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Testing of New York guardsmen: first confirmed cases of Iraq
war depleted uranium exposure
By Joanne Laurier
21 April 2004
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A group of American soldiers suffering from unexplained illnesses
due to service in the Iraqi war have been diagnosed with radiation
contamination likely caused by dust from depleted uranium shells
fired by US troops.
An investigation funded by the New York Daily News found
that several members of the 442nd Military Police Company, based
in Orangeburg, New York, almost certainly inhaled
radioactive dust from exploded American shells manufactured with
depleted uranium (DU).
A nuclear medicine expert and former Army doctor, Dr. Asaf
Durakovic, tested nine men who had been battling serious physical
problems that began last summer in the Iraqi town of Samawah.
Laboratory tests revealed traces of two manmade forms of uranium
in urine samples from four of the soldiers. The menSgt.
Hector Vega, Sgt. Ray Ramos, Sgt. Agustin Matos and Cpl. Anthony
Yonnoneare the first confirmed cases of inhaled depleted
uranium exposure from the war, according to the Daily News
report. The soldiers contacted the newspaper after six of them
were denied testing for DU by Army doctors and the three who were
tested waited months for results. Two in the latter group suspiciously
tested negative.
Dispatched to Iraq a year ago, the unit, made up for the most
part of New York policemen, firefighters and correction officers,
has been providing security for convoys, operating jails and training
Iraqi police.
These are amazing results, especially since these soldiers
were military police not exposed to the heat of battle. Other
American soldiers who were in combat must have more depleted uranium
exposure, Durakovic, a colonel in the Army Reserves who
served in the 1991 Persian Gulf War, told the Daily News.
Dr. Durakovic is affiliated to the Uranium Medical Research Centre,
an international association of scientists and physiciansthe
first study organization to detect DU in the urine of Canadian,
British and US troops who served in the first Gulf War.
The Army and Pentagon, under pressure from veterans groups
who blame DU contamination as a factor in Gulf War Syndrome, have
conducted studies which essentially concluded that DU exposure
does not present a major health risk. Gulf War Syndrome is a term
for a myriad of ailments that afflicts thousands of veterans of
that war. A Pentagon study published in 2000 concluded that DU,
as a heavy metal, could pose a chemical hazard but
that Gulf War veterans did not experience intakes high enough
to affect their health. Pentagon spokesman Michael Kilpatrick
said the overwhelming conclusion from the studies
of those who work with uranium is that it has not produced
any increase in cancer.
Kilpatrick also said that the Pentagon has tested some 1,000
soldiers back from the current war in Iraq and only three have
come up positive for DUresulting exclusively from depleted
uranium shell shrapnel.
The Army contends that only soldiers who suffer retained DU
shrapnel wounds or who were inside tanks hit by DU shellsforcing
an immediate inhalation of radioactive dustare at risk.
However, the Pentagons Kilpatrick claimed that follow-up
studies of around 70 cases of DU-contaminated veterans from the
Gulf War exhibited no serious health problems.
Gulf War Syndrome
Of the 579,000 American veterans who participated in the Gulf
War, some 251,000 (43 percent) had sought medical treatment from
the Department of Veterans Affairs as of July 1999. Approximately
182,000 (31 percent) filed claims for compensation for medical
disabilities or damage related to illness or injury. The illnesses
included leukemia, lung cancer, chronic kidney and liver disorders,
respiratory ailments, chronic fatigue, skin spotting and joint
pain, according to the Japanese newspaper Chugoku Shimbun.
A large number of the veterans offspring suffer from congenital
defects.
In an April 18 article by John Pilger headlined, This
is a war of liberation and we are the enemy, the author
states that Dr. Doug Rokke, director of the US Army DU project
following the 1991 Gulf invasion, estimates that more than 10,000
American veterans have since died as a result of the war, many
from contamination illnesses.
After an unusual number of leukemia deaths among Italian soldiers
who served in Kosovo, the European Parliament called for a moratorium
on the use of depleted uranium weapons in January 2003.
Depleted uranium is what is left over when most of the highly
radioactive isotopes of the element are extracted for use as nuclear
fuel or nuclear weapons. In military applications, depleted uranium
is primarily used in armor-piercing munitions and enhanced armor
protection.
Pilgers article also revealed that during last years
invasion of Iraq, both American and British forces used
uranium-tipped shells, leaving whole areas so hot
with radiation that only military teams in full protective clothing
can approach them. No warning or medical help is given to Iraqi
civilians; thousands of children play in these zones. The coalition
has refused to allow the International Atomic Energy Agency to
send experts to assess what Rokke describes as a catastrophe.
Sgt. Agustin Matos, one of those who tested positive for DU
from the New York company, told the Daily News that since
his return from Iraq he has had constant headaches, fatigue, shortness
of breath, nausea, dizziness, joint pain and excessive urination.
A small lesion on his liver has also been discovered. Before
I left for Iraq, they tested my eyes and I was fine. Now my eyesights
gotten bad on top of everything else, Matos said.
According to members of the 442nd, the company was so short
of manpower that a commanding officer would order an evacuation
only when a soldier could no longer physically function.
A press release issued by the National Gulf War Resource Center,
an international coalition of advocates and organizations, stated:
The [NGWRC] is very concerned that veterans returning from
combat in Iraq are being denied testing for exposure to depleted
uranium and potentially other hazards.... The family members of
the 442nd are right to be concerned about proper DU screening.
Both the DoD [Department of Defense] and the VA [Veterans Administration]
have done a poor job testing and evaluating veterans in the past,
and it is hard to ignore the withholding of information and manipulation
of study findings from the DoD DU Surveillance Program.
Isaac Zimmerman of the Uranium Medical Research Centre is a
research assistant for Dr. Durakovic and a co-author of many of
the organizations studies. He told the WSWS: The 442nd
was a military police unit and I dont believe they saw active
combat. All of the nine soldiers that we tested were sick. Four
tested positive for DU and six or seven came back with Uranium
236, which does not exist in nature, and is only produced in a
nuclear reaction process.
The military is continuing to drop DU. I dont think
anybody really knows, not even the military, how many tons have
been dropped. One researcher in England estimates some 1,700 tons,
which is a lot more than what the military claims. We have also
tested a number of civilians in Iraq and found that a significant
number are contaminated.
Ive heard second hand that the military is now
going to test everyone. But we know from past tests that labs
with substandard methodology were used and therefore the test
results were negative for DU. It is without doubt that the US
military would never ask our organization to conduct DU testing
on the soldiers. The testing of the New York guardsmen was entirely
funded by the Daily News.
A statement by Dr. Durakovic, posted on the International Action
Organization web site, argued that [d]ue to the current
proliferation of DU weaponry, the battlefields of the future will
be unlike any battlefields in history. Since the effects of contamination
by uranium cannot be directed or contained, uraniums chemical
and radiological toxicity will create environments that are hostile
not only to the health of enemy forces but of ones own forces
as well.
Due to the delayed health effects from internal contamination
of uranium, injury and death will not always be immediate to the
battle, but will remain lingering threats to survivors
of the battle for years and decades into the future. The battlefield
will remain a killing zone long after the cessation of hostilities.
Environmental contamination will linger for centuries posing an
ongoing health threat to the civilians who reclaim the land and
subsequent generations.
The testing organized by the Daily News on a handful
of members of one company yielded results that point to the fact
that thousands of US troops and a vast percentage of the Iraqi
population are likely to have suffered exposure to depleted uranium,
absorbing it either by inhaling contaminated dust or ingesting
it from contaminated water, food and soil.
See Also:
Washington conceals US casualties
in Iraq
[4 February 2004]
More questions on the
deaths and illnesses of American soldiers
[10 October 2003]
Thousands of US troops
evacuated from Iraq for unexplained medical reasons
[9 September 2003]
Are American soldiers
in Iraq dying due to depleted uranium?
[4 August 2003]
Another US war crime:
the use of depleted uranium munitions in Iraq
[29 May 2003]
Ongoing consequences
of the Gulf War
Casualties increase from use of depleted uranium
[8 September 1999]
Depleted uranium weapons
used in Balkan War expected to cause thousands of fatal cancers
[5 August 1999]
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