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Another US war crime: the use of depleted uranium munitions
in Iraq
By Ben Nichols and Joe Lopez
29 May 2003
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One of the war crimes for which the Bush administration should
be prosecuted is the US militarys extensive use of weapons
tipped with depleted uranium (DU) during the war against Iraq.
The Pentagon has repeatedly dismissed warnings from a variety
of scientific and other bodies about the potential dangers of
such weaponry. In the aftermath of the war, Washington has refused
to clean up the residue left behind or allow UN experts into the
country to assess the potential long-term environmental and health
hazards caused by depleted uranium.
In its use of DU weapons, the Bush administration has acted
with complete indifference to international law and convention.
In January 2001, the European Parliament voted in favor of a resolution
that took the modest step of imposing a ban on the use of DU munitions
while investigations were carried out into the links between DU
and cancer.
In August 2002, the UN published a report which cited a series
of international laws and conventions breached by the use of DU
weapons, including: the Universal Declaration of Human Rights;
the UN Charter; the UN Genocide Convention; the Convention Against
Torture; the four Geneva Conventions of 1949; the Conventional
Weapons Convention of 1980; and the Hague Conventions of 1899
and 1907 which all forbid the deployment of poison or poisoned
weapons and arms, projectiles or materials calculated
to cause unnecessary suffering.
According to a recent CNN report, Pentagon and UN experts have
estimated that US-led military forces used between 1,100 and 2,200
tonnes of depleted uranium during the invasion of Iraq. The amount
far exceeds the 300 tonnes of depleted uranium used in the 1991
Gulf War and the 10 tonnes used by NATO forces during the bombing
of Serbia in 1999.
Depleted uranium is a radioactive heavy metal, which is also
chemically toxic. It is the waste product left over after the
isotope uranium-235used in nuclear power plants and nuclear
weaponshas been extracted from naturally occurring uranium.
What remainsdepleted uraniumis composed almost entirely99.7
percentof the isotope uranium-238. While less radioactive
than enriched or even naturally occurring uranium, DU is still
toxic and its long-term affects on health are unknown.
The Pentagon has insisted on using DU munitions because they
confer a significant military advantage. DU is 2.5 times denser
than steel and 1.7 times the density of lead, enabling shells
and bullets tipped with the substance to easily pierce most armour
and concrete structures. It is also relatively cheap to manufactureessentially
being a waste product from the US nuclear industry and weapons
program. DU bullets and shells emit almost no radiation prior
to firing, but burn in mid air and vaporise after impact, spreading
a layer of fine dust across a large area. Each DU tank shell is
said to contain about five kilograms of depleted uranium.
Just days before the invasion of Iraq, Colonel James Naughton
crudely summed up the reasons for using DU munitions and accused
those warning of its dangers of falling for Iraqi propaganda.
The Iraqis tell us terrible things happened to our people
because you used it last time. Why do they want it to go away?
They want it to go away because we kicked the crap out of themokay?
I mean, theres no doubt that DU gave us a huge advantage
over their tanks. They lost a lot of tanks.
Equally cynical was the response of Lieutenant Colonel Michael
Sigmon, the deputy surgeon for the US Armys V Corps. Asked
about the health risks of DU, he declared: There is not
really any danger, at least that we know about, for the people
of Iraq. He claimed that children playing with expended
DU tank shells would have to eat and practically suffocate on
the depleted uranium residue before incurring any health problems.
These comments fly in the face of considerable anecdotal evidence
from battlefields where DU munitions have been usedincluding
in Iraq during the first Gulf War, in the Balkans and at the US
bombing range on the Puerto Rican island of Vieques. In each case,
significant increases in cancer rates, birth deformities and long-term
health problems have been recorded.
A leading Iraqi specialist, Dr Salma Haddad, told reporters
that several years after the 1991 Gulf War she began to encounter
more and more children at Baghdads Al Mansur Hospital with
an aggressive form of cancer.
Haddad said she was particularly alarmed since the diseaseacute
myeloblastic leukemiais closely associated with radiation
exposure and her suspicions pointed to DU munitions. She went
on to explain that the number of cancer cases admitted to her
hospital was five times higher than in 1991.
Vested interests
But Pentagon officials continue to play down the dangers. Last
month, spokesman Colonel David Lapan claimed that recent studies
had demonstrated that DU was safe. Since 1990, he told the BBC
thereve been a number of studies by the UKs
Royal Society and the World Health Organisation, for exampleinto
the health risks of DU, or lack of them. Its fair to say
the 1990 study has been overtaken by them. One thing we have found
in these various studies is that there are no long-term effects
from DU.
In fact, the Royal Society report entitled The health
hazards of depleted uranium munitions says nothing of the
sort. The body has been one of the most vociferous in calling
for a cleanup of depleted uranium and for more comprehensive tests
into its health and environmental effects. It recently called
on the British government to carry out health tests on troops
returning from Iraq.
The study does state that the known risks of cancer are low
and may only be twice as probable for people exposed to DU in
the worst-case battlefield scenarios. But it also points to the
need for further research. Far from being harmless, the Royal
Society report explains: DU is radioactive and poisonous.
Exposure to sufficiently high levels might be expected to increase
the incidence of some cancers, notably lung cancer, possibly leukemia
and may damage the kidneys.
The key question is whether exposures to DU on the battlefield
are such that the increased incidence of cancer, or the likelihood
of kidney damage, are insignificant or are high enough to cause
concern. This is a very difficult question to answer given the
lack of good quality data on some of the parameters that determine
the extent of the exposure or the subsequent risk of disease.
Royal Society spokesperson Professor Brian Spratt commented
last month: The coalition needs to make clear where and
how much depleted uranium was used in the recent conflict in Iraq.
Although there are more pressing problems in Iraq ... the coalition
needs to acknowledge that depleted uranium is a potential hazard
and make inroads into tackling it by being open about where and
how much depleted uranium has been deployed.
But neither Washington nor London has shown the slightest willingness
to provide the necessary information, let alone acknowledge the
dangers. When the United Nations Environmental Program (UNEP)
asked to be allowed to send a team to Iraq to make an assessment
of the environmental and health threats posed to the Iraqi population,
the Bush administration refused.
Previous UNEP studies on depleted uranium have indicated that
the substance can attack the kidneys if ingested most likely through
contaminated water or cause lung cancer if the dust is inhaled.
Further evidence of the dangers of DU munitions has been provided
by Major Doug Rokke, a Vietnam and Gulf War combat veteran. Rokke
has specialised in hazardous materials and emergency medicine
for over 20 years and has campaigned in recent years against the
use of DU. He was assigned to clean up depleted uranium after
the 1991 Gulf War in Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Iraq.
In a speech in January published by the magazine In These
Times, Rokke denounced the use of DU munitions declaring:
We have willfully spread it all over the place. Weve
refused to clean up the mess; weve refused to provide medical
care; not only to the American friendly fire casualties
who survived, but also to the DU cleanup teams; and weve
refused to supply medical care to all the thousands and thousands
of other people, including women and childrenwhich makes
it an indiscriminate weapon.
Rokke explained that indiscriminate weapons are banned by international
law and that UN has issued several calls for a ban on the use
of DUwhich the US has rejected. Speaking from his experience
in the first Gulf War, he warned: When you leave all the
contamination there, people are going to continue to get sick
from just the uranium munitions alone... The army knows its
a problem, and they just dont care. Theyre going to
use DU... When you go to war, you use the best weapon you have,
and you will not ever give it up.
Washington also has other interests at stake. If DU is proven
to have a long-term health impact, the US faces charges of criminal
negligence and claims for compensation, not only from civilians
in the Middle East and the Balkans, but from thousands of US veterans
who have suffered debilitating illnesses.
Moreover, any cleanup of DU residue in Iraq and elsewhere would
involve huge costs. According to an article in the US publication
Newsday last month, the estimated cost of clearing a closed
500-acre military facilitythe Jefferson Proving Ground in
Indianawas between $4 billion and $5 billion. The firing
range was thought to contain about one fifth the amount of depleted
uranium used during the 1991 Gulf War and many times less than
the tonnage used this year on Iraq.
See Also:
US will provide no estimate
of Iraqi war casualties
[28 April 2003]
How the US media covers
up civilian deaths in Afghanistan
[26 February 2002]
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