Radioactive
Ammunition Fired In Middle East May Claim More Lives Than Hiroshima
And Nagasaki
By Sherwood Ross
20 November, 2007
OpEdNews.com
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By
firing radioactive ammunition, the U.S., U.K., and Israel may have triggered
a nuclear holocaust in the Middle East that, over time, will prove deadlier
than the U.S. atomic bombing of Japan.
So much ammunition containing
depleted uranium(DU) has been fired, asserts nuclear authority Leuren
Moret, "The genetic future of the Iraqi people for the most part,
is destroyed."
"More than ten times
the amount of radiation released during atmospheric testing (of nuclear
bombs) has been released from depleted uranium weaponry since 1991,"
Moret writes, including radioactive ammunition fired by Israeli troops
in Palestine.
Moret is an independent U.S.
scientist formerly employed for five years at the Lawrence Berkeley
National Laboratory and also at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory,
both of California.
Adds Arthur Bernklau, of
Veterans For Constitutional Law, "The long-term effect of DU is
a virtual death sentence. Iraq is a toxic wasteland. Anyone who is there
stands a good chance of coming down with cancer and leukemia. In Iraq,
the birth rate of mutations is totally out of control."
Moret, a Berkeley, Calif.,
Environmental Commissioner and past president of the Association for
Women Geoscientists, says, "For every genetic defect that we can
see now, in future generations there are thousands more that will be
expressed."
She adds, "the (Iraq)
environment now is completely radioactive."
Dr. Helen Caldicott, the
prominent anti-nuclear crusader, has written: "Much of the DU is
in cities such as Baghdad, where half the population of 5 million people
are children who played in the burned-out tanks and on the sandy, dusty
ground."
"Children are 10 to
20 times more susceptible to the carcinogenic effects of radiation than
adults," Caldicott wrote. "My pediatric colleagues in Basra,
where this ordnance was used in 1991, report a sevenfold increase in
childhood cancer and a sevenfold increase in gross congenital abnormalities,"
she wrote in her book, "Nuclear Power is not the Answer"(The
New Press).
Caldicott goes on to say
the two Gulf wars "have been nuclear wars because they have scattered
nuclear material across the land, and people---particularly children---
are condemned to die of malignancy and congenital disease essentially
for eternity."
Because of the extremely
long half-life of uranium 238, one of the radioactive elements in the
shells fired, "the food, the air, and the water in the cradle of
civilization have been forever contaminated," Caldicott explained.
Uranium is a heavy metal
that enters the body via inhalation into the lung or via ingestion into
the GI tract. It is excreted by the kidney, where, if the dose is high
enough, it can induce renal failure or kidney cancer. It also lodges
in the bones where it causes bone cancer and leukemia, and it is excreted
in the semen, where it mutates genes in the sperm, leading to birth
deformities.
Nuclear contamination is
spreading around the world, Caldicott adds, with heaviest concentrations
in regions within a 1,000-mile radius of Baghdad and Afghanistan.
These are, notably, northern
India, southern Russia, Turkey, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Tibet, Pakistan,
Kuwait, the Gulf emirates, and Jordan.
"Downwind from the radioactive
devastation in Iraq, Israel is also suffering from large increases in
breast cancer, leukemia and childhood diabetes," Moret asserts.
Doug Rokke, formerly the
top U.S. Army DU clean-up officer and now anti-DU crusader, says Israeli
tankers fired radioactive shells during the invasion of Lebanon last
year. U.S. and NATO forces also used DU ammunition in Kosovo. Rokke
says he is quite ill from the effects of DU and that members of his
clean-up crew have died from it.
As a result of DU bombardments,
Caldicott writes, "Severe birth defects have been reported in babies
born to contaminated civilians in Iraq, Yugoslavia, and Afghanistan
and the incidence and severity of defects is increasing over time."
Like symptoms have been reported
among infants born to U.S. service personnel that fought in the Gulf
Wars. One survey of 251 returned Gulf War veterans from Mississippi
made by the Veterans Administration found 67% of children born to them
suffered from "severe illnesses and deformities."
Some were born without brains
or vital organs or with no arms, hands, or arms, or with hands attached
to their shoulders.
While U.S. officials deny
DU ammunition is dangerous, it is a fact Gulf War veterans were the
first Americans ever to fight on a radioactive battlefield, and their
children apparently are the first known to display these ghastly deformities.
Soldiers who survived being
hit by radioactive ammunition, as well as those who fired it, are falling
ill, often showing signs of radiation sickness. Of the 700,000 U.S.
veterans of the first Gulf War, more than 240,000 are on permanent medical
disability and 11,000 are dead, published reports indicate.
This is an astonishing toll
from such a short conflict in which fewer than 400 U.S. soldiers were
killed on the battlefield.
Of course, "depleted
uranium munitions were and remain another causative factor behind Gulf
War Syndrome(GWS)," writes Francis Boyle, a leading American authority
on international law in his book "Biowarfare and Terrorism,"
from Clarity Press Inc.
"The Pentagon continues
to deny that there is such a medical phenomenon categorized as GWS---even
beyond the point where everyone knows that denial is pure propaganda
and disinformation," Boyle writes.
Boyle contends, "The
Pentagon will never own up to the legal, economic, tortious, political,
and criminal consequences of admitting the existence of GWS. So U.S.
and U.K. veterans of Gulf War I as well as their afterborn children
will continue to suffer and die. The same will prove true for U.S. and
U.S. veterans of Bush Jr.?s Gulf War II as well as their afterborn children."
Boyle said the use of DU
is outlawed under the 1925 Geneva Convention prohibiting poison gas.
Chalmers Johnson, president
of the Japan Policy Research Institute, writes in his "The Sorrows
of Empire"(Henry Holt and Co.) that, given the abnormal clusters
of childhood cancers and deformities in Iraq as well as Kosovo, the
evidence points "toward a significant role for DU."
By insisting on its use,
Johnson adds, "the military is deliberately flouting a 1996 United
Nations resolution that classifies DU ammunition as an illegal weapon
of mass destruction."
Moret calls DU "the
Trojan Horse of nuclear war." She describes it as "the weapon
that keeps killing." Indeed, the half-life of Uranium-238 is 4.5-billion
years, and as it decays it spawns other deadly radioactive by-products.
Radioactive fallout from
DU apparently blew far and wide. Following the initial U.S. bombardment
of Iraq in 2003, DU particles traveled 2,400 miles to Great Britain
in about a week, where atmospheric radiation quadrupled.
But it is in the Middle East,
predominantly Iraq, where the bulk of the radioactive waste has been
dumped.
In the early Nineties, the
United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority warned that 50 tons of dust from
DU explosions could claim a half million lives from cancer by year 2000.
Not 50 tons, but an estimated two thousand radioactive tons have been
fired off in the Middle East, suggesting the possibility over time of
an even higher death toll.
Dr. Keith Baverstock, a World
Health Organization radiation advisor, informed the media, Iraq?s arid
climate would increase exposure from its tiny particles as they are
blown about and inhaled by the civilian population for years to come.
The civilian death toll from
the August, 1945, U.S. atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki has
been put at 140,000 and 80,000, respectively. Over time, however, deaths
from radiation sickness are thought to have claimed the lives of another
100,000 Japanese civilians.
Sherwood Ross is
a Miami, Florida-based free-lance writer who covers military and political
topics. Reach him at [email protected]. Ross has
worked as a reporter for the Chicago Daily News and several wire services
and is a contributor to national magazines
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