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-Caveat Lector-

AUDIENCE PACKS NEW YORK MEETING--
"DEPLETED URANIUM: PENTAGON POISON"

By Minnie Bruce Pratt
New York

Deadly radioactivity is drifting in the sands and fertile fields of
Iraq, in rain falling in Europe, in breezes that toss palm trees in
Vieques, Puerto Rico, in the water of South Korea--the toxic debris of
exploded U.S. depleted uranium (DU) shells.

The International Action Center continued its historic expos� of this
terrible danger with a forum in New York City on May 25, "Poison Dust--
Another U.S. War Crime: the Use of Radioactive Weapons in the Gulf."

DU is a byproduct of the process used to make nuclear bombs and reactor
fuel. Because this metal is 1.8 times denser than lead and burns on
impact with steel, bullets and shells made of DU can cut through tank
armor like butter.

U.S. tanks, Bradley fighting machines, A-10 attack jets and "Apache"
helicopters routinely fire DU rounds. When a DU shell hits a target, as
much as 70 percent burns on impact, releasing invisible and insoluble
uranium oxide, a radioactive dust that people inhale and ingest.

'METAL OF DISHONOR'

To the political hip-hop of Movement in Motion arts collective chanting
"Drop beats, not bombs," 200 people crowded the United Nations Church
Center for the meeting on "Poison Dust." The meeting was co-chaired by
Naomi Santos of Movement in Motion and IAC co-director Sara Flounders.

Flounders alerted the gathering that over half of the 700,000 veterans
of the first U.S. invasion of Iraq in 1991 have the chronic illness
dubbed "Gulf War Syndrome."

Millions of Iraqis died of preventable diseases from the obliteration of
water and health systems by bombing and 12 years of sanctions starting
in 1990. More recently, Iraqi doctors began to note an ominous increase
in cancer and diseases of the immune systems.

Sharon Eolis, a health care worker who traveled to Iraq in 1998 and
2000, confirmed that both U.S. documents and independent scientists
strongly link this pattern of sickness and death to DU.

IAC founder and former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark first raised
the issue of DU shortly after the 1991 Gulf War. The IAC has continued
to inform the public through its DU Education Project with such
publications as "Metal of Dishonor: How the Pentagon Radiates Soldiers
and Civilians with DU Weapons."

The project also challenged U.S. government denials of DU's impact in a
video, also called "Metal of Dishonor," produced by the People's Video
Network. At the meeting Sue Harris of PVN announced development of a new
video, "Poison Dust," which will go on tour to military bases and
communities. The film is necessary, she said, "because the situation is
getting worse."

The U.S. dropped 375 tons of DU on Iraq during the first Gulf War, and
2,200 tons during the current invasion. The U.S. has also used DU
weapons during its assaults on Afghanistan and the former Yugoslavia, in
training exercises in Vieques, Okinawa and South Korea, and doubtless in
numerous U.S. military testing grounds. Other countries also use DU
weapons.

CLARK: 'DU IS WAR AGAINST THE POOR'

Ramsey Clark traced his journey toward understanding the murderous
impact of DU on the people of Iraq. He noted that the first signs came
two years after heavy U.S. bombing of the desert near Kuwait in 1991.
Nomadic Bedouin people, seeking help, began to bring newly born deformed
babies into urban hospitals.

In March 2001, Dr. Aws Albait, an Iraqi physician who worked in Baghdad
from 1990-1999, said that leukemia and lymphomas in Iraqi children had
increased 12-fold, and in adults, six-fold.

Illness and genetic damage is also occurring in the children of U.S.
soldiers. Children of male Gulf War veterans are born with twice the
usual rate of birth defects. In female veterans, the rate is three times
normal, with double the rate of miscarriages.

A study in the April 2003 New Scientist magazine suggests DU toxicity
combines synergistically with its radioactivity to produce much more
serious effects than either poison alone.

Clark stressed that the impact of DU unfolds over many years, and that
the movement must be committed to an equally long struggle: "We have to
reach out, be unified, with every ounce of energy. This is a war against
the poor with the U.S. military there only to protect and increase the
wealth of the few."

'A HUGE CATASTROPHE'

Juan Gonzalez, president of the Nation al Association of Hispanic Journ
alists and a co-producer of the "Democracy Now!" radio show, is
currently running a series of columns on DU in the New York Daily News.
He acknowledged that he was standing on the shoulders of the IAC and
other activists, saying: "A huge, huge catastrophe has been visited upon
the planet by use of these weapons and the spread of low-level
radiation."

Gonzalez broke the story on DU after the mother of a U.S. soldier on
leave from Iraq came to him for help. Her son, serving with a New York
State National Guard unit, was suffering from serious respiratory
problems--and being forced to return to combat. The mother added that
many other members of his unit in Iraq were also so sick with high
temperatures, kidney ailments and respiratory problems that they'd been
sent home to Fort Dix.

Gonzalez saw a connection to the effects of DU, and arranged for
independent testing of the soldiers. Of nine tested, four were
absolutely positive for DU contamination, and three were probable.

Denied testing at Walter Reed Military Hospital, they were examined in a
German clinic under the supervision of Dr. Asaf Durakovic, professor of
radiology and nuclear medicine at Georgetown Univer sity in Washington,
D.C., and a colonel in the U.S. Army Reserves. Dr. Durakovic, who is the
Veterans Administration's nuclear-medicine expert, has characterized DU
as a "threat to humanity."

DU is the latest manifestation of the dangerous low-level radiation that
is a byproduct of U.S. military use of nuclear weapons. Gonzalez cited a
January 2000 federal report on occupational sickness of Department of
Energy personnel that documented 50 years of deliberate government
exposure of military and civilian personnel to radiation.

A 1990 report on the effects of DU, from the U.S. Army Armaments,
Munitions and Chemical Command, was clear: "[L]ong term effects of low
doses [of DU] have been implicated in cancer ... There is no dose so low
that the probability of effect is zero."

Gonzalez was emphatic: "These weapons have to be eliminated or the whole
planet will be contaminated."

RESISTING WAR CRIMES

Navy veteran Dustin Langley of SNAFU (Support Network for an Armed
Forces Union) stated that DU was just one more crime of the U.S. against
its own soldiers, in a line stretching back to exposing troops to atomic
testing during the Cold War and Agent Orange in Vietnam.

He described how soldiers--working people forced to enlist by the
"poverty draft"--come home with contaminated equipment, store it in the
garage or laundry room, and sicken their own families. "DU doesn't wash
off with Tide," he said.

Langley urged the crowd to join the IAC and SNAFU in turning out for the
June 5 March on Washington to end the U.S. occu pation of Iraq,
Palestine, Haiti, the Philippines, Korea and everywhere. He indicted the
Bush administration as a regime that is "stockpiling weapons of mass
destruction, using them against its own people, and funding a worldwide
network of terrorism" through U.S. military aggression. But by "regime
change," he said, he didn't mean the Democrats or Ralph Nader's
campaign.

The solution? "A global mass movement--a multinational, multi-gendered
anti-war movement that will shock and awe the war-makers in Washington."

For inspiration, he pointed to the heroic resistance in Falluja and to
the growing number of U.S. soldiers who refuse to com mit war crimes,
like Marine Corps resister Stephen Funk and Staff Sgt. Camilo Mejia, a
Nicaraguan immigrant sentenced on May 21 to a year's imprisonment. Mejia
would not return to his unit in Iraq, saying, "This is an oil-driven
war."

More inspiration for resistance came from Frank Velgara of the Vieques
Sup port Campaign, who told how on May 3, 2003, a decades-long struggle
by determined Puerto Rican activists shut down the U.S. Navy bombing
range in Vieques, a "victory against the most powerful military in the
world."

Kadouri al-Kaysi, an International Action Center member from Basra,
Iraq, seconded that determination, focusing the evening on action:
"Iraqis want the U.S. out of Iraq. The fight is still going on, and they
will never give up. Most important is to come to Washington on June 5 to
say to the Iraqis: We are with you, not with the U.S. government!"

- END -

(Copyright Workers World Service:

www.ctrl.org
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
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<A HREF="http://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/">ctrl</A>
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