Discounted Casualties
Part I On the Wrong Side of a Superpower
A Delayed Casualty
Eight Years of Pain Before Suicide
"I've only recently begun to recover my peace of mind.  But at night..."Speaking to me in a room at the bank where she works.  Gina Whitcomb (51) gazed at a picture of her second son, Jason, whom she lost in September 1999.
     We were in Oklahoma City, the capital of Oklahoma.  The bank where Gina works is located in the middle of this city of roughly 600,000.
     "Fresh out of high school, Jason left home to enlist in the army on August 6, 1990.  I could never have guessed that within a year my 17-year-old son would be unable to walk without crutches."
Drastic Physical Changes in a Few Months
Assigned to an airborne unit, he went to Saudi Arabia in January 1991.  Gina and her company-employee husband Jim (55) saw their son again in early April, when he took home leave. "Even then, he was complaining about headache and joint pain, but he didn't look any different." Gina recalled.
     When Gina and her husband visited Jason at his North Carolina base in mid-July, they couldn't believe their eyes.  Formerly a muscular 175 pounds (about 79kg), his six-foot (183cm) body was wasted.  He walked gingerly, as if protecting his legs.  The change in a little over three months was dramatic. Over time, his symptoms-hip and leg pain, gastrointestinal disorder, acute headache-progressively worsened.  In April 1992, he was discharged before his four-year term of services was up.
     "At the time we had no idea what the reason was.  We didn't hear the term 'depleted uranium' until much later."  According to Gina, Jason's unit's main task was to destroy the munitions warehouses that the Iraqi army had erected in the desert.  They entered contaminated zones scattered with Iraqi tanks and trucks destroyed by DU bullets.  They were forced to take pyridostigmine (PB), and insufficiently tested antidote to chemical weapons.
"It's stress."
"He first went to the local veterans' hospital in May, a month after discharge.  The doctor pronounced, 'He shouldn't have this sort of serious illness at his age,' and started him in psychological therapy. Stress stress, that's all they said then."
     Psychological therapy failed to help Jason.  In 1994 he began using a wheelchair.  He also showed extreme chemical sensitivity.  He began avoiding people.  That year, he married Shawn (26), whom he had known since high school.  The couple moved to a wildlife reserve in the adjoining state of Arkansas.
     "The scenery was beautiful, the air was clean, and he really enjoyed volunteer activities."  He also participated in blood testing and other research programs around the country, hoping to learn something about his illness.
Suddenly, at Age 26
Jason, who had been so active, suddenly died from a gunshot wound on September 24, 1999.  He was 26 years old.
     "He didn't leave a suicide note, so it's possible that it was an accident. But the inquest called it a suicide."  The Whitcombs are convinced that if Jason committed suicide, it was because after eight years of headache, arthritis, stomach pain, and other ailments, their son's condition had become unbearable. After his death, they sent tissue from most of his organs to research organizations.
     "It's too late for Jason and 10,000 other veterans of the Gulf War, but if it will help identify the cause..."
     If the cause is found, maybe a treatment method will be next.  But until that happens, the number of "delayed casualties" like Jason can only increase.
 
On Jan 13, 2010 Plaintiffs battled with NRC and AEC over the military receiving a License to Posses and use in live fire at Makua Waianae and Pohakuloa on Big Island.

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  • Amelia,

    At the time I was in Hilo my sister shared with me about her son-in-law that has similar symtons from Iraq war. How close to home can this problem be. But, here is the sadness about it I really didn't think twice until I read this piece I just posted. How many more victims in Hawaii will this DU claim.

    I have a girl friend that lost her son through cancer and he was living right down the street from my house. A downwinder for sure. I don't know how to stop the NRC and would hate to spend years more to stop the bombing and the crazy Akaka Bill from it's only intent which is genocide.
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