Army Downplays Depleted Uranium Risk on Hawaiian Island

Radiation levels safe at Pohakuloa, Army says

by William Cole

The Army said yesterday that the results of a depleted uranium study at Pohakuloa Training Area on the Big Island show radiological doses "well within limits" considered safe by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

The Army studied the potential health risk posed by residual DU in Pohakuloa areas where past and current weapons firing has taken place.

Depleted uranium, a weak radioactive heavy metal, was used in aiming rounds for the Davy Crockett, a 1960s nuclear device intended as a last-ditch weapon against masses of Soviet soldiers in the event of war.

Jim Albertini with the Malu Aina Center for Nonviolent Education & Action said yesterday that the Army was "stonewalling community involvement in seeking the truth about DU radiation contamination at Pohakuloa."

Albertini said the Army has made unreliable safety claims based on questionable assumptions and scientific methodology and no peer-reviewed studies.

"The bottom line is this," Albertini said. "The Army does not want to risk having to shut down Pohakuloa if it is determined that the presence of DU and other military toxins pose a threat to the health and safety of the troops who train there and residents and visitors of Hawaii island."

The Pohakuloa study is the second determination by the Army that DU poses no health threat.

The Army discovered DU spotting rounds at a Schofield Barracks firing range in 2005. Even though the Army said in 2008 that there was no danger, officials said yesterday that the DU at Schofield is being removed because Stryker armored vehicles and soldiers will be training at the Schofield site.

The DU at Pohakuloa will remain in place at the impact site because "one, we're not finding a lot, and two, there are too many hazards" to its removal, including jagged lava and unexploded ordnance, said Greg Komp, an Army radiation safety officer from the Pentagon.

A shipping list showed that at least 714 of the spotting rounds, containing about 298 pounds of depleted uranium, were sent to Hawaii by 1962, but it is "highly probable" that more rounds were fired here, the Army said.

Cory Harden, who lives near Hilo, said training requirements called for 2,000 or more of the spotting rounds to be fired at Pohakuloa, but the Army said the number used at Schofield and on the Big Island is unclear.

Fifteen light M28 Davy Crocketts and seven heavy M29 versions were allocated to the Army in Hawaii.

The M101 spotting rounds were about 8 inches long and contained about 6.7 ounces of DU alloy. The firing device was attached to a recoilless rifle that could launch a 76-pound nuclear warhead. Only dummy warheads were used in training in Hawaii.

The warhead could be fired more than a mile but likely would have irradiated the soldiers using it.

The spotting rounds are believed to have been fired mainly at Schofield and Pohakuloa, but the Army said they also may have been used at Makua Military Reservation.

DU was found within the boundary of the Pohakuloa impact area in October 2006.

Albertini, who lives on the Big Island, is concerned that DU particles can be ingested from the soil or inhaled as airborne dust and cause adverse health effects.

According to the World Health Organization, "very large amounts of dust" would have to be inhaled for there to be an additional risk of lung cancer.

Harden complained that a news conference at Pohakuloa yesterday was not open to the public. The Army has been invited to attend a public forum to answer questions about DU, and "they just keep putting us off," she said.

Russell Takata, program manager for the state Health Department's Noise, Radiation and Indoor Air Quality Branch, downplayed the danger of DU at the Big Island military training range.

"It's a very minimal risk," he said.

The health study will be available at the website www.garrison.hawaii.army.mil/du, the Army said.

 

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  • Amelia excellent thanks for writing
  • I simply don't know how to penetrate the minds of Oahu as to the dangers of DU and it's very existence on Oahu.

    The academic and environmentalist seem to think that this is not true and made note of it in public meetings for the past 10 years.

    "The spotting rounds are believed to have been fired mainly at Schofield and Pohakuloa, but the Army said they also may have been used at Makua Military Reservation." cole
    • hi Kaohi,

      watch?v=1gbBZe478xEhttp:


      The Military LIES............

      watch?v=U9TWT87NsMUhttp:


      watch?v=c0VO1TVvctohttp:


      watch?v=SnO55tPu32Yhttp:


      Crimes Against Humanity, etc.

      aloha.

      watch?v=EYI7JXGqd0o&feature=relatedhttp:


      WARS BASED ON LIES, War Activities Cannot, Must Not Continue on Neutral, Non Violent, Friendly Nations which is owned by the Royal Families, and aboriginal Hawaiians/kanaka maoli, et. als.

      Wicked ...........

      watch?v=yvstzQIUXUo&feature=relatedhttp:

  • Waianae has 51% native Hawaiian population. We have native Hawaiians not on any economic basic income, thus the poverty exist. Too many are poor and an easy mark for any venture to take advantage of--and that too exist. In reading"Struggle for the Land" by Ward Churchill he compares native people living close and far apart. This is an important concern for Waianae.

    Churchill compares native American and native Canadians. The native's that lives near uranium mines have not only "super-waste" problems, but extreme health issues. He states that natives living in a highly concentrated area such as reservations that are near uranium mines are worse off as oppose to those natives living apart.

    Waianae is a concentration of native Hawaiians and have been exposed to DU by the daily trucking companies that have brought these contaminants from military reservations on Oahu, and their war zones. I see the congenial birth defects not only on rising number charts, but come face to face with these infants and children each day.

    Sadly, I watched Trucking companies transfere DU contaminates into Waianae, one can almost predicte the early deaths. Although the DU nano particle once induced by mouth or nose, it supposedly be around seven years (time honored) before a person reaches it's final stage of death. I asserted that truckers would be the first to die. The next would be the old and infants.

    One's immune system plays a larger role in the 'time honored' period once a person induces DU into their body system. There is a possibility that a pregnant women can if she is healthy that has contacted the disease can have a healthy child because of the nature of the placenta, but their is no guarantee that she herself may not be too healthy, thus causing the child to have congenial birth defects. We should see occurrences of ill health in Waianae among the native Hawaiian population.

    I'm contending the same reasoning that author Churchill proposed it's densely held together native population in close proximity are sicker and most unhealthy as oppose tothose native peoples living far apart are a wide spread problem--even in Hawaii. What I find interesting is that those Canadian Indians that live far apart (not on reservations) have subsistence rights to live and hunt in their area. Because of this native practice they don't have the illnesses and earlier deaths as those that live in closeness on a reservation.

    Waianae has a likeness of an American Indian Resrvation.

    I assert because of the 50% bloodquantum set forth by the US Congress, native Hawaiians on DHHL are similar to the native Americans and are at risk to their Manifest Destiny as Tane would put it, thus, leaving us very vulnerable to military existence on DHHL lands and their usage of DU in their live training exercises.

    Two most important things that needs to be held in thought, concentration of native Hawaiian population living near dump sites with DU-- U-234, U-235, and U-238 in a single surface stockpile waste. And military installations on DHHL lands. These two situations are deathly to native Hawaiians and one should take note of this situation and understand why, I am asking for an exit plan for native Hawaiians.

    I make this assertion with great pain and sorrow.
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