Quietly, and under the radar for now, a movement is growing across the country that could blow up White House war planning and finish off the U.S. adventure in Iraq. That movement is state-by-state legislation to provide for testing of returning National Guard troops for signs of contamination by depleted uranium.
Depleted uranium poisoning of her dad, Gerard Matthew, in Iraq cost little Victoria Claudette three fingers on her right hand. |
Kicked off in Connecticut by a feisty Democratic state representative from New Haven named Patricia Dillon, a woman who was trained in epidemiology at Yale, the measure has copycats hard at work in some 14-20 other states. Rep. Dillon’s bill passed the state legislature in July unanimously, and goes into effect this October, about the time many Connecticut Guard troops will finally be coming home from Iraq. Louisiana, too, has already passed a similar law.
The military has been insisting that the 3,000 tons of DU munitions it has blown up in Iraq and the 1,000 tons more it has exploded and fired off in Afghanistan are safe for troops and for civilians. However, there is no real data to prove this because the Pentagon has vigorously resisted testing returning troops.
Only 270 troops have been tested so far – using a far-from-state-of-the-art test. The State Department and Pentagon have barred UN and other outside testers from looking into DU contamination in Iraq.
The official line, or obfuscation, is that uranium is only minimally radioactive. While this is true, it is chemically toxic in minute trace amounts, because uranium ions are actually attracted to bond with DNA, where they can wreak havoc with cells – especially the cells of developing fetuses.
Meanwhile, an early small test sample of nine returned New York State National Guard soldiers, financed by the New York Daily News, found four, or nearly half the sample, to be clearly DU contaminated, with the others showing obvious symptoms – headaches, renal and neurological problems etc.
If even a much smaller proportion than 44 percent of the tens of thousands of U.S. Guard troops who get tested in Connecticut, Louisiana and other states prove to be contaminated with uranium from U.S. weapons, more states are bound to establish similar testing laws. Beyond that, reservists and active duty troops and veterans, already anxious about the issue, are certain to start demanding the sophisticated tests.
Meanwhile, if DU tests start showing serious contamination of U.S. troops, how are Iraqis going to react? Already Iraqis are troubled by a dramatic, seven-fold rise in childhood cancers and birth defects, particularly in the South.
Unlike in the first Gulf War, when all 300 tons of DU used were fired off in the Kuwaiti and Iraqi desert, this time nearly 10 times as much DU has largely been exploded and burned in urban fighting, putting the dust right in the path of millions of civilians.
This bomb is ticking ...
Dave Lindorff (dlindorff@yahoo.com) is the author of “This Can’t Be Happening!” Learn more at www.thiscantbehappening.net.
source: http://www.sfbayview.com/110205/du110205.shtml 29jan2006
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