Newsletter
No. 124a - Serving the Vision of a Sustainable Vancouver Island
- Feb 2003
Depleted Uranium
It’s dirty, and it’s deadly.
When you coat a shell with it, it slices through armoured plating as
if it was cheese, turning tanks, buildings and bomb shelters into
exploding incinerators.
It causes cancer among people who breathe its dust, or touch it.
It causes horrible birth defects among the babies of pregnant women who
breathe it or touch it.
It causes a host of chronic ailments and sicknesses among returning troops.
It was used by the US army in Iraq, in Kosovo, and Afghanistan.
The United Nations wants a worldwide ban on it.
The US plans to use it again, in its war on Iraq.
What is it? It’s a waste product that arises during
the production of enriched uranium for nuclear weapons and reactors.
It’s called depleted uranium.
It has a radioactive half-life of 4.5 billion years. The Earth is 4.5
billion years old.
This means that the cities, battlefields, and locations where depleted
uranium is used will be radioactive and remain radioactive for the
next 4.5 billion years.
That’s as long as the Earth has existed.
That’s twice as long as the entire evolution of life on Earth.
Seventy times longer than the time since the dinosaurs became extinct.
Depleted uranium is extremely dense; that’s what
makes it capable of slicing into heavily armoured vehicles. That’s
why the American military likes it.
In the Gulf War, in 1991, the US army fired off a million rounds of depleted
uranium, totalling 300 tons. In Baghdad, where they thought they
were attacking a secret bunker, they sliced into it with depleted
uranium and incinerated 800 women and children who were hiding in
a shelter. Along the “highway of death”, outside Basra, in southern
Iraq, they incinerated every tank, every soldier.
Along that road, the shell-holes in the blown-up tanks are 1000 times
more radioactive than the background. The desert near the vehicles
is 100 times more radioactive.
70% of the uranium burns on impact, turning into as a fine ceramic dust
of depleted uranium oxide particles which gets blown on the wind,
and washed into the groundwater. In the Basra region, there has
been a 100-fold increase in uranium in the groundwater.
And then there’s the birth defects.
Children born with fingers missing.
Children born with legs missing.
Children born with parts of their face missing.
Children born with their eyes missing.
Children born with grossly deformed skulls.
Children born with enormous distended bellies.
Children born with no hands.
Children born with no genitals.
Children born with no skin over their bellies.
Children born with open holes in their backs.
Children born whose bodies are beyond words, in their pitiful awfulness.
There has been a 10-fold increase in such birth defects in the Basra
region since 1988. I have seen the photos of these children. You
can see them for yourself at
http://www.web-light.nl/VISIE/extremedeformities.html.
But be warned – these photos are not for the squeamish, and may
give some people nightmares. They are also at http://www.ngwrc.org/Dulink/du_link.htm
There has also been a 17-fold increase in cancer in southern Iraq since
1988, and a sudden increase in childhood leukemia.
That was Iraq. Then there was Afghanistan.
The data is still sketchy, but tests on residents in Jalalabad have found
a level of uranium in the urine of residents that is 400% to 2000%
higher than normal. The contamination is also present in Kabul.
A scientific team from the Uranium Medical Research Centre that went
to Kabul in September 2002 found that people who had been exposed
to debris from the US/British precision bombing were reporting pains
in their joints, back and kidney pain, muscle weakness, memory problems,
confusion, and disorientation. Members of the team began to complain
of the same symptoms. They found that 25% of new-born infants were
suffering from congenital and post-natal health problems that appeared
to be associated with uranium contamination.
So what happened to the US and British troops who were exposed to the
same dust?
It’s hard to sort out, because the troops who served in the Gulf were
exposed to a cocktail of injections and chemical and biological
hazards, as well as depleted uranium. But the symptoms are telling.
There were 700,000 US troops who served in the Gulf War in 1991.
50% were black or Latino. Many were women.
260,000 have applied for medical benefits.
159,000 have been awarded disability allowances.
Many are probably on low incomes, who cannot afford expensive medical
insurance.
They call it Gulf War Syndrome; nobody in the military wants to talk
about it. The returning troops are suffering from reactive airway
disease; neurological damage; cataracts; kidney problems; lymphoma;
skin and organ cancer; neuropsychological problems; uranium in their
semen; sexual dysfunction; and birth defects in their offspring.
Birth defects are turning up four times more often in the children
of those who served in the Gulf than normal. (see www.chronicillnet.org/online/lifemag.html)
That was Afghanistan. Now a new war on Iraq looms.
A new round of death.
A new nightmare.
Unless we stand together, work together, pray together, and call out
together to stop it, and to outlaw depleted uranium forever, as
the United Nations has recommended.
Four and a half billion years.
Sources:
Afghanistan: The Nuclear Nightmare Starts: www.truthout.org/docs_02/011103E.dpltd.urnim.htm
Born Soldiers: Birth Defects from Depleted Uranium in the Gulf? http://www.chronicillnet.org/online/lifemag.html
International Action Center’s Depleted Uranium Education Project: http://www.iacenter.org
Iraqi cancers, birth defects blamed on U.S. depleted uranium. Seattle Post Intelligencer: http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/iraq2002/95178_du12.shtml
National Gulf War Resource Center: http://www.ngwrc.org/Dulink/du_link.htm
Written
and compiled by Guy Dauncey, Victoria, B.C., Canada
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