Published on Sunday, March 30, 2003 by the Los Angeles Times

 Uranium Warheads May Leave Both Sides a Legacy of Death for Decades
 by Susanna Hecht
 http://www.commondreams.org/views03/0330-02.htm

 Although the potential human cost of the war with Iraq is obvious, not
 many people are aware of a hidden risk that may haunt us for years.

 Of the 504,047 eligible veterans of the 1991 Persian Gulf War, about
 29% are now considered disabled by the Department of Veterans Affairs, the
 highest rate of disability for any modern war. And most are not disabled
 because of wounds.

 These guys were rough, tough, buff 20-year-olds a decade ago. The vast
 majority are ill because of a complex of debilities known as the Gulf War
 syndrome.

 These vets were exposed to toxic material from both sides, including
 numerous chemicals, fumes and weird experimental vaccines. But the largest
 number of the more than half a million troops eligible for VA benefits --
 436,000 -- lived for months in areas of the Middle Eastern desert that had
 been contaminated with depleted uranium.

 Depleted uranium, or DU, is a highly toxic heavy metal that continues
 to emit low levels of alpha radiation. It is a byproduct of nuclear power
 plants and various military activities.

 The United States has hundreds of thousands of tons of DU lying
 around, and for the Gulf War it developed a new use for the stuff: load it
 into warheads.

 Though not technically "nuclear," because the material is not really
 fissionable, uranium is a heavy metal ideal for lethally effective "warhead
 penetrators" that can pierce through armored tanks and fortified positions.
 When the munitions explode, the area is bathed in a fine dust of DU that can
 be easily inhaled. These aerosols also taint soil and water and pollute
 ground water.

 If the penetrators do not explode, their casings gradually oxidize,
 releasing DU into the environment.

 DU warheads are essentially dirty bombs -- not very radioactive, but
 poisonous, and this is why there is an increasing global outcry against
 using DU in combat as tips for armor-piercing rounds as well as in artillery
 shells and Tomahawk missiles, among others.

 Such warheads were used very successfully by the U.S. in the Gulf War,
 when more than 350 tons of depleted uranium were dropped on Iraq, and later
 in Kosovo when about 13 tons of DU were exploded in the conflict there.

 The "Balkan syndrome" that emerged among the military and civilians
 after the U.S. bombing there bears a similarity to the Gulf War syndrome.

 Though the findings are controversial, many scientists now see these
 afflictions as the result of heavy metal poisoning and possibly exposure to
 very low levels radiation.

 DU is implicated in respiratory and kidney problems, rashes and,
 longer-term, bone cancer, as well as damaged reproductive and neurological
 systems.

 Iraqi civilians -- many more than the 100,000 who died in the conflict
 or as a result of the war -- also suffer from a range of similar health
 problems.

 Families of soldiers should be very worried.

 A huge amount of ordnance has already been unleashed in Iraq, and
 there is no way of knowing how many thousands of tons of depleted uranium
 will find "permanent storage" in the rubble of Iraq, its soil and the bodies
 of its people and U.S. occupying forces.

 It is certain, however, that the legacy of contamination will add
 billions to the cost of reconstruction -- and our lack of generosity in
 Afghanistan is instructive about the sincerity of our pledges in this area.
 The stingy benefit package the Gulf vets got, even during boom times, is yet
 another cautionary tale.

 The rosy fantasies of a democratized Arab world might make for good
 sound bites. But the reality of widespread DU use brings to mind the epitaph
 for the Punic Wars: "They made a desolation and called it Peace."

 Susanna Hecht is a professor in the School of Public Policy and Social
 Research at UCLA. She is head of the environmental analysis and policy
 program.



 _______________________________________

------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ---------------------~-->
Make Money Online Auctions! Make $500.00 or We Will Give You Thirty Dollars for 
Trying!
http://us.click.yahoo.com/yMx78A/fNtFAA/i5gGAA/FGYolB/TM
---------------------------------------------------------------------~->

Biofuel at Journey to Forever:
http://journeytoforever.org/biofuel.html

Biofuels list archives:
http://archive.nnytech.net/

Please do NOT send Unsubscribe messages to the list address.
To unsubscribe, send an email to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/ 


Reply via email to