The following is an archived copy of a message sent to the CASI Analysis List run by Cambridge Solidarity with Iraq.

Views expressed in this archived message are those of the author, not of Cambridge Solidarity with Iraq (CASI).

[Main archive index/search] [List information] [CASI Homepage]


[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

[casi-analysis] SVO- DU---KUCINICH TO CALL FOR BAN ON MUNITIONS MADE FROMRADIOACTIVE MATERIALS



[ This message has been sent to you via the CASI-analysis mailing list ]


[ Presenting plain-text part of multi-format email ]

"This memo told us to be sure that we should only report our findings so DU
munitions could always be used.  IN OTHER WORDS LIE!" ~ Dr. Doug Rokke, a
retired U.S. Army Reserve
health physicist
distributed  by The Salmon Valley Observer,03/15/04


For Immediate Release: March 11, 2004
Contact: Matt Harris: (o) 216.889.2004, (c) 216.403.3980,press@kucinich.us

Kucinich To Call for Ban on Munitions Made From Radioactive Materials

WHAT: Press conference
WHO: Congressman Dennis Kucinich and Dr. Doug Rokke, PhD
WHERE: University of Illinois, Champaign Campus, Illini Forum
WHEN: Monday, March 15th, 7:00 PM

Champaign, Ill. - Democratic Congressman and presidential candidate Dennis
Kucinich will hold a press conference about U.S. munitions made from
radioactive materials (depleted uranium, or DU) manufactured in sites
across the U.S. and used in U.S.-led wars beginning with the Gulf War in
1991. Joining Kucinich will be Dr. Doug Rokke, a retired U.S. Army Reserve
health physicist, is one of the word's leading experts on the use of DU 
munitions.

Kucinich is expected to discuss the devastating health consequences
suffered by American servicemen and women and their families and by
innocent civilians in Iraq, Afghanistan, Kosovo, Serbia, Kuwait, Saudi
Arabia and elsewhere because of U.S. use of DU munitions.

Kucinich is also expected to demand that the U.S. cease manufacturing and
using DU munitions; that it provide all necessary medical care to all
persons who have been exposed to US munitions, military and civilian
alike; and that the U.S. take full responsibility for performing complete
environmental remediation wherever our military has used DU munitions.

"Depleted uranium weapons are an unacceptable threat to life, a violation
of international law, and an assault on human dignity," says Kucinich. "We
have an obligation to do what is right for our servicemen and women, for
our children and our grandchildren and our grandchildren's children, and
for all citizens of the world. We must ban the use of depleted uranium in
our military and worldwide; we must provide medical care to all DU
casualties; and we must clean up all the places where we've used this
poison that has the power to kill for countless generations into the
future."

Dr. Doug Rokke earned his Ph.D. in Physics and Technology Education at the
University of Illinois, and served as a member of the U.S. Army Medical
Command's Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical (NBC) special operations and
teaching team during the Gulf War. Dr. Rokke, a confirmed DU poisoning
casualty, has taught hazardous materials; field emergency medicine;
nuclear, biological, and chemical warfare; education and training,
counter-terrorism, and military operations courses for more than 20 years.
Recently  Dr. Rokke has taught undergraduate and graduate courses in
environmental science and engineering, nuclear physics, and emergency
management.

For information about the National campaign:http://www.kucinich.us
For Congressman Kucinich's Schedule:http://www.kucinich.us/schedule.htm
To schedule an interview with Kucinich or spokesperson:jonathans@kucinich.us
For information about the Illinois Kucinich campaign: Diego Alvarado,
309-275-5070,MrDiegoAlvarado@aol.com
---------------------------------------------------------------

IMMEDIATE ACTION REQUIRED ON DEPLETED URANIUM
Dr. Doug Rokke, Ph.D.
March 12, 2004


ABSTRACT: Depleted uranium munitions are used during combat because they are
extremely effective. However, in winning these battles through use of
uranium
munitions we have contaminated air, water, and soil. Consequently, children,
women, and men have inhaled, ingested, or got wounds contaminated with
uranium.
 Uranium is a heavy metal and radioactive poison. The toxicity is not
debatable as the Director of the U.S. Army Environmental Policy Institute
stated in a
congressionally mandated report that "No available technology can
significantly change the inherent chemical and radiological toxicity of DU.
These are
intrinsic properties of uranium " (Health and Environmental Consequences of
Depleted Uranium Use in the U.S. Army: Technical Report, AEPI, June 1995).
The
primary U.S. Army training manual: STP 21-1-SMCT: Soldiers Manual of Common
Tasks
states "NOTE: (Depleted uranium) Contamination will make food and water
unsafe
for consumption." [Task number: 031-503-1017 "RESPOND TO DEPLETED
URANIUM/LOW
LEVEL RADIOACTIVE MATERIALS (DULLRAM) HAZARDS"]. Although, existing U.S.
Department of Defense (DOD) directives require that prompt and effective
medical
care be provided to all exposed individuals (Medical Management of Unusual
Depleted Uranium Casualties, DOD, 10/14/93) and the thorough clean up of
dispersed
radioactive contamination (AR 700-48: "Management of Equipment Contaminated
With Depleted Uranium or Radioactive Commodities"); United States, British,
and
Australian officials refuse to comply with these directives.    

RECENT EVENTS.

The United States, England, and Australia have recently used extensive
amounts of weapons made from uranium, commonly called depleted uranium in
Iraq,
Afghanistan, and the Balkans. Medical evidence and especially the birth
defects in
children born to parents in areas with DU contamination is an issue of
significant concern.  Depleted uranium (uranium 238) along with other
contaminates
of war have been implicated and medical evidence supports the fact that
uranium
contamination exposure results in adverse health effects.

Today; after the willful use of uranium munitions during Gulf War 1, during
Balkans combat, in Afghanistan, and now during Gulf War 2; warriors and
non-combatants are exhibiting serious adverse health effects from exposure
to
depleted uranium munitions contamination, conventional weapons residue, and
released
toxic industrial chemicals.

However, even though medical evidence exists to prove adverse health effects
United States, British, Australian, Canadian, and NATO officials continue to
state specifically that there are no known adverse health effects in
individuals who were exposed to uranium and other contamination. That is a
willful lie
as verified by actual medical records of thousands of individuals affected
by
war created contamination. However, despite their formal stance the British
Ministry of Defence recently have acknowledged that British serviceman who
serve
in Iraq may be exposed to depleted uranium contamination and can obtain
medical testing upon re-deployment
(http://www.traprockpeace.org/du_mod_warning_cards.html).   

WHAT IS DU?

Depleted uranium (DU) which is 99.8% by mass U-238 is made from uranium
hexaflouride, the byproduct of the uranium enrichment process. Recent
documents
released by the U.S. Department of Energy and the 1995 U..S. Army
Environmental
Policy Institute reports state that a small proportion of other toxic heavy
metals and radioactive isotopes such as plutonium, neptunium, americium, and
U-236 also are present.  Although the 60 % of the ionizing radiation given
off by
gamma emissions from U-235 and U-234 was eliminated during the enrichment
process, alpha particles at 4.2 Mev and 4.15 Mev that cause significant
internal
ionization with consequent cellular damage were proportionally increased and
gamma and beta emissions from contaminants and daughter products still are
present.  The continuing incomplete statement that DU is 60% less
radioactive than
natural uranium simply ignores the serious internal damage caused by alpha
particles that impact any cell!  Alpha particle emission measurements show
that
the dose or exposure rate is in excess of 10000 counts per minute.  DU is a 
serious internal hazard.  Consequent inhalation, ingestion, and wound
contamination pose significant and unacceptable health risks due to direct
cell damage
from alpha and beta particle and gamma ray emissions.  Spent penetrators, DU
fragments, and contaminated shrapnel emit beta particles and gamma rays at
300
mrem / hour and thus can not be touched or picked up without protection.

HOW IS DU USED BY THE MILITARY?

DU is used to manufacture kinetic energy penetrators- giant pencils or
rods. 
Each kinetic penetrator consists of almost entirely uranium 238.   The
United
States munitions industry produces the following DU munitions with the
corresponding mass of uranium 238:
7.62 mm with unspecified mass
50 cal.  With unspecified mass
20 mm with a mass of approximately 180 grams.
25 mm with a mass of approximately 200 grams.
30 mm with a mass of approximately 280 grams.
105 mm with a mass of approximately 3500 grams.
120 mm with a mass of approximately 4500 grams.
Sub-munitions / land mines such as the PDM and ADAM whose structural body
contain a small proportion of DU.
Cruise missiles with unknown quantity of DU
Bunker buster bombs with unknown quantity of DU
 
Many other countries now produce or have acquired DU munitions.  DU is also
used as armor, counter weights, radiation shielding, and as proposed by the
U.S. Department of Energy as a component of road and structural materials. 
All
of these uses are designed to reduce the huge U.S. Department of Energy
stockpiles left over from the uranium enrichment process.

It is important to realize that DU penetrators aresolid uranium 238. THEY
ARE NOT TIPPED OR COATED!  During an impact at least 40 % of the penetrator
forms uranium oxides or fragments which are left on the terrain, within or
on
impacted equipment, or within impacted structures.

The remainder of the penetrator retains its initial shape. Thus we are left
with a solid piece of uranium lying someplace which can be picked up by
children.  DU also ignites in the air during flight and upon impact.  The
resulting
shower of burning DU and DU fragments causes secondary explosions, fires,
injury, and death. 

All individuals must ask if they would want tons solid uranium penetrators 
lying in their backyard? Does anyone want any radioactive contamination of
any
type lying in their backyard?  The answer is simple- NO ONE!

OPERATION DESERT STORM DEPLETED URANIUM FRIENDLY FIRE AND COMBAT INCIDENTS
INVESTIGATION FINDINGS

I was assigned to the 3rd U.S. Army  Depleted Uranium assessment team as the
health physicist and medic by order of  Headquarters Department of the Army
in
Washington, D.C.  What we found can be explained in three words:  "OH MY
GOD".

According to official documents each uranium penetrator rod could loose up
to
70% of it's mass on impact creating fixed and loose contamination with the
remaining rod passing through the equipment or structure to lie on the
terrain. 
On-site impact investigations showed that the mass loss is about 40% which
forms fixed and loose contamination leaving about 60% of the initial mass of
the
penetrator in the solid pencil form.

We found that standard radiacs will not detect his contamination.  Equipment
contamination included uranium fragments, uranium oxides, other hazardous
materials, unstable unexploded ordnance, and byproducts of exploded
ordnance. 
U.S. Army Materiel Command documents sent to us stated the uranium oxide was
57%
insoluble and 43 % soluble and at least 50% could be inhaled. In most cases
except for penetrator fragments, contamination was inside destroyed
equipment or
structures, on the destroyed equipment, or within 25 meters of the
equipment.
During the 1994 and 1995 Nevada tests we found DU contamination out to 400
meters from a single incident.

After we returned to the United States we wrote the Theater Clean up plan
which reportedly was passed through U.S. Department of Defense to the U.S.
Department of State and consequently to the Emirate of Kuwaiti. Today, it is
obvious
that none of this information regarding clean up of extensive DU
contamination ever was given to the Iraqi's. Consequently, although there
still are
substantial radiation contamination hazards existing within Iraq these
hazards have
been ignored by the United States and Great Britain for political and
economic
reasons at the same time additional use of uranium weapons has occurred
resulting in additional confirmed contamination.

Iraqi, Kosovar, Serbian, and other representatives have asked numerous times
for DU contamination management and medical care procedures but this
information has not been provided.  Although residents of Vieques, who are
U.S.
citizens, also have asked for medical care and completion of environmental
remediation DOD officials still refuse to complete these essential actions.

THE U.S. ARMY DEPLETED URANIUM PROJECT AND ITS OBJECTIVES? 

The probable health and environmental hazards of uranium contamination were
known before the Gulf War.  A United States Defense Nuclear Agency
memorandum
written by LTC Lyle that was sent to our team in Saudi Arabia stated that
quote:

 "As Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD), ground combat units, and civil
populations of Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and Iraq come increasingly into contact
with DU
ordnance, we must prepare to deal with potential problems.  Toxic war
souvenirs, political furor, and post conflict clean up (host nation
agreement) are
only some of the issues that must be addressed.  Alpha particles (uranium
oxide
dust) from expended rounds is a health concern but, Beta particles from
fragments and intact rounds is a serious health threat, with possible
exposure rates
of 200 millirads per hour on contact." end quote.

This memorandum, the reports that we prepared immediately after the Gulf War
as a part of the depleted uranium assessment project to recover DU destroyed
and contaminated U.S. equipment, the previous research, and other expressed
concerns led to the publication of a United States Department of Defense
directive signed by General Eric Shinseki on August 19, 1993 to quote:

"1.  Provide adequate training for personnel who may come in contact with
depleted uranium equipment.
2.  Complete medical testing of personnel exposed to DU contamination during
the Persian Gulf War.
3. Develop a plan for DU contaminated equipment recovery during future
operations."

It is thus indisputable that United States Department of Defense officials
were and are still aware of the unique and unacceptable health and
environmental
hazards associated with using depleted uranium munitions.
   
Consequently, I was recalled to active duty in 1994 as U.S. Army Depleted
Uranium Project Director and tasked with developing training and
environmental
management procedures.  The project included a literature review; extensive
curriculum development project involving representatives from all branches
of the
U.S. Department of Defense and representatives from England, Canada,
Germany,
and Australia. We also completed basic research at the Nevada Test Site
located 120 miles northwest of Las Vegas, Nevada, to validate management
procedures.

    The products of the DU project included: Three training curricula:
(1) Tier I: General Audience,
(2) Tier II: Battle Damage and Recovery Operations,
(3) Tier III: Chemical Officer / NCO;
(4) Three video tapes: (1) "Depleted Uranium Hazard Awareness", (2)
"Contaminated and Damaged Equipment Management", and (3)  "Operation of the
AN/PDR 77
Radiac Set";
(5) The draft Army Regulation: "Management of Equipment Contaminated with
Depleted Uranium or Radioactive Commodities" (currently AR 700-48,
Department of
the Army, Washington, D.C., 9/16/2002);
(6) an United States Army Pamphlet specifying "Handling Procedures for
Equipment Contaminated with Depleted Uranium or Radioactive Commodities" and
(7) a redesigned radiac capable of finding and quantifying DU
contamination. 

Although, these products were completed, approved, and ready for
distribution
by January 1996, U.S. Army, U.S. Department of Defense, British, German,
Canadian, and Australian officials have disregarded repeated directives and
have
not implemented or only have implemented portions of the training or
management
procedures.

The training curriculum and management procedures have not been given to all
individuals and representatives of governments whose populations and
environment have been exposed to DU contamination as verified by U.S.
General
Accounting Office investigators in a report published during March 2000 and
through
personal conversations.

WHAT ADVERSE HEALTH EFFECTS HAVE BEEN OBSERVED, RECOGNIZED, TREATED, AND
DOCUMENTED?

Deliberate denial and delay of medical screening and consequent medical care
of U.S. friendly fire casualties who inhaled, ingested, and had wound
contamination and all others with verified or suspected internalized uranium
exposure
limits recognition and verification of health effects still continues as of
December 10, 2003.

Although we recommended immediate medical care during March 1991 and many
times since then United States Department of Defense, the British Ministry
of
Defense, Canadian, Australian, United State Department, and U.S. Department
of
Veterans  Affairs officials are still refusing to provide thorough medical
screening and necessary medical care for all DU casualties as required by
their own
written and published directives.

Dr. Bernard Rostker wrote to me in a letter dated March 1, 1999 that
physicians and health physicists at the completion of the ground war decided
that
medical screening and care for uranium exposures was not required. Actual
documents refute this!Today, individuals are sick (including me) and others
are dead
who were denied medical care even though I requested it in a letter dated
May
21, 1997 which was sent to the Office of Surgeon U.S. Army Materiel Command
and forwarded to Dr. Rostker. 

Verified adverse health effects from personal experience, physicians, and
from personal reports from individuals with known DU exposures include: (a)
Reactive airway disease, (b) neurological abnormalities, (c) kidney stones
and
chronic kidney pain, (d) rashes, (e) vision degradation and night vision
losses,
(f) gum tissue problems, (g) lymphoma,  (h) various forms of skin and organ
cancer, (I) neuro-psychological disorders, (j) uranium in semen, (k) sexual
dysfunction, and (l) birth defects in offspring.

Today, health effects have been documented in uranium processing facility
employees of and residents living near Puducah, Kentucky, Portsmouth, Ohio;
Los
Alamos, New Mexico; Oak Ridge, Tennessee; and Hanford, Washington. 
Employees
of and residents living near uranium manufacturing or processing facilities
in
New York, Tennessee, Iowa, Massachusetts, and the four corners area of
southwest Colorado also have repeatedly reported health effects similar to
those
reported by Gulf War DU casualties.

Iraqi and other humanitarian agency physicians are reporting the same health
effects in exposed populations.  Scottish scientists have verified that
residents of the Balkans were excreting uranium in their urine.  Dr. Assaf
Durakovic
(a retired U.S. Army Colonel)  of the Uranium Medical Research Center has
also verified extremely high uranium excretion rates in Afghanistan
refugees.
This demonstrates that depleted uranium (U-238) is mobile and contaminating,
air,
water, and soil just as specified in the October 1943 letter to General
Leslie Groves.

Today, verifying correlation between uranium exposures and adverse health
effects, except in only in a few cases, is difficult because of deliberate
delays
in required screening, a radio-bioassay and medical care. Screening involves
the collection and analysis of urine, fecal, and throat samples within 24
hours of exposure as required in a October 1993 Department of Defense
published
directive. Today, months or years after exposure, only a small fraction of
the
sequestered uranium will be detected. This detectable fraction represents
only
the mobile or soluble portion and a very smal fraction of what is or was in
the body. Terry Riordan's (a DU casualty) autopsy in Canada has revealed
that
sequestering is occurring and that the mobile fraction may not be
representative
of what is actually present.

Even when verified medical evidence attributing adverse health effects to DU
exposures is available official recognition and documentation is limited. 
For
example during 1994 and 1995 United States Department of Defense medical
personnel at an U.S. Army installation hospital removed, separated, and hid
documented diagnoses (including my own) from affected individuals and other
physicians. Some medical records were retrieved during the fall of 1997,
but, probably
too late for many individuals. Today, this practice continues and
consequently exposed individuals are not receiving adequate and effective
medical care. 
This includes individuals whose required medical care has been requested and
ordered many times.

The denial of medical care will continue as long as the United States,
British, Canadian, NATO, and United Nations officials are permitted to
ignore the
emerging evidence and deny medical care to all individuals who have been or
may
have been exposed to depleted uranium (uranium 238), other isotopes, and
other
contaminants created as result of depleted uranium munitions use.  The
criteria describing exposures requiring medical screening within 24 hours of
exposure and consequent medical care were specified in a message from
Headquarters
Department of the Army dated October 14, 1993.  These exposures included:

"a.  Being in the midst of smoke from DU fires resulting from the burning of
vehicles uploaded with DU munitions or depots in which DU munitions are
being
stored.
b. Working within environments containing DU dust or residues from DU fires.
c. Being within a structure or vehicle while it is struck by DU munitions."

These guidelines must be applicable to all exposed individuals with care
independent of military or civilian status. They must be implemented now!

Medical care must be planned and completed to identify and then alleviate
actual physiological problems rather than placing an emphasis on
psychological
manifestations and continued testing. Children and others are sick and
deserve
care for the complex exposures that have resulted in health problems. 
Medical
care for known uranium exposures should emphasize (concern in parentheses):

 a. neurology (heavy metal effects)
 b. ophthalmology (radiation and heavy metal effects)
 c. urology (heavy metal effects and crystal formation)
 d. dermatology (heavy metal effects)
 e. cardiology (radiation and heavy metal effects)
 f. pulmonary (radiation, particulate, and heavy metal effects)
 g. immunology (radiation and heavy metal effects)
 h. oncology (radiation and heavy metal effects)
 i. gynecology (radiation, neurological, and heavy metal effects)
 j. gastro-intestinal (systemic effects)
 k. dental (heavy metal effects)
 l. psychology (heavy metal effects)
m. chromosomal damage (systemic effects)

Many individuals with known exposures still have not received requested
care.
As stated during March 10, 2003 by Dr. Michael KilPatrick, U.S. Department
of
Defense, only 90 individuals (including myself) are receiving minimal
medical
care from physicians assigned to the Baltimore Maryland Department of
Veterans Affairs Depleted Uranium program. That includes only a fraction of
over 400
individuals with verified extremely high exposures as the Dr. Rostker's
staff
told members of the Presidential Special Oversight Board on September 28,
1998.

It is impossible to get proper care and treatment. IF YOU DO NOT PROVIDE
MEDICAL ASSESSMENT FOR THOSE WITH VERIFIED EXPOSURES AND HEALTH PROBLEMS
THEN YOU
CAN SAY DU DID NOT CAUSE ANY ADVERSE HEALTH PROBLEMS BECAUSE YOU NEVER SAW
ANY
HEALTH EFFECTS.  SO MUCH FOR MEDICAL SCIENCE WHEN A COVER-UP IS DIRECTED BY
POLITICIANS TO LIMIT LIABILITY.

The cover-up actions to avoid liability started with the infamous Los Alamos
memorandum sent to our team in Saudi Arabia during March 1991.  This memo
told
us to be sure that we should only report our findings so DU munitions could
always be used.  IN OTHER WORDS LIE!

A letter sent to General Leslie Groves during 1943 is even more disturbing. 
In that memorandum dated October 30, 1943, senior scientists assigned to the
Manhattan Project suggested that radioactive materials; including uranium as
confirmed during personal discussions with former Manhatten Project
scientists;
could be used to contaminate air, water, and terrain contaminant.  According
to the letter sent by the Subcommittee of the S-1 Executive Committee on the
"Use of Radioactive Materials as a Military Weapon" to General Groves
(October
30, 1943) inhalation of radioactive materials- dirty bomb, would result in
"bronchial irritation coming on in a few hours to a few days".  This is
exactly
what happened to those of us who inhaled DU dust during Operation Desert
Storm
and in U.S. soldiers in the Balkans.

The subcommittee went on further to state that "Beta emitting products could
get into the gastrointestinal tract from polluted water, or food, or air. 
From the air, they would get on the mucus of the nose, throat, bronchi, etc.
and
be swallowed.  The effects would be local irritation just as in the bronchi
and exposures of the same amount would be required. The stomach, caecum and
rectum, where contents remain for longer periods than elsewhere would be
most
likely affected.  It is conceivable that ulcers and perforations of the gut
followed by death could be produced, even without an general effects from
radiation". 

Today, although medical problems continue to develop; medical care is denied
or delayed for all uranium exposed casualties while United States Department
of Defense and British Ministry of Defense officials continue to deny any
correlation between uranium exposure and adverse health and environmental
effects. 
They contend that they can spread tons of solid radioactive waste (uranium
238) in anyone's backyard without cleaning it up and providing medical
care. 
Their arrogance is astonishing!

Since 1991 numerous DOD and VA directives have required compliance with
these
recommendations. However even though DOD, VA, and UN officials know what
should be done, visual evidence, photographic and video tape evidence, on
site
radiological measurements, personal experience, and published reports verify
that:
1. Medical care has not been provided to all DU casualties.
    2.   Environmental remediation has not been completed.
3. Individuals are not wearing respiratory or skin protection.
4. Contaminated and damaged equipment and materials have been recycled to
manufacture new products.
       5. Training and education has only been partially implemented.
        6. Contamination management procedures have not been distributed and
implemented.

Consequently,

1. All DU contamination must be physically removed and properly disposed of
to prevent future exposures.
2. Specialized radiation detection devices that detect and measure alpha
particles, beta articles, x-rays, and gamma rays emissions at appropriate
levels
from 20 dpm up to 100,000 dpm and from .1 mrem/ hour to 75 mrem/ hour must
be
acquired and distributed to all individuals or organizations responsible for
medical care and environmental remediation activities involving depleted
uranium
/ uranium 238 and other low level radioactive isotopes that may be present. 
Standard equipment will not detect contamination.
3. Medical care must be provided to all individuals who did or may have
inhaled, ingested, or had wound contamination to detect mobile and
sequestered
internalized uranium contamination.
4. All individuals who enter, climb on, or work within 25 meters of any
contaminated equipment or terrain must wear respiratory and skin protection.
5. Contaminated and damaged equipment or materials should not be recycled to
manufacture new materials or equipment.
6. The use of uranium munitions must cease immediately.
7. All individuals who may come in contact with uranium munitions or uranium
munitions contamination must complete specific education and training on
management of contamination and response to incidents involving uranium
munitions.
.

WHAT SHOULD HAPPEN NEXT?

    All citizens of the world must raise a unified voice to force the
leaders
of those nations that have used depleted uranium munitions to recognize the
immoral consequences of their actions and assume responsibility for medical
care of all individuals exposed to uranium contamination and the thorough
environmental remediation of all uranium contamination left as a result of
combat and
peacetime actions.  The efforts of senior U.S. Department of Defense, U.S.
Army, U.S. Department of Energy, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs,
British,
Canadian, Australian, and United Nations officials to prevent acknowledgment
of
these problems and accept responsibility must be stopped!   The overt
retaliation against any of us who are attempting to get these same officials
to
comply with their own directives must stop.  We can not continue to ignore
the
consequences of wartime contamination that include adverse health and
environmental effects. I IMPLORE YOU TO ACT!


T.h.e. S.a.l.m.o.n. V.a.l.l.e.y. O.b.s.e.r.v.e.r
in The Empire State
 
 
 
 

Charles Jenks, attorney at law
President of the Core Group
Traprock Peace Center
103A Keets Road
Deerfield, MA 01342
413-773-1633; fax 413-773-7507
charles@mtdata.com
http://www.traprockpeace.org

------ End of Forwarded Message



_______________________________________
Sent via the CASI-analysis mailing list
To unsubscribe, visit http://lists.casi.org.uk/mailman/listinfo/casi-analysis
All postings are archived on CASI's website at http://www.casi.org.uk


[Campaign Against Sanctions on Iraq Homepage]