. Are there individuals that have demonstrated those? Yes, absolutely," 
he
said, adding that while the vast majority of those who suffer from Gulf War ailments 
will
never turn violent, he receives despairing letters and telephone calls daily from 
sufferers.

In an emotion-choked voice, Robinson read from one such letter, written by a veteran 
in jail
for a vehicular homicide that killed a close friend. It said in part: "I'm nervous all 
the time. I
feel like my body is doing 200 miles an hour. I am always fatigued, my body shakes and
sweats. I believe that because of the physical symptoms, I am a basket case. Anxiety 
and
depression rule my life."

NOT JUMP TO CONCLUSIONS

According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, in 1999 -- the latest year for which 
the data
are available -- just 16 people aged 25-49 committed murder per 100,000 population.

There is no breakdown according to military service.

"There is no evidence to support the notion that Gulf War veterans are more violent 
than
any other group," said Barbara Goodno, a spokeswoman at the Defence Department.

"We should be careful not to jump to conclusions. Approximately 697,000 veterans served
their country in operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm. It would be an injustice 
to them
to automatically link the aberrant acts of a few to their military service," she added.

But enough questions linger that with the country teetering on the brink of another 
conflict
with Iraq, researchers think these violent crimes may merit further study.

"These high-profile shooters, that looks like it could be something new. And certainly 
the
Gulf War personality change thing could account for it," the researcher said.

The U.S. government does not acknowledge a Gulf War "syndrome" -- a group of signs and
symptoms adding up to a unique condition. It admits there are a number of illnesses 
that
have emerged in veterans of the conflict but until recently it has put these down to
psychology.

Symptoms can include difficulty with concentration, thinking and memory, severe body 
pain,
chronic diarrhoea, sleep disturbances, night sweats, hot flashes and personality 
change,
said Dr. Robert Haley of the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Centre, a member 
of
the research advisory council on Gulf War illnesses to the Department of Veterans 
Affairs.

"It's common for these guys to have become (different)," Haley said. "Their wives will 
tell
you, 'This isn't the guy who went over. He's had a personality change.' And they 
typically
come back (with) difficulty controlling temper, often depressed, withdrawn, not 
wanting to
be around other people, difficulty dealing with complex environments."

Haley said it is "too big a leap" to go from this to a conclusion that Gulf War brain 
injuries
could be prompting this small group of men to commit terrible crimes.

POTENTIAL BREAKTHROUGH

According to a report the advisory committee issued to the Department of Veterans 
Affairs
in June, the ailments of veterans of the relatively short conflict "cannot be 
adequately
explained by deployment stress, wartime trauma or psychiatric diagnoses such as post-
traumatic stress disorder."

This year's advisory committee report said neurological problems are a key category of 
Gulf
War illnesses and that there is enough evidence "to conclude that this line of inquiry
represents a potential breakthrough that could be pursued."

Last month, Veterans Affairs issued a statement citing the research on a possible
neurological link and committing $20 million in fiscal 2004 to further study. The 
department
will set up a brain-imaging centre to probe the issue.

URL of this story
http://www.swissinfo.org/sen/swissinfo.html?siteSect=41&sid=1454521

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