THE WEAPONS OF WAR ARE QUIETLY CHANGING. The
U.S. military's deadliest ammunition is now packed with depleted uranium --
radioactive waste left over from nuclear bombs and reactors. These so-called
"hot rounds" penetrate armored tanks like a needle pierces burlap,
vaporizing steel in hell-fires of 5,000 degrees Celsius. Unlike tungsten, the
armor-piercing metal used since World War II that "mushrooms" when it
hits a target, depleted uranium actually sharpens itself like a pencil as it
bores into tanks. Flaming radioactive particles shear off in every direction on
impact, igniting fuel tanks and whatever explosives the target might be
carrying. With virtually no public oversight, radioactive weapons have replaced
conventional weapons as the cornerstone of American military might. Whenever
U.S. troops go to war, depleted uranium supplies the shock and awe.
In the annals of warfare, there has been
nothing like DU, as it is often shorthanded. In both Iraq wars, and in
Afghanistan, the U.S. military used depleted uranium to inflict enormous harm
on the enemy while incurring almost none itself. During the first Gulf War, in
1991, "tank-killing" DU rounds brought Saddam Hussein's Republican
Guard to its knees in only four days. Military experts estimate that at least
10,000 Iraqis were killed, compared with 147 Americans. In the corridors of the
Pentagon, DU munitions quickly earned the nickname "silver bullet",
and the Defense Department turned its attention to creating even faster, more
powerful weapons systems fueled by depleted uranium. "We want to be able
to strike the target from farther away than we can be hit back, and we want the
target to be destroyed when we shoot at it," Col. James Naughton told
reporters at a Pentagon briefing last March. "We don't want to see rounds
bouncing off. We don't want to fight even. We want to be ahead. And DU gives us
that advantage."
Five days after the briefing, U.S. forces launched the second war on Iraq. This
time around, however, DU projectiles were exploded not only in uninhabited
deserts but in urban centers such as Baghdad -- a city the size of Detroit.
Stabilized in steel casings called "sabots", the shells were fired
from airships, gunships, Abrams tanks and Bradley troop carriers, striking
targets 1.5 miles away in a fraction of a second. The weapons contained traces
of plutonium and americium, which are far more radioactive than depleted
uranium.
The Pentagon insists that the weapons pose no threat to U.S. soldiers or to
non-combatants. "DU is not any more dangerous than dirt," declares
Naughton, who recently retired after years as director of Army munitions. But a
broad consortium of scientists, environmentalists, and human-rights activists
-- as well as thousands of U.S. soldiers who served in the Gulf in 1991 -- cite
mounting evidence that depleted uranium will cause death and suffering among
civilians and soldiers alike long after the war's end. DU projectiles spew
clouds of microscopic dust particles into the atmosphere when they collide with
their targets. These particles, lofted far from the battlefield on the wind,
will emit low-level radiation for 4.5 billion years -- the age of the solar
system itself. Some doctors fear that long-term exposure to such radiation
could eventually prove as deadly as a blast from a nuclear bomb -- causing lung
and bone cancer, leukemia, and lymphoma (a cancer of the immune system known in
medical circles as the "white death").
"This is a war crime beyond comprehension," says Helen
Caldicott, a pediatrician who has campaigned against nuclear weapons for
years. "This is creating radioactive battlefields for the end of
time."
Others are more measured but equally concerned. "There are medical nuances
I don't fully grasp," says Chris Hellman, a senior analyst at the Center
for Arms Control and Non-proliferation, in Washington, D.C.. "But if
you're going to be fighting wars for the goal of winning hearts and minds and
bringing democracy and the altruistic things we associate with the campaigns in
Afghanistan and Iraq, the last thing you want to be doing is poisoning the
people you're trying to help."
The percussion of the first shell pulverized a glass rosary inside the
vehicle and knocked the crew unconscious. Jerry Wheat remembers popping the
hatch, climbing out and pulling off his burning Kevlar vest. "My whole
body was pretty much smoking." That's when the second round struck.
"I could feel myself getting hit with shrapnel in the back of the head and
back."
Wheat, a divorced father of two who works for the post office in Las Lunas, New
Mexico, was twenty-three when he found himself halfway around the world in the
Iraqi desert at the center of a fierce tank battle in 1991. A sandstorm was
raging. He was driving a four-man Bradley fighting vehicle, on which one of his
crew-mates had painted Garfield the cat saying, "Fuck Iraq." In
photos of the vehicle, two jagged holes are visible at the top. That's where
the Bradley was struck by "friendly fire" from an Abrams tank as
Wheat steered toward the center of the battle and rescued members of another
American tank crew.
A day later, Army medics removed pieces of shrapnel from Wheat's body as he lay
on the back of a truck. Curiously, the wounds hardly bled, though second- and
third-degree burns marked the entry points. "They were worried about a
chest wound, but the shrapnel was so hot when it went in, it sort of
cauterized, and I wasn't bleeding that bad." His sergeant major stopped by
to tell him he had been hit by an Iraqi tank. "When we asked if we were
hit by friendly fire, they said no, so I ate, slept, and lived off my vehicle
for the next four days."
Wheat continued to drive the Bradley, though he noted a "dusty
residue" coated it inside and out. "It was pretty nasty. Imagine a
huge fireball going off inside your car - that's pretty much what the inside of
my vehicle was like." He and his buddies also smoked eight cartons of
cigarettes that had been stashed in the Bradley when it was hit. "You had
these little pieces of metal falling out, and you would hold your fingers over
the holes as you smoked them. They were all coated with DU. No one had ever
even mentioned DU except to say that we were firing it. We were told not to
worry. They said, 'It won't hurt you. It's depleted.' It was on your hands,
your food. We didn't even think about it. We were just happy to be alive."
MILITARY SCIENTISTS BECAME intrigued by
depleted uranium in the 1940s, at the very advent of the nuclear age. But it
wasn't until the 1960s that American weapons designers began inventing ways to
use DU in battle. Depleted uranium is what remains after "enriched"
uranium, a crucial component in nuclear bombs and reactors, is processed from
uranium ore. Although its radioactive properties have diminished by forty
percent, it's hardly safe. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission has strict rules
pertaining to the handling and transporting of DU in this country -- rules that
don't apply to the military during battle.
Depleted uranium has long been used as ballast in military and commercial
planes, but the introduction of DU onto the battlefield began modestly, without
fanfare. According to a Pentagon official, U.S. troops carried DU
"penetrators" into both Grenada and Panama. "It wouldn't have
been very much, because there wasn't much to shoot at," says Naughton.
"The first large-scale use was Desert Storm."
By its own estimates, the military exploded as many as 320 tons of DU in
sabot-encased projectiles in the deserts of Iraq and Kuwait. Gunners shot DU
rounds from the cannons of Abrams tanks or from airships such as the A-10
"Warthog". Depleted uranium is the heaviest of metals, which results
in its superior penetrating abilities; it is also highly pyrophoric, bursting
into flames at temperatures of 170 degrees Celsius. To imagine the carnage, one
need only recall Iraq's infamous "Highway of Death", a desert road
between Basra and Kuwait's border that remains strewn with radioactive trucks,
cars, and tanks. U.S. soldiers found bodies inside those vehicles that were
burned in such astonishing ways that they dubbed the remains "crispy
critters".
Iraqi civilians were also exposed to low-level radiation from DU -- and
preliminary evidence indicates that the consequences have been devastating.
Iraqi doctors, many of them specialists trained at eminent Western
institutions, such as Sloan-Kettering in New York or Great Ormond Street
Hospital in London, report twelve-fold increases in Iraqi cancer rates since
the first Gulf War, as well as sharp rises in birth defects in southern Iraq,
where much 0f the fighting took place. According to Iraqi doctors, some infants
there emerged from the womb with one eye, or no brain, or without limbs. They
add that in the dozen years since the conflict, rates of childhood cancer
linked to radiation exposure -- especially leukemia and lymphoma -- have jumped
four-fold.
As for U.S. troops, the Pentagon says that only 900 of the 700,000 soldiers
deployed during the war were exposed to DU, when they were fired upon or went
into destroyed tanks to rescue others. But scientists and military
whistle-blowers who have studied the campaign say the number of soldiers
exposed to DU dust and debris is closer to 300,000. Soon after the fighting
stopped, soldiers who worked on supply lines at the rear were loaded on buses
and taken to the battlefields so they could be photographed with their comrades
on burned-out Iraqi tanks. No one warned them to avoid the sticky black soot
coating the vehicles, which was radioactive.
Within months of the war's end, thousands of Gulf War veterans began suffering
from odd, nameless maladies, including hair loss, bleeding gums, memory loss,
joint pain, incontinence. and disabling fatigue. In 1992, Sen. Ron Wyden
(D-Ore.) asked the General Accounting Office, an independent research arm of
Congress, to study American tanks that had been hit by DU rounds during the
war. GAO investigators learned that most soldiers had never been informed by
their superiors about the hazards of DU. The GAO's findings were summarized in
the title of its report issued a year later: "Army Not Adequately Prepared
to Deal with Depleted Uranium Contamination".
Military and civilian doctors agree that the host of ailments now known as Gulf
War Syndrome were probably caused by a multitude of physical insults:
vaccinations, pesticides, toxic solvents, and oil fires (which deposited a film
in the nostrils so thick that soldiers relied on Popsicle sticks to remove it).
But many of the diseases -- including increased rates of lymphoma -- are
consistent with either radiation sickness or the toxicological effects of
exposure to depleted uranium.
It will take years, if not decades, to determine how much of a role DU played
in the illnesses, but the sheer magnitude of the problem could make the
struggle over Agent Orange, the cancer-inducing chemical used to defoliate
jungles during the Vietnam War, look like an encounter with Dr. Phil. More than
150,000 veterans of the first Gulf War are currently on medical disability, and
another 50,000 have applied for benefits -- nearly one-third of the entire
fighting force. By comparison, nine percent of veterans from World War II and
the Vietnam War applied for similar compensation.
"About two weeks after I was wounded,
I was sent back to Germany. There was a lot of shrapnel -- my sleeping bag had
eighty-two holes in it. All my gear was filled with holes. I brought it all
into the house. I had a son who was three months old at the time. Within twelve
hours, I was taking my baby to the hospital for respiratory problems. They kept
him there for three days.
"I left Germany in December of 1991. I started having really bad abdominal
cramps. I couldn't hold my food down. I was discharged, so I had no health
insurance. Then, my wife miscarried, and no one knew why.
"In March, my dad calls me and says, 'Hey, did you know you were hit with
depleted uranium?' I had given my dad a bunch of the shrapnel. I could still
squeeze pieces out of my body. I had another piece up in my head. My dad was an
industrial-hygiene technician for the Los Alamos labs. So he decided to put a
Geiger counter to the shrapnel. It was radioactive -- the highest possible
reading you can get. To this day, it's still in my system, and it's not losing
any of its radioactivity."
THE PENTAGON NEXT USED DU weapons in the Balkans in 1994 and 1995. Just as
there is a disease called Gulf War Syndrome in this country, there is a
corollary in Europe: Balkans Syndrome. Four years later, NATO pilots fired DU
ammo at Serbian tanks in Kosovo, leaving thirteen tons of DU on the ground,
according to the Pentagon. When the United Nations recently measured radiation
at eleven sites in Kosovo where NATO fired DU rounds, eight were found to still
be contaminated.
Europeans are more acquainted with the DU controversy than Americans, in large
part because a handful of Italian soldiers, most of whom were sent to
Yugoslavia as peacekeepers when the Balkans conflict ended, developed leukemia.
When seven of the Italians died, and the deaths of at least nine other Balkan
veterans were linked in news reports to DU exposure, anti-DU fervor rapidly
swept across Europe.
In Geneva, the Human Rights Tribunal declared DU projectiles weapons of mass
destruction. The United Nations has made its position on depleted uranium
abundantly clear: Use of such weapons is illegal, because they continue to act
after the war ends, they unduly damage the environment, and they are inhumane.
Next month, the first international conference on eliminating such weapons will
convene in Germany; a country that outlaws the use of DU munitions.
"Depleted uranium weapons are radioactive weapons, even if they are not by
definition nuclear weapons," says Victor Sidel, co-president of
International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War and an expert in
weapons of mass destruction. "And because they are radioactive, their use
is contrary to international law."
But the Bush administration remains
un-swayed by international opinion. The U.S. used DU weapons in Afghanistan,
though the Pentagon will not say how much or where. In Iraq, the A-10
"Warthog", the Apache helicopter, the MI Abrams tank, and the Bradley
fighting vehicle were all equipped with DU. The Pentagon won't reveal how much
depleted uranium it deployed in Iraq. "I can't reasonably guess,"
says the Army's Naughton. "Even if I gave you a guess, it would be
classified." Nor will he say how much DU is left over from the first Gulf
War. "It's not as if there's a massive pile of DU where we could say,
'Hah, here it is,' and clean it up."
Dan Fahey, a former Navy officer deployed in the Gulf in 1991, has reviewed the
latest military assessments. He estimates that as many as 176 tons of DU were
used in the second war on Iraq, roughly one-third to one-half the amount used
in the first. In May, the Christian
Science Monitor's Scott Peterson, who was touring battle sites
with a Geiger counter, reported that Baghdad and other cities were littered
with DU ordnance, all of which was producing extremely high levels of
radiation.
But the Bush administration flatly rejects Iraqi reports that lingering
radiation from the first Gulf War is causing lymphoma and leukemia among
civilians. A month before DU-plated American tanks began their steady crawl
into Baghdad, the White House issued a report called "Apparatus of Lies:
Saddam's Disinformation and Propaganda". The report implies that Iraq's
"baby funerals", blocks-long processions of marchers carrying
infants' coffins, were staged by Saddam to ward off DU attacks. "Uranium
is a name that has frightening associations in the mind of the average person,
which makes the lie relatively easy to sell," the report states.
Naughton is equally dismissive. "If you go to a cancer ward, you should
expect to find cancer patients," he says. "If you go to a casino, you
should expect to find gambling going on. The question that needs to be asked is
whether the occurrence of cancer in Iraq is higher than places where there's
been no DU. Aside from the fact that we're bombing the crap out of Iraq, and
did so twelve years ago, what is the general state of the environment over
there? I would look in the water. I'm pretty well convinced it's not DU."
Jim McDermott isn't so sure. The imposing, white-haired Democratic congressman
from Seattle, who is also a doctor and child psychiatrist, visited hospitals in
Iraq in September 2002. "I spent a good deal of time looking at the
increase in childhood leukemia, lymphoma, and malformations -- which are felt
by the doctors there to be directly related to the residue from the use of
depleted uranium," McDermott says. "These are serious malformations
-- without eyes, limbs. One obstetrician told me, 'The average Iraqi woman
giving birth no longer says, "Is it a boy or a girl?" She asks, 'Is
the baby normal?'" McDermott studied the records Iraqi doctors were
keeping that show a rise in birth defects after the war. "You can say,
'They made it all up.' That's one explanation," he says. "But if they
didn't make it all up, then there is something we made happen when we brought
that war there. It would be a tragedy for us to bring democracy to Iraq and
leave in our wake a horrendous cloud of nuclear waste."
"It
felt like someone was ripping out my insides. I was going to the hospital in
Albuquerque. They didn't know what was causing it. Back then, no one was
saying, 'Gulf War Syndrome.' I didn't have a place to live. I was sick. I had
just been put out of the military.
"Since I've been back, I've had joint pain, abdominal pain, headaches,
minor respiratory problems -- shortness of breath, my lungs make gurgling
sounds. I don't run. I walk everywhere. Last time a doctor asked me to blow
into a hose to check my lung power, I puked. I take methadone every day for the
joint pain. My foot goes numb on me. I get shooting pains in my legs. In 1993,
1 went from 220 pounds to 160 in three months for no reason. The VA just said,
'If you could figure out how you did it, you would be a rich man.'
"My left arm started hurting several years after the war. They did a
biopsy at the VA hospital in Baltimore, and said, 'It's not cancer, but we're
going to take it out of you anyway.' So in 1998, 1 had a tumor taken out of a
bone in my arm. When I went in to have it removed, I asked them to send it to a
hospital in Canada. But they got rid of it! They said they sent it out to one
of their military hospitals to be examined. I have no idea what they found, but
lately my right arm is feeling like my left arm.
"I'm in touch with a couple of my crew -- my gunner and my loader. My
gunner's still in active duty. He's had health problems, but he didn't want to
say anything or he would be kicked out of the military. The loader -- the same.
"I'm only thirty-six right now, and I'll be lucky if I make it another two
years before I can't work."
THE BUSH ADMINISTRATION HAS BEEN equally adamant in denying a link between
depleted uranium and the host of illnesses suffered by American troops. So far,
the Veterans Administration has agreed to study only ninety soldiers who were
exposed to depleted uranium. "There has been no cancer of bone or
lungs," Michael Kilpatrick, the military's top spokesman on Gulf War
Syndrome, told journalists last March. He added that the vets, twenty of whom
carry DU fragments in their bodies, have suffered "no medical consequences
of that depleted uranium exposure."
Kilpatrick failed to mention that one of the vets being studied had been
diagnosed with lymphoma, and that Jerry Wheat, who continues to report for
testing twice a year, had a bone tumor. He also neglected to mention that every
vet in the study continued to excrete depleted uranium in their urine nine
years after their exposure -- evidence that DU is present in their organs and
tissues.
The few independent studies that have been done on Gulf War veterans also
suggest a link between depleted uranium and cancer. Han Kang, an environmental
epidemiologist at the Department of Veterans Affairs who examined death
certificates of Gulf-War-era vets, discovered a thirty percent increase in
lymphoma. And Richard Clapp, an environmental epidemiologist at Boston
University, used state medical records to track cases of cancer among 30,000
vets in Massachusetts. The statistical likelihood of finding even a single case
of lymphoma among such a small sample is zero. So far, Clapp has found four.
Clapp warns it is too soon to draw conclusions from his research, noting that
it usually takes at least ten years for those exposed to radiation to develop
lymphoma. "That's especially true of other kinds of tumors such as lung
cancer and solid cancers," he says. "So we have to keep looking at
this."
The federal government, however, has supported almost no independent research
into the effects of DU exposure. "The government depends on its own
agencies for its information," says Rosalie Bertell, an expert in the
relationship between low-level radiation and cancer who has been turned down
for federal grants to study Gulf War vets. "Unless you say what the
Pentagon says they won't pay any attention to you."
Bertell and other scientists are looking into how the fireballs created by DU
explosions spew vast clouds of radioactive dust into the atmosphere. The
military insists that such "oxides" fall to the ground within fifty
meters of a target. But Asaf Durakovic, a retired Army colonel and former chief
of nuclear medicine at the VA hospital in Wilmington, Delaware, calls the
assertion "a mind-boggling admission of ignorance. The particles remain
permanently suspended in the atmosphere. And dust containing depleted uranium
has been detected several dozen miles from the point of impact." Twenty
years ago, he notes, a physicist in Schenectady, New York, detected depleted
uranium in his workplace, thirty-eight miles from a plant manufacturing DU
weapons.
Chris Busby, a British specialist in low-level radiation, conducted his own
field assessments in Iraq before the second Gulf War and measured radiation
more than 100 times normal near target sites. He concluded that oxide particles
are blown far afield by the wind. Such super-fine particles cannot be dislodged
from the lungs by coughing; some will make their way into internal organs and
bone, where they can irradiate nearby cells and eventually cause genetic
mutations that lead to cancer.
Indeed, there is now concern that the latest fighting produced another Gulf War
Syndrome. Two service members are dead, and at least sixteen others have been
placed on life support as the result of a mysterious aliment that is afflicting
U.S. soldiers in Iraq. The Army is investigating, but so far is unable to
explain the illness.
WHEN THE FIRST GULF WAR ended in 1991, the
military needed to bring home fifteen damaged tanks and nine troop transports
contaminated with depleted uranium. Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf asked Maj. Doug Rokke to head the
effort to clean them up. The top brass knew the mission was dangerous. Rokke
remembers those at the command level telling him, "We've got our Agent
Orange of the Nineties."
Rokke went to Iraq with several hundred men under his command. "I planned
how the decontamination should be undertaken," he says. "Nobody
really knew anything about it then. We were wearing what we had available --
gas masks and anti-contamination suits and coveralls. I was scraping up body
parts from these tanks with a putty knife. If you listen to the briefings
today, they say, 'All you need is a dust mask.'"
When it was all over, Rokke received a citation for meritorious service. That
wasn't all he got, however. Today he suffers from cataracts, kidney damage, and
a disease called RADS -- a lung-destroying malady caused by inhaling hazardous
substances over short periods. Another colleague, an engineer, developed throat
cancer nine months after the decontamination project and died. Rokke claims
that thirty other men who worked with his team eventually died of cancer. Ask
him about his own health today, twelve years later, and he says simply,
"I'm trashed."
Ultimately, Rokke and his team shipped the vehicles to a military facility in
Barnwell, South Carolina. "It's a giant facility that deals with the
recovery of radioactive-contaminated equipment," he says. "There are
exceptional scientists there, but it took three years to clean up twenty-four
vehicles." Some of the vehicles, he says, were sent back into service,
where they joined thousands of others that remain contaminated. Cleaning them
up, he says, "is not even feasible."
For the past twelve years, Rokke has tried to educate the military command
about the dangers posed by DU. "I recommended medical care for every
soldier who had been involved in friendly fire," he says. "They won't
do it. They never looked for problems, so they didn't find any. And people
wonder why a quarter of the vets are sick? But hey, I'm just a friggin'
blue-jean-type moccasin scientist. I'm not a lab guy. I'm the guy who is
scraping this stuff up with a putty knife. It's real simple: This stuff is
effective, and they're going to use it. If they acknowledge what happened to
the vets, they have to acknowledge what happened to the non-combatants. There
are sick people all over the Gulf."
THE THREAT POSED BY DU ISN'T limited to Iraqi civilians and U.S. soldiers. The
military has been testing depleted uranium at home, even firing missiles into
the Pacific. "We've fired DU all over the country," says Naughton,
the retired Army spokesman. "If you shoot it into the same area over and
over, you create a contamination problem that's just not worth cleaning up. If
you have enough DU lying around, someone is going to ask you to clean it up,
and you would rather not do that."
Depleted uranium has attracted its share of conspiracy theorists. Some say the
military is deploying DU to help rid the United States of nuclear waste; others
charge the Pentagon with genocide, claiming that radioactive weapons are being
used to deliberately destroy the genetic future of targeted populations in Iraq
and elsewhere. But even the most measured activists who take pains to distance
themselves from such claims say the military is distorting the truth and
putting troops at risk to keep its silver bullet in action. "The Pentagon
is lying," says Dan Fahey, the former Navy officer. "This is the
precedent that has been established with atomic veterans and with Vietnam
veterans. If they're not going to let us know what they know, they should give
the benefit of the doubt to the veteran. But they don't want anyone telling
them what weapons they can and cannot use."
The military is certainly worried that public opposition could put an end to
its favorite weapon. As early as 1991, Lt. Cola M.V. Ziehmn of the Los Alamos
labs in New Mexico sent a memo
to his bosses at the Pentagon warning that, "DU rounds may become
politically unacceptable and thus be deleted from the arsenal." Naughton
concedes that the press briefing on depleted uranium held a few days before the
attack on Iraq last March was called to blunt criticism. "There have been
considerable efforts by a variety of people and institutions to take DU away
from the U.S. Army," Naughton says. "We used a little bit in Kosovo
and got a really big reaction from our allies. The public-affairs people just
wanted to get out there before the shooting started -- before people start
complaining there are sick people in Iraq."
Chris Hellman, the military-policy analyst, says the Pentagon is ultimately
unconcerned with whether it is turning entire areas of countries into
radioactive hot zones. "That's not the military's view of this," he
says. "When they wake up in the morning and look at Iraq, number one is to
win the war." The only way to put a stop to depleted uranium, he adds, is
for Congress to pass a law banning DU ordnance. "It's up to the
policy-makers to make this decision for them. It's the policymakers, not the
military, who make decisions about morality and 'collateral damage'."
Left to its own devices, the military has made clear that it considers depleted
uranium worth any risk it poses. "The military benefits are so much larger
compared to any health problems," Naughton says. "We feel we have to
use it. It's radioactive -- I wish it wasn't, but I can't change the laws of
physics. The issue is, once you've had the hit, once you're involved in the
catastrophic failure of the tank, did the crew survive long enough to really
care whether it was tungsten or DU that hit them? Anyone who does should count
themselves damn lucky. I'm sure every one of them would thank God that they
lived forty years to contract lymphoma."
"I don't even know what to say about the Veterans Administration. I put
in for disability on my back and they won't give it to me. I spoke with the
chief investigator of the study, and I don't know whether she's downplaying it
or what. She said, 'DU doesn't hurt you.' That was pretty much what she said in
a nutshell. But that study is funded by the government, and I guess if I wanted
the job, I would say what the government wants, too.
"At first, being hit with friendly fire really disturbed me. But at that
point, I wasn't really aware of any problems with DU. Over the years, I've kind
of changed. The friendly fire has become less important to me, and the DU is
concerning me more and more.
"I personally think the Pentagon is covering this up. They have a shameful
history of hiding these things from the vets. It's not until half of these
people are dead or coming down with cancer that they say, 'OK, now we're going
to take care of you.' Don't take me as un-American or anything, but there's no
way in hell I would want one of my sons out there fighting now."
On April 2nd, during week two of the Iraq
War, twenty-eight protesters were arrested outside Alliant Techsystems in
Edina, Minnesota. A defense contractor with annual revenues of $2.2 billion,
Alliant is America's largest maker of ammunition -- half of which it sells to
the Pentagon. "Who profits?" chanted the protesters. "Who
dies?" As they marched, American A-10s were attacking Iraqi positions
armed with an Alliant munition: tank-busting shells packed with depleted
uranium. "They just dive into their adversaries and just rip them to
shreds," CNN reporter Bob Franken told viewers that day.
The war has been good to companies that manufacture DU weapons. Alliant's
production of DU shells set a fifteen-year record, and CEO Paul David Miller
took home $16.8 million in bonuses and stock options. Defense giant General
Dynamics, meanwhile, watched sales in its combat-systems group, which provides
DU shells for the Army, nearly double since 2000.
There's a reason that DU shells are so profitable: The raw material is all-but
free. Eager to dispose of 1 billion pounds of depleted uranium accumulating in
federal installations since the Manhattan Project, Washington sells the waste
to munitions makers for pennies on the dollar.
But while defense contractors profit handsomely, their neighbors are exposed to
radioactive waste. Starmet Corp. -- among the Army's largest supplier's of DU
weapons -- dumped 400,000 pounds of uranium and heavy metals into an unlined
holding pond in Concord, Massachusetts, polluting soil and groundwater. Faced
with a massive cleanup, Starmet filed for bankruptcy last year -- leaving
taxpayers with cleanup costs estimated at $50 million. Cleanup at the Twin
Cities Army Ammunitions Plant in suburban Minneapolis, littered with DU shells
manufactured by Alliant, is expected to cost $235 million.
"We have a government heavily invested in using DU weapons," says
Judy Scotnicki, a community leader in Concord. "As a result. our community
is stuck with hundreds of thousands of pounds of radioactive waste." --
SUSAN O. STRANAHAN
For more information regarding DU, see the Nonviolent Action Community of
Cascadia's Peacelinks
and Iraq War Fallout
pages and the Depleted
Uranium page at Wikiverse. All of the links herein have been added, without
the knowledge of either Rolling Stone or the authors, for the reader's
edification.
"Intellectual property" laws suck ass. Be that as it may, both the U.S. Code and the so-called "Digital Millennium Copyright Act" have recognised the rights of libraries and archives to make works available to the public for non-commercial purposes. The upshot is that it would be both a violation of copyright law, and (more importantly) a violation of the true spirit of the Internet to profit from freely-available materials. So, link to and distribute this piece at will, but don't try to sell it. Okay?