The radioactive wasteland that was once Iraq
by Rob los Ricos
Two military campaigns
of dubious merit, initiated by the former President Bush and his son's
ruling junta, have scattered tons of radioactive material over Iraq. Along
with Afghanistan and the nations which once formed Yugoslavia, Iraq has
been used as a laboratory to test the long-term effects of depleted uranium
munitions on people and the environment. The Bush junta is also using
this opportunity to check out how much misinformation it can successfully
spew in order to carry out its objectives.
The U.S. military
admitted to using 320 tons of DU-enhanced ammunition during the Gulf war.
Despite massive evidence about the lethal effects of prolonged exposure
to DU residue in Iraq, the Bush junta and its military propagandists still
claim DU presents no clear health risks, at any level of exposure. Unless,
of course, one is targeted by weapons firing DU projectiles.
There are still no
reliable estimates of how much DU was used during the conquest of Iraq.
The lower estimates have been 500 tons, while some guesses range as high
as 2,000 tons. No doubt, the expanded us of DU in missiles and bombs -
much of it carried out in secret - makes it difficult to accurately come
up with a reliable figure. There is, however, substantial evidence regarding
the effects of DU exposure, as the land and people of Iraq have been so
exposed for over 12 years. In the southern city of Basra, for example,
radiation levels were 84 times greater than what is considered safe, before
the latest war of conquest. Cancer and other ailments associated with
exposure to radiation are epidemic throughout southern Iraq, Kuwait and
across their borders into Saudi Arabia and Iran. Eight years after the
Gulf war, Canadian soldiers who participated in the conflict were still
passing uranium 238 in their urine.
Supporting Our Troops
The effects of DU exposure are terrible. Since Bush I's Gulf War of 1991,
43 percent of American veterans of that campaign have sought medical treatment
for illnesses associated with radiation poisoning. Over 90,000 US and
tens of thousands of British veterans have experienced symptoms like leukemia,
lung cancer and chronic liver and kidney disorders. Birth defects in children
born to Gulf War vets are two to three times higher than in the general
public. UK vets have rates of bone marrow and lymphatic cancers at 10
times the rate in the civilian population.
And all this in people
who were only briefly exposed to DU. Imagine how much worse it is for
people who live in areas contaminated by DU.
Despite massive evidence
to the contrary - not only from Iraq, but from Bosnia and Kosovo as well
- the U.S. Department of Defense insists DU presents no significant health
risks, either to soldiers using it or to the people living in areas polluted
by DU residue. Not everyone buys their line, though.
NATO has warned their
soldiers stationed in the former Yugoslavia not to eat locally grown food,
or drink the water. The UN has passed two resolutions listing DU as a
"weapon of mass or indiscriminate destruction," and asked that
it be banned, along with chemical or biological weapons.
Currently, 15 nations
utilize DU-enhanced ammunition. Why, if it is so lethal, do governments
willingly expose their own troops to DU?
The former head of
the Pentagon's DU project, Professor Rocke, says he was instructed to
lie about the health effects of DU exposure. "Even tough," he
related in a TV interview, "we know there are health and environmental
effects
" he was told to
" make sure that we can
always use uranium munitions in combat because they are so effective."
So, Just What is
the Big Deal with DU?
Since nuclear reactors were first built, they've presented a difficult
problem: What to do with the radioactive waste materials? There are several
minerals created as by-products of nuclear reactions. Plutonium is one,
manufactured for us in weapons of mass destruction.
Depleted uranium
is actually uranium-238. this is what is left over when uranium-235 is
separated from uranium ore for us in nuclear weapons. The process "depletes"
uranium by a whopping 2 percent. Though u-235 is much more volatile, DU
is still quite radioactive.
Other waste by-products
which build up inside nuclear reactors include Neptunium and Americium.
These materials produce metals that are extremely dense and therefore
make superior bullets and other projectiles, capable of penetrating thick
concrete bunkers and conventional steel armor, such as that used on tanks.
Just this quality makes DU munitions desirable for military applications.
It has, however, other aspects which elevate it into an entirely unique
category as a weapon of indiscriminate destruction.
Upon impact, DU projectiles
explode, bursting into flames that burn at temperatures exceeding 6,000
degrees F. the projectile is pulverized into extremely fine dust particles,
much of which burns up in the initial impact's explosion, creating a radioactive
cloud. This cloud will immediately kill anyone who inhales it, searing
the victim's lungs, nasal passages and throat.
A single bullet fired
by a .50 caliber machine gun can destroy a tank or a bunker, penetrating
and filling the interior with flames, killing the people inside and igniting
any munitions or other combustible materials on hand. Remember al the
images of burnt-out Iraqi vehicles during Bush's war of conquest? DU.
DU projectiles form
tiny, glass particles upon impact. This dust emits radiation at all levels
- alpha, beta and gamma - so it is extremely toxic. DU has a radioactive
half-life of 4.5 billion years. Let's emphasize this point: residual dust
from DU munitions will be lethal for a longer period of time than life
has existed on Earth. Basically, DU kills forever.
One of the other
nuclear wastes used in DU ammunition, Americium-243, will eventually decay
into plutonium-239, which is 200,000 times more radioactive than uranium-238
(DU), and is the most carcinogenic substance known. For millions of years
to come, this toxic dust will be killing everything unlucky enough to
come into contact with it.
Health Effects of
DU Exposure
The Bush junta and Department of Defense (DoD) are not interested in studying
the health risks associated with exposure to DU. Instead, the Republican
Party-controlled Congress is cutting back on health benefits for U.S.
military veterans by 25 billion dollars. The ruling junta is also cutting
millions from education programs for children of military personnel. Bush
has also instructed the Department of Veteran Affairs to stop publicizing
health benefits still available for veterans and their families.
The Assistant Secretary
of Defense for Health Affairs William Winkerwerder, issued a memo on May
30, 2003, called "Policy for the Operation Iraqi Freedom Depleted
Uranium Medical Management," concerning troops exposed to high levels
of DU. These would include soldiers "
on, in or near combat
vehicles at the time they were struck, who entered immediately after to
attempt rescue
" and "
personnel who routinely entered
DU-damaged vehicles or who fought fires involving DU munitions."
The memo concluded that the military needs "bio-assay" tests
for soldiers exposed to such conditions. Instead, the DoD has decided
such tests are unnecessary. With no scientific research to establish health
risks related to DU, it is up to each individual soldier to prove a link
between his/her exposure and its effects on his/her health.
The above-mentioned
conditions are "high risk" exposure, but are not the only risks
associated with the use of DU. It's interesting to note that doctors from
Italy and Germany who have treated civilians and military personnel in
Serbia and Kosovo have identified specific syndromes which correspond
with different conditions of DU exposure, while the Pentagon continues
to insist it is not a significant health concern.
DU is so radioactive,
it has caused radiation burns and skin cancer in areas adjacent to where
soldiers carry their ammo; on their hips, where the ammo is carried on
their belts, and even on their hands, from handling it. Children who gather
spent DU shells also experience radiation burns on their hands.
As mentioned above,
DU bullets easily penetrate conventional armor. To prevent this, the U.S.
military no armors its tanks with DU. Imagine the result of a DU-on-DU-
impact: a cloud of burning, radioactive gas, but the projectile doesn't
penetrate through the armor. The fire, however, must be quickly suppressed
or the tank crew will suffocate, or cook. And the tank and surrounding
area get a double dose of DU dust.
If DU can damage
soldiers who just carry it, what are the health effects of being encased
in it? The DoD doesn't want to know.
Such environmental
exposure causes lymphoma, leukemia, skin cancer and radiation burns.
Long after the shooting
is over, there remains the fine, radioactive dust. Inhalation of this
dust causes liver, kidney and lung damage, memory loss, headaches, fever
and low blood pressure. Those unfortunate enough to have their skin penetrated
by DU schrapnel experience internal tumors and cancers, often affecting
bone marrow and internal organs.
That's a fairly large
list of ailments associated with DU exposure. Remember reports of soldiers
from the Gulf War suffering "Gulf War Syndrome"? almost 100
percent of the symptoms described by these vets are caused by DU. You
don't hear much talk about Gulf War Syndrome anymore, do you?
This can mostly be
explained by the heavy influence of energy interests within the Bush junta,
almost all of whom have financial ties to energy corporations. These corporations
own oil wells and refineries, coal mines - and nuclear power plants. They
need to find some way to get rid of radioactive waste materials. And,
why not turn a profit while they're at it?
So, they came up
with ways to make their hazardous waste marketable. And they are expanding
their product's applications. In addition to military uses, DU is currently
being used in hospital equipment, and governments are researching more
ways to "recycle" nuclear waste in consumer products.
Another application
they've found for DU is as ballast in jet airliners. What happens when
such an aircraft crashes? Like the 1992 EL-AL jet that crashed near Amsterdam?
If you don't' remember, this crash resulted in a "much greater than
normal" explosion and fire, according to media reports at the time
(see CADU News #3, www.cadu.org.uk/).
Let's not forget
- it's a small world, after all. Last summer, dust storm in China raged
so severely, the dust was carried high into the atmosphere, where wind
currents blew it over the Artic Circle, eventually to fall to land again
across Canada, and into the U.S., as far south as Colorado. It's not unreasonable
to think that at least some of that dust had previously been blown across
the deserts of Iraq, Iran and Afghanistan, into China. This is not an
environmental problem isolated in one, distant part of the world - it's
something everyone on Earth will have to contend with. For 4.5 billion
years.
Misinformation
A journalist I overheard on the radio related how U.S. corporations no
longer needed to lobby the government. They are the government. So, instead
of investigations into schemes and misdeeds by energy corporations, we
get cover-ups, propaganda and misinformation. What have been the consequences
of the California energy swindle of 2001, for example?
Despite UN resolutions
condemning the use of DU munitions as "weapons of indiscriminate
destruction," the U.S. military insists on developing further applications
for these heinous weapons. And there is no end to how far they'll go to
suppress information about the health effects of DU. We certainly aren't
getting any such information from the corporate media.
Instead, the media
jumped all over one of the sexist stories of Bush's war of conquest: the
search for Dr. Huda S. Ammash. What an intriguing story it was, too. Women
are, naturally, one of the spoils of war to be won by the invading armies.
And here was a feisty one: a beautiful, exotically dark, sultry scientist
who was "in hiding" as one of Saddam Hussein's inner circle
- the brains behind his program to develop weapons of mass destruction,
according to the Bush junta. In the Pentagon's dead of cards featuring
wanted Iraqis, Dr. Ammash was the five of hearts.
Prior to the conquest,
she had quite a different reputation. As an environmental biologist and
professor, she was a respected enough scholar to be named Dean of Baghdad
University. The UN's Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission
(UNMOVIC) did not question Dr. Ammash while searching for weapons of mass
destruction, s they couldn't find any connection between her and such
programs.
Yet, still on May
5, 2003, she was detained for questioning by the Bush occupation forces.
Why? Who knows?
It might have something
to do with her real area of expertise. Dr. Ammash is the author of "Toxic
Pollution, the Gulf War and Sanctions," a research paper which examines
the lingering effects of the Gulf War, 12 years of sanctions and sporadic
bombing by British and U.S. warplanes (Iraq Under Siege, South End Press,
2002). She has also authored "Impact of Gulf war Pollution in the
Spread of Infectious Diseases in Iraq" (Soli Al-Mondo, Rome, 1999),
and "Electromagnetic, Chemical and Microbial Pollution from War and
Embargo and Its Impact on the Environment and Health" (Journal of
Academy of Science, Baghdad, 1997). Dr. Ammash is very likely the leading
expert on the effects of DU walking the earth. Assuming, that is, she
is still alive.
Sources
Websites:
Campaign Against Depleted Uranium www.cadu.org.uk/
Thomas Paine www.tompaine.com
Periodicals
"Radioactive Waste is Good for the Economy," The Rearguard,
Portland State University, Portland, Oregon, Jan. 23, 2003.
"DU-Lally,"
Schews, Brighton, UK, May, 23, 2003.
"Operation Iraqi
Freedom Pop Quiz," Portland Alliance, Portland, Oregon, July 2003.
Some information
overheard on radio stations KBOO and KOPB, Portland, Oregon.
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