-Caveat Lector-

[Note: Some sources say the oil wells were lit
up for propaganda purposes by US commando forces.]

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A57503-2003Mar19.html

Environmental Damages a Concern
Experts Fear Effects of War on Persian Gulf Region Could Be 'Irreversible'

An Iraqi tank destroyed in the 1991 Persian Gulf War sits amid oil well
fires in northern Kuwait set by Iraqi forces. Experts fear worse
environmental damage from the new conflict. (David Longstreath -- AP)

By Eric Pianin
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, March 20, 2003; Page A21


Environmental experts warned this week that war in Iraq will cause
"massive and possibly irreversible" damage to the Persian Gulf region and
significantly add to global warming. The environmental leaders said the
ensuing damage to Iraq's ecosystem and food and water supplies may eclipse
the destruction during the 1991 Persian Gulf War.

"I think it will be comprehensive damage, and I don't think it will be
localized to the area of Iraq, regardless of how precise and surgical our
bombing campaign will be," said Ross Mirkarimi, a San Francisco-based
environmental analyst who made two trips to Iraq shortly after U.S.-led
forces drove the Iraqis from Kuwait. "The pollution will travel in areas
that will compound the damage that still remains from the 1991 military
campaign."

During the Gulf War, retreating Iraqi forces set fire to more than 600
Kuwaiti oil wells, creating toxic smoke that choked the atmosphere and
blocked the sun. The Iraqis dumped 4 million barrels of crude oil into the
Persian Gulf, tarring beaches, killing more than 25,000 birds and driving
millions more away, according to data compiled by the World Resources
Institute and other organizations that monitor the environment. Spills of
60 million barrels of oil in the desert formed huge oil lakes and
percolated into aquifers.

More than 80 percent of Kuwait's livestock perished during the war, and
fisheries were heavily polluted, according to the monitoring groups. The
burning oil fields released nearly a half-billion tons of carbon dioxide,
an amount of greenhouse gas that many scientists say is the leading cause
of the earth's rising temperature.

To date, a dozen nations affected by the Gulf War have submitted
environmental damage claims to the United Nations totaling $79 billion.
The U.N. has ruled so far on $1.9 billion of the claims, awarding about $1
billion, most of it to Kuwait and Saudi Arabia.

Environmental groups and experts said a new war in Iraq could do even more
harm to the region's environment and water resources, and kill off dozens
of endangered species of birds and animals.

"The first Gulf War was the biggest environmental disaster in recent
history," said Gar Smith, former editor of Earth Island Journal and a
spokesman for Environmentalists Against the War. "Unfortunately, with
advances in military technology, a new Gulf War has the potential to be
even worse."

Hans Blix, the chief U.N. weapons inspector in Iraq, said in a recent
interview with MTV that, "To me the question of the environment is more
ominous than that of peace and war."

Environmentalists say that U.S. fighter jets, tanks, armor-piercing shells
and ground-shattering Massive Ordnance Air-Burst (MOAB) bombs likely will
destroy or seriously damage Iraqi water and sewage treatment plants and
dams; ruin ancient archaeological sites and harm what little remains of
the Mesopotamian Marshlands, the primary source of fresh water in southern
Iraq that was systematically destroyed by government engineers during the
past 30 years.

Iraqi officials have said that they expect to maintain 10 percent of their
water supply in a war. But aid agencies say taps could run dry within 12
hours of the first airstrikes on Baghdad, and they are stockpiling large
quantities of drinking water for the capital's residents.

Environmentalists are particularly concerned about the use of
armor-piercing munitions tipped with depleted uranium, a heavy metal that
can penetrate tanks but also spreads radioactive dust to soil and water.
During the 1991 conflict, U.S. forces fired 320 tons of depleted uranium,
most of it from cannons mounted on Air Force A-10 Thunderbolt IIs, or
"Warthogs." Radioactive material was spread across Kuwait, Iraq and Saudi
Arabia, often in tiny fragments that some civilians picked up.

Defense Department officials last week said there is little evidence that
depleted uranium poses a serious threat to public health or the
environment, and they stressed the metal's ability to penetrate enemy
armor. "Nobody goes into a war and wants to be even with the enemy," Col.
James Naughton of the U.S. Army Materiel Command told reporters.

If oil wells are set ablaze again, they could do far more environmental
damage than was inflicted in 1991, experts said. The Kuwaiti oil wells
burned for as many as nine months, generating soot, sulfur and acid rain
that covered croplands as many as 1,200 miles away.

"Over the last few decades, we've come to recognize that war has not only
a tragic human cost, but a tragic environmental cost as well," said
Carroll Muffett, a Washington environmental lawyer. "Fragile habitats are
destroyed, wildlife lost and resources like fresh water are degraded
beyond use."

Earlier this week, nearly 200 lawyers, scholars and environmentalists from
51 countries protested the looming war and urged leaders of the United
States, Britain, Turkey and Iraq to pull back.

Their letter highlighted international rules of law for governments that
impose a "solemn responsibility to avoid destruction of or serious or
widespread damage to the natural environment and cultural heritage of Iraq
and the Persian Gulf region."


© 2003 The Washington Post Company

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