Impact of DU munitions
Akira Tashiro
 
The Persian Gulf War
On August 2, 1990, Iraq invaded and conquered neighboring Kuwait, triggering the Gulf War.
     Iraq's leader, Saddam Hussein, insists that Kuwait, one of the world's major oil producing countries, is actually Iraqi territory.  Taking the move as a grab for oil fields and a more dominant role among the Arab states, the US and other Western nations reacted ferociously.  US President Bush, obtaining assent from the former Soviet Union and China, created a multinational force of troops from 28 nations endorsed by the UN and led by the US, Air attacks began on January 17, 1991, the ground war on February 24.
     With an overwhelming show of power, the multinational force freed Kuwait on the 26th.  The fighting ended on the 28th.  On March 3, Iraq accepted and signed a cease-fire designed by the UN Security Council.  That cease-fire agreement prohibited Iraq from researching, developing, or possessing nuclear weapons, and required it to accept a survey team from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
 
Impact of DU munitions
Of the 696,000 American soldiers who participated in the Gulf War, about 436,000 entered areas contaminated by DU shells.  Dan Fahey (31;photo) is a member of the Military Toxicity Project, a civilian watchdog group investigating the environmental and health impacts of the use and dismantling of US weapons.  After studying material obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, Fahey announced in March 1998 that, "About 400,000 soldiers may have been exposed to depleted uranium."
     The US Defense Department (Pentagon) attacked this estimate, claiming that his figures were utterly groundless.  About eight months later, under pressure from the National Gulf War resource Center (NGWRC: Washington, DC) created by Gulf War veterans, their families and supporters, the Pentagon published a map of the areas in which DU shells were used.  At that point, they admitted that about 436,000 ground soldiers had entered areas where DU munitions were used in Kuwait and Iraq.
     The hazards of DU were known before the Gulf War.  A military report in 1974 evaluating the medical and environmental effects of depleted uranium noted. "In combat situations involving the widespread  use of DU munitions, the potential for inhalation, ingestion, or implantation of DU compounds may be locally significant."
     Another report issued in July 1990 by the Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC), a company under contract to the military, identified the hazards even more clearly.  Because depleted uranium is a "a low-level alpha radiation emitter,"  It could be "linked to cancer when exposures are internal." It further warned, "Aerosol DU exposures to soldiers on the battlefield could be significant, with potential radiological and toxicological effects."
     Thus, the Pentagon knew the dangers of DU well in advance, yet did nothing to inform or educate its soldiers about that danger and took no protective measures.
     In 1993, a report compiled by the General Accounting Office (GAO) stated.  "The Army was not adequately prepared to deal with depleted uranium contamination."
     The reason given would be hard to defend to those who became casualties of this decision. "Army officials believe that DU protective methods can be ignored during battle and other life-threatening situations because DU-related health risks are greatly outweighed by the risks of combat."
     Long after the war, this attitude is costing thousands of young men and women in their twenties and thirties their health, and even their lives.
 
Notes:
 
Waianae is the place for people that have chronic illnesses.  Tonight I heard the Mayor and Debbie Kim talk about the Compact Agreement of Micronesians that were in need of funding to take care of their chronic illnesses due to the military contaminations of their islands.  We have many veterans living in Waianae with chronic illnesses.  Add the already isotopes in Waianae, we are doomed should the Akaka Bill pass. 

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  • Sorry guys I messed up there was a second page.

    Other Factors
    DU munitions were not the only source of health problems that emerged after the Gulf War. Many soldiers were given medicines never approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). They were exposed to intense smoke pollution from oil field fires, post-war destruction of Iraqi chemical weapons storehouses, and various toxic substances released during the war. Thus, numerous factors may be involved.
    Among the medicines the soldiers took under orders from their officers was an antidote to biological weapons called pyrisdostigmine bromide (PB). They also received a vaccine against botulinum and a drug to protect against anthrax. According to an investigation by the NGWRC, 250,000 troops took PB, 8,000 received botulinum vaccinations, and 150,000 took the anthrax medicine.
    A total of 696,000 American soldiers took part in the Gulf War from August 2, 1990, when Iraq invaded Kuwait, until July 31, 1991, when the last of the soldiers came home after shipping home American tanks destroyed by friendly DU fire. Of these 579,000 had left the military and 117,000 remained enlisted as of July 1999.
  • I am listening to Debbi Kim talk on 'homeless' and too have the Akaka Bill in view and mind. Will give it deep thinking as I do my work and concern. My concern and first and formost is the isotopes that can cause and wreck our entire island. Givent he difficulty of the problem, I believe and feel that Akira is the best source in confronting the problem of polluting our islands with dangerous toxins--military usage of our island.

    As for the sex pervert it's a community problem and from what I have come to know the Na Kanaka community have always been in denial that it had a problem.
    • Tell as all, Kaohi,
      What is so different from the Na Kanaka Community that you are a member of compared to the all other communites of the World? Can it be that you Kaohi are a shame to be of the Na Kanaka Community? That you have Talked Down on the Na Kanaka Kane Community in the past. I have never heard of anyone, including all the Haoles that I know TALK DOWN on the Na Kanaka Community as you, Kaohi. You remind me of the Blacks prior to the 1960's who TALKED DOWN on their people for being Black.
      Long Live The Hawaiian Kingdom, o Pomai
  • People need to realize that what has happened in Micronesia is happening in Hawai'i Nei. Are we really ready to give up our islands and relocate to some other country?

    Where is the outrage?

    Tane
    • So was Hitler Outraged. What good did that do, Tane? Hitler turned his Outraged into Hate.
      ALOHA, o Pomai
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