http://www.gulfwarvets.com/greely.htm

40 Years of Government Sponsored Ecological Terrorism

Joyce Riley vonKleist, RN BSN

Captain, USAF, inactive reserve

When beginning an investigation of any kind, one must accept the inevitability that 
when going through the process of "leaving no stone unturned", the resulting scatter 
of insects lead to other stones. Such is the case when it comes to the investigation 
of nuclear, chemical and biological exposures and the research and development of 
these insidious weapons of mass destruction.

While researching the history behind the Gulf War experiments, I have been stunned 
almost on a daily basis by the revelations of other experiments conducted by the 
Department of Defense and the CIA on the American civilian and military population. 
Our most recent discovery is the that the Department of the Army was conducting 
biological, chemical and nuclear experiments at Ft. Greeley, Alaska and the town of 
Delta Junction, Alaska.

The documentation for the information that follows was taken from a 60-page report 
that included maps, photos and charts I received in a brown manila envelope entitled:

INSTALLATION ASSESSMENT OF GERSTLE RIVER TEST SITE:
RECORDS EVALUATION REPORT NO. 105, VOLUME 1
December 1976
Department of the Army Office of the Project Manager for
Chemical Demilitarization and Installation Restoration
Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland 21010

FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY

Do not think that the date of 1976 automatically relegates this information to a place 
in the past. This document merely reports the military activities and involvement up 
to that time. Information received recently from the Ft. Greely area leads us to 
believe that the experiments conducted in the past have continued to the present and 
that they are now affecting the health and welfare of not only the military and 
indigenous peoples who reside in that geographical area, but also the animals who 
migrate through the test site. We have received reports from both the U.S. and 
Canadian authorities claiming there are dramatically increased incidences of cancer, 
thyroid conditions and other illnesses and are investigating the relationship to the 
U.S. initiated testing. The questions we're asking are: "Why are troops rotated in and 
out of Ft. Greely on a six to nine month basis? Why are we getting reports of 
Hashimoto's Thyroiditis and thyroid, spinal and brain cancers? Why are the Canadian 
people becoming sick after eating caribou and buffalo that migrate through the Ft. 
Greely area?"



EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

During August 1976, a Records Research study was conducted at Fort Greely to estimate 
possible contamination at the Gerstle River Test Site by chemical, biological, and 
radiological material, and to assess the possibility of contaminants migrating beyond 
the boundaries of the installation. As a result of the records search survey, it was 
discovered that the same organization, which conducted the chemical agent tests at the 
Gerstle River area, also conducted biological agent tests at the Delta Creek area of 
Fort Greely, Alaska.

Those in charge of this project were Captain James Verney and Captain David Moss of 
the U.S.A. Cold Regions Test Center. They served as points of contact for the 
assessment. Also, Mr. Bert Johns of Dugway Proving Ground was in charge of test 
operations for Dessert Test Center from 1962 to 1967. He possessed intimate knowledge 
of test and surveillance operations conducted at the Gerstle River Test Site during 
this period. There were only five copies of this official report that were to be 
disseminated to the Commander of the U.S. Army Cold Regions Test Center, Ft. Greely 
and Office of the Project Manager for Chemical Demilitarization and Installation 
Restoration, Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland. The American Gulf War Veterans 
Association is grateful to an unknown concerned citizen who provided these documents 
anonymously.



Summary Description of Ft. Greely, Alaska and U.S. Army Cold Regions Test Center (CRTC)

Ft. Greely contains 661,814 acres and lies in the southeastern portion of interior 
Alaska known as the Tanana Lowlands. Its location if 64 degrees North latitude and 145 
degrees, 43 minutes West longitude. The city in closest proximity is Delta Junction, 
which is five miles north. The nearest city of major population is Fairbanks, which is 
100 miles to the northwest. The Alaska Highway and the Richardson Highway pass Fort 
Greely and join at Delta Junction. At the time of the Gerstle River Project 
(1962-1974), the U.S. Army Cold Region Test Center was a tenant activity at Fort 
Greely and had operational control. Quoting from the report: "The Delta Creek area, 
adjacent to the USAF bombing range, was used for biological agent testing from 1963 
through 1967."

HISTORY

Fort Greely, Alaska Wing, Air Transport Command, Big Delta, Alaska, was first occupied 
by Army Troops in 1942. It served as a staging area for aircraft being ferried to 
Russia under the lend-lease agreement. It was later designated as the Army Arctic 
Training Center and in 1953 a permanent post was constructed. In 1964, the U.S Arctic 
Test Board was re-designated the U.S. Army Arctic Test Center. During 1966, the 
General Equipment Test Branch, which was located at Fort Wainwright, was absorbed by 
the Nuclear Biological, Chemical and Special Projects Division at Fort Greely. In 
1976, the U.S. Army Arctic Test Center was re-designated the U.S. Army Cold Regions 
Test Center.

The Gerstle River Test Site, which parallels the Alaska Highway was acquired by the 
U.S. Army in 1952 for an indefinite period and was used by Dugway Proving Ground for 
chemical and high explosive testing from 1954 to 1962. In 1954, Dugway Proving Ground 
(DPG) initiated a comprehensive program for the surveillance testing of chemical and 
biological materials. From 1954 to 1962, a comprehensive Arctic 
Environmental/Surveillance Program on Chemical Corps material was conducted at the 
Gerstle River Test Site (GRTS). Limited cold weather dissemination testing of GB 
(sarin gas and VX, deadly nerve agents) was conducted in this area. (Note: President 
Clinton recently bombed a pharmaceutical plant in Sudan that he stated was producing 
precursor of VX --this has now been proven to have been false as the plant was truly a 
pharmaceutical production facility.) It is indeed startling to find out that our own 
country was, in fact, testing these deadly nerve agents within five miles of the 
inhabitants of Delta Junction, Alaska. Single round, GB-filled (Sarin) munitions were 
tested in the winters of 1955 through 1957. Six trials of VX-filled M23 mines were 
conducted in the winter of 1960-61. The majority of testing at the Gerstle River Army 
Test Site was with single round, statically fired, chemical munitions. However, GB 
filled 155mm howitzer shells were dynamically fired into spruce forests.

Sarin Gas, VX nerve agent, high explosives, (including mines, projectiles and rockets) 
as well as BLU 19/B23 bombs and bomblets, M23 Land Mines, M55 Rockets, 155mm 
Howitzers, and M121A-1 shells, were tested under the Codenames of: Whistle Down, Elk 
Hunt, Devil Hole, Swamp Oak, Sundown and Dew Point.

One very embarrassing situation occurred according to the report:

"Blueberry Lake became a controversial subject during the 1969/1979 period and to date 
is a sensitive issue. In the winter of 1965, a number of chemical munitions were 
stored on the ice of Blueberry Lake for ultimate disposal during the same year. For 
unknown reasons, the shells were neglected and finally sank to the bottom of the lake 
during the spring thaw. The incident became known sometime in 1969. Approximately 231 
105mm Projectiles, M55 Rockets and cylinders sank to the bottom of the lake containing 
Sarin gas GA and HD (mustard gas) and VX nerve agent."

To add insult to injury, thousands of pounds of herbicides including 2,4D (does the 
name Agent Orange ring a bell?) 2-4-Dichlorophenoxyacetic acid, 2,4,5-T 
(Trichlorophenoxyacetic acid isooctyl ester, Alkanolamine salts, Dinitro-o-sec-1 
tylphenol were utilized on the area.



BIOLOGICAL TESTING

Biological Testing was conducted from December 1963 through August 25th, 1967 under

Codename projects Night Train, West Side I, Special Study Alaska and Rev. Cloud. The 
munitions utilized were; A/B 45Y Spray Tanks using F100 and F105 aircraft, bomblets, 
dispensers and Disseminators. During the "Special Study Alaska", biological infectious 
agents Serratia Marcescens, E coli, and LVS (not determined) were mixed together for 
trials totaling 264 liters of agent that were aerially dispersed.



LEGAL CLAIMS

In the early 1970's, the Gerstle River Test Site at Fort Greely became a matter of 
controversy for Alaskan politicians in Washington, D.C. The discovery that the U.S. 
Army had conducted chemical and biological tests brought about accusations that the 
U.S. Army was responsible for the deaths of various animals in Delta Junction, the 
paralysis of two children and an outbreak of Tularemia. All claims prior to 1972 
should be on file at the U.S. Army Claims Service at Fort Meade, Maryland, or the 
Office of the Judge Advocate General (OTJAG), Litigation Division, Washington, D.C.



RECENT DEVELOPMENTS

The wife of a serviceman who was stationed at Ft. Greely, Alaska, from 1990-92 
recently contacted me. Laura Cuozzo is a 29 year old housewife and mother of four 
children. She has single handedly re-opened the investigation into what has been 
happening at Ft. Greely over the past 30 years. Her story explains the heartache the 
civilian and military populations have been subjected to as a result of living and 
working in a nuclear, biological and chemical playground. The following is her 
statement and testimony:



Disturbing information about Ft. Greely

John & Laura Cuozzo
Telephone 813-969-0110
email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
17409 Darby Lane
Lutz, FL 33549


Today I wish to share with you events which are taking place half a world away, yet 
affect every American citizen. Fort Greely and the sleepy town outside of it, Delta 
Junction, are located in the "Middle of Nowhere", Alaska. Actually they are about 100 
miles south of Fairbanks. The simple people there live in the Land of the Midnight 
Sun. They are rugged individualists making their way on the Last Frontier. There is no 
crime rate there, for often it is too cold to venture out, yet a great crime is being 
committed there. No one cares because the location is remote, the population is few 
and virtually no one knows these places exist. This strategy had worked well for the 
U.S. Army so far. This discussion involves utter disregard for humanity and our 
environment. It is my intention to prove unequivocally that Ft. Greely has been used 
as a nuclear, chemical and biological weapons test site that has jeopardized the 
welfare and safety of its inhabitants for over 40 years. I will first relate many 
experiences encountered while living on Ft. Greely, their relationship to events 
taking place today and the results of on-going research.

First of all, I will outline important events which occurred on Ft. Greely during the 
period of October 29, 1990 until September 30, 1992. These facts have been compiled 
from my own recollection, the recollection of others present at the time and a photo 
albums which chronicles our stay. A vast majority of the photographs are labeled with 
dates and places.

The following events took place between December of 1990 until April of 1991:

I. SPC John W. Cuozzo, my husband, and CPL Jason F. Kelly were assigned to the MEDDAC 
unit as x-ray technologists. One day a team of men arrived, escorted by First Sgt. 
Steven Stenger, to investigate rumors of leakage on the base. Each member of the team 
suited up in radioactive protective clothing and was assigned a dosimeter by my 
husband. The team explained to John that they did indeed discover a leak and would 
stay to build a wall casing around the tank. He was told that there was nothing to 
worry about and explained to me that we were to tell no one else on the base about 
this matter.

II. During the Persian Gulf War, special readiness exercises were held at Ft. Greely. 
Airplanes from Eielson Air Force Base flew over all day dropping bombs out on the 
range. What distinguished these exercises from any others? Were they using depleted 
uranium?

III. Also during the Persian Gulf War, a study was done at the clinic. There was a 
campaign to test the lung capacity of people living and working on the base. It 
included those not entitled to receive health care at the clinic. When I went down to 
have it done and casually asked Cpt. David Peterson, R.N. why they were giving away 
free lung capacity examinations, he explained that he did not know. He was to recruit 
volunteers and report the findings. When my sister, Heather Breece, came to live with 
us in April of 1991, I brought her over to the clinic for lung testing because she 
smoked cigarettes, but by then the study had ended. Why was the Army interested in 
testing the lungs of everyone from the area?

IV. In the early months of 1991, I began experiencing extreme joint pain throughout my 
entire body. Every evening the pains came on strong. We deduced that the extreme 
arctic temperatures were wreaking havoc on my body, but no amount of warmth could 
subdue the pain. The next two events took place in the summer of 1991:

1. One day in August Sgt. Don Jenkins, John Vitek (a friend staying with us), John, 
Heather and myself decided to do some sightseeing in the area. We decided to climb 
Donnely's Dome located on Texas Range on Ft. Greely. We drove to the location, but did 
not see the path that everyone else takes to reach the summit. John Vitek and I had 
been climbing most of the way together until I separated from the rest of the group 
and moved further to the left in an effort to find the path and take the easy way up. 
I climbed through small bushes onto an area of open tundra. The mountain was so steep 
that my knees were in my chin and my hands were touching the tundra. At that point 
something happened. It felt as if my body had suddenly become attacked. Every lymph 
node on my head and neck swelled up. I experienced a strange headache and nausea. 
Panicking, I looked beneath me to see what had caused this. Realizing that my body's 
awkward position prevented this, I mistakenly moved further to the left and sat far 
enough away from the spot, but close enough to scope out the area. There was 
absolutely nothing to be detected. Unfortunately, my only choice was to retrace my 
steps to return to the group. I risked leaping over the area and rolling down the 
mountain side rather than touching the spot again. I returned to the group and watched 
as they went ahead to the top. That evening the pain became immense. Upon examination, 
John had found that the lymph nodes on my head had swelled up to the size of marbles. 
I remember that for two nights I could only sleep on my face which made it difficult 
to breathe, but I do not remember whether the incident had taken place on Saturday or 
Sunday. On Monday morning I was examined at the clinic. The doctor felt sure that this 
condition was due to a thyroid problem. He explained that he should be able to detect 
an infection somewhere in my body. He ran the tests, but the results came back 
negative. My condition perplexed him and he reran the tests, thinking that the lab had 
made an error, yet once again the results were negative.  Eventually the lymph nodes 
returned to normal, yet the headaches and nausea persisted for years. They would best 
be described as sublime and omnipresent.

2. The Army began conducting extensive radon testing of the base. Every family took 
turns relocating to the base motel for a period of days so that their housing could be 
tested. Then every soldier was asked to stay at the motel while their barracks were 
tested. My sister remembers our stay very well because at the time John had attended a 
buffalo cookout in Delta Junction. He brought back buffalo sloppy joes and buffalo 
steak which she simply refused to eat.  Eventually an entire barracks was condemned 
and the soldiers were asked to cram into another building. Sgt. Jenkins, along with 
another soldier, asked special permission to remain and it was allowed. Why was the 
entire base relocated out of their quarters when a simple radon detector in our 
basements would have sufficed? Why was Sgt. Jenkins permitted to reside in a condemned 
barracks?

Sometime between April of 1991 until Thanksgiving Day, 1991 the following event 
occurred:

Heather had been experiencing chronic fatigue, sharp pains in her uterus and spotting. 
One evening we took her to the emergency room at the clinic. Upon our arrival, Sgt. 
Jenkins, who worked as a medic in the ER, asked us if we were there because we had the 
flu. He explained that it was a very busy time because everyone was getting ill on 
base. Heather was examined, tests were run, the results came back negative, the 
condition went undiagnosed and persisted until a few months after leaving Ft. Greely.

The following events took place from the winter of 1991 until September 30, 1992:

1. Before becoming employed at the Post Exchange, I signed up as a Red Cross 
Volunteer. Mrs. Lewis was the head of the volunteer effort and had two small children. 
These children were always sick, pale and extremely thin, but the first thing everyone 
noticed about these children was their lack of hair. The mother and I once had a 
discussion about her children's health. She told me that their hair simply would not 
grow in some areas and in other areas would only come in silky fine. They looked like 
chemotherapy patients. She told me that both of her children had lived on Ft. Greely 
all of their little lives (her husband kept requesting extensions) and that the only 
meat they ever ate was the moose stored in their freezer from hunting season. They 
were poor and her husband hunted during the season so they could spend less money on 
their food bills throughout the year. She told me that the meat did not taste right to 
her and she suspected that it may have been the cause of her children's illness. She 
tried to buy beef at the commissary, but the children, not being accustomed to the 
taste, would not eat it and her husband had forbid her to waste any more money. She 
had taken them to doctors who could find nothing wrong with the children. Their 
father, Sgt. Lonnie Lewis, was assigned to MEDDAC, but attached to the Gerstle River 
Test Site (CRTC). He was becoming increasingly ill and no one could diagnose his 
problem.

2. While working at the Post Exchange, I began to get to know many others living on 
the base. It bothered me to discover that 5 people I knew had cancer. Two had ovarian, 
one cervical and I do not recall what types the men had. It struck me as odd that 
amongst such a small population at least 5 had cancer. How many more had been 
diagnosed? There seemed to be only one link unifying them all. All had lived on base 
past their original two year tour. All had asked for extensions.

3. Shortly before my family left Ft. Greely, orders came down that no one would be 
allowed to remain on base past their one or two year orders and that there would be 
absolutely no exceptions.

4. The last thing I did before leaving Fort Greely was to ensure proper health care 
for pregnant women on base. We were told that the OB/GYNs at Ft. Wainwright did not 
feel like making the monthly trip down to Ft. Greely and that we were to be examined 
by a M.D. on base instead. This seemed unacceptable to me and despite my husband's 
fears of backlash from the chain of command, I marched into the Base Commander's 
office on his first day-- what a welcoming committee. I demanded to know why the 
medical staff of Ft. Wainwright was too lazy to send one OB/GYN once a month to Ft. 
Greely, had asked that the women travel to Fairbanks instead and now were refusing to 
treat us altogether. He explained that he did not know their reasons, but that the 
entire group of OB/GYNs had banded together and were led by a Major. They were all 
determined to defy orders and there was nothing he could do. It was only when I 
threatened to contact every women's rights organization and the media that the Base 
Commander assured me that he would take care of the matter. My husband experienced no 
backlash from this issue and it was never mentioned again. From that point on and till 
this day, Ft. Wainwright sends an OB/GYN once a month to Ft. Greely. Why did the 
doctors really not want to come to Greely and refuse to treat us? What had they 
noticed about the residents of Ft. Greely?

As you can plainly see, many extraordinary things occurred during our time there. It 
has taken a great amount of courage to come forward with this information when I know 
it will be at first taken with disbelief. If lie detector tests, psychological 
examinations and physical examinations are called for, I will gladly comply. I welcome 
any effort to back the authenticity of this testimony for I am not lying, nor am I 
crazy, but I am ill and so are a great many others in this country and around the 
world.  Affidavits are coming from many of those mentioned above. When the others are 
found I expect theirs as well. This was my first experience dealing with the military, 
I was anxious to re-enter the real world and put it all behind me. Two things have 
hampered this: my health and my conscience. John had opted for an early out, received 
an Honorable Discharge and we moved to Tampa, Florida. It was here that my cognitive 
struggle began for I quickly realized that my ability to communicate with others was 
hampered by moments of confusion and of total memory loss. In 1988 I had taken the 
Army's entrance exam.  This exam is well noted for its accuracy in determining I.Q. 
levels. My score fell within the top 10% and at the enlistment center they offered me 
a MOS in Military Intelligence learning Czechoslovakian, yet now I am sometimes unable 
to carry on a simple conversation. It has been a humbling experience.

In March of 1994, an OB/GYN discovered a lump in my throat and urged me to have it 
checked out. After many tests, I underwent a very risky surgery to have the right side 
of my thyroid removed. The biopsy revealed papillary thyroid cancer. Papillary thyroid 
cancer can ONLY be acquired from radiation poisoning or fallout. Now there are 
radiation treatments, various tests and the use of Synthroid for the rest of my life. 
Strangely, after the tumor had been removed, the daily headaches and nausea 
disappeared and the pain in my joints has greatly lessened. Further testing revealed 
Hashimoto's disease. You have a better chance of being struck by lightening than 
getting this extremely rare condition. It is an immune system disorder relevant to a 
defective gene. That is what radiation does to your genes. It does not always outright 
attack them; it alters them.

Now that you have discovered my motives, I would like to inform you of all the 
information acquired as a result of private research. After reading reports of human 
radiation experimentation conducted by the Air Force in Alaska involving radioactive 
isotope iodine 131 (this is what gives many people thyroid cancer), I began to make a 
few phone calls.   The Institute for Energy and Environmental Research suggested that 
I may have gotten thyroid cancer as a result of drinking milk that had been 
contaminated with fallout as a child. Their representative explained that low 
exposures of iodine 131 over a long period of time can cause thyroid cancer and that 
it takes five years to develop. The only problem with this theory is that as child I 
never drank milk. I have lactose intolerance and the physician at the time instructed 
my mother and grandmother to not give me any milk products. I also did not grow up in 
a state which received high levels of fallout according to the National Cancer 
Association.

On July 21, 1998 per a telephone conversation with Cathy Lemar, Executive Director of 
the Military Toxics Project, I was informed that Ft. Greely has radioactive materials 
stored on site. She has sent me a copy of the Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) 
report on Ft. Greely in which it states, "Begin removal of contaminated pipe and 
associated soil from nuclear power plant cooling water waste line in FY97" She also 
made me fully aware and has sent documentation of the role depleted uranium plays in 
giving people thyroid cancer. This new awareness was an encouragement to probe further.

To my amazement there is a wealth of information available on the internet. To 
understand the history of Fort Greely, you must understand that it is also called by 
two other names: the Northern Warfare Training Center and the Cold Regions Testing 
Center. Every year NWTC hosts troops from all over the country, including West Point 
Cadets, to train on its ranges and rivers. CRTC is responsible for a plethora of 
testing on Ft. Greely.  As part of the Cold War effort to develop and test nuclear 
weapons, Ft. Greely was chosen as a site to place the Atomic Energy commission's SM-1A 
reactor. The SM-1A was a medium sized, fixed-base (as opposed to portable), 
pressurized water nuclear power plant. Experiments were conducted there and called 
"Project Greely" during the years of 1964 and 1965. During the years of 1966 and 1967 
I have found reports referring to the "Greely Event". NASA conducted nuclear tests 
from 1966 until 1970.

Project Greely Titles
"Overexposure at SM-1A reactor, Fort Greely, Alaska"
"Possible high radiation exposures at the SM-1A nuclear power plant (List of men to be 
subject to high exposures during reactor refueling)"
"Overexposure to ionizing radiation at SM-1A"
"Memo to file, subject: Selection of contractor for analytical work on SM-1A"
"Memo to JE Reeves, Et Al, Subject: Interim report of offsite surveillance for Project 
Greely"

Greely Event Titles
"Memo to O.R. Placak, Subject: Preliminary report for the Greely Event"
"Information meeting 650, 11:20 a.m., Wednesday, December 21, Chairman's
Conference Room, D.C. Office (Assignment of U.S. Personnel at IAEA, Rt on 12/20 Greely 
Event, Project Cabriolet, Etc)"

NASA Titles
"Neutron spectral considerations affecting projected estimates of radiation 
embrittlement of the Army SM-1A reactor pressure vessel"
"Inspection of europium-bearing control rods from the Army SM-1A stationary medium 
power reactor"
"SM-1A core 4 design analysis Final report"
"Postirradiation examination of fuel elements from core 1 and core 2 of the Army SM-1A 
stationary medium power reactor"
"SM-1A core 4 loading and startup core physics test report Final report"
"SM-1A reactor pressure vessel surveillance - Irradiation of follow-on capsules in the 
SM-1 reactor"

Mayor Glenn Wright has reported speaking to a lifelong resident of Delta Junction. As 
a child in elementary school she had remembered being told that  a small incident had 
occurred with the reactor. The school children were  asked to place cups on their 
desks every morning and they were collected  after the children left at night. She had 
always thought that this was done to collect and measure radioactive fallout.

The following information is from the EPA. Ft. Greely has two Superfund locations. The 
first one is Superfund ID# AK2210890115 and there is no detailed information available 
from their web site about it. The second is Superfund ID# AK8214522155. Its EPA# is 
AK9214522345 and it also has a Hazardous Waste Report and an AIRS report. On these   
reports I found containers that have an illegal status and an operator status that 
reads, "INACTIVE/CLOSING, BUT NOT YET RCRA CLOSED". Admittedly these reports are all 
new to me and I am missing a great deal of information that would be in a more 
detailed report, yet the "NOT YET RCRA CLOSED" gives us quite a bit of information.

The Institute for Energy and Environmental Research's On-Line Classroom gives detailed 
information about the classification of radioactive waste. "Transuranic Waste (TRU): 
Waste containing elements with atomic numbers (number of protons) greater than 92, the 
atomic number of uranium. (Thus the term 'transuranic,' or 'above uranium.') TRU 
includes only waste material that contains transuranic elements with half-lives 
greater than 20 years and concentrations greater than 100 nanocuries per gram. If the 
concentrations of the half-lives are below the limits, it is possible for waste to 
have transurnaic elements but not be classified as TRU waste. In both the commercial 
and military sectors, some of the radioactive wastes generated are mixed with 
hazardous substances, such as organic solvents or other toxic chemicals. Much of this 
waste (especially the transuranic waste) contains substantial quantities of long-lived 
radionuclides, such as plutonium-239 and technetium-99. The radioactive components of 
mixed wastes are regulated under the Atomic Energy Act by the Nuclear Regulatory 
Commission for commercial sources, and by the Department of Energy for military 
sources. The hazardous components, however, are subject to regulation by the 
Environmental Protection Agency according to an environmental law known as the 
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA)". I am also very interested in finding 
out whether RCRA is responsible for handling chemical and biological agents as well.

When discussing Alaska, the term "phenomena" will frequently arise. Scientific 
phenomena take place there which take place no where else on this earth. Has our 
military, which should be the expert in this area due to their years of research, made 
others aware of such phenomena? According to the "Cold Weather Decontamination Study 
by Joseph C. Maloney, July 1960, Radiologic Laboratory, U.S. Army Chemical Research 
and Development Laboratories, Army Chemical Center, Maryland" it states, 'The vertical 
movement of deposited solid fallout into the ground is negligible under temperate 
condition, and a similar circumstance would be encountered when the ground is frozen. 
however, the fallout may settle through snow and ice by a combination of gravity and 
thermal action. Since the location of the fallout with respect to the surface of 
either snow or ice will determine the decontamination procedure to be followed, it is 
necessary to understand the phenomena associated with fallout migration. The NCEL has 
reported that sand, deposited on snow, migrated a maximum vertical distance of 1-1/2 
inches until solar radiation no longer had an effect. Little else is known of this 
phenomena and consequently further information is required'. Might other phenomena 
might take place there in relation to nuclear, chemical and biological contamination? 
Former U.S. Senator Frank H. Murkowski in his 1993 speech, "The Environmental Legacy 
of the Cold War", states, 'More recently the Department of Defense issued an interim 
report listing sites at Fort Greely, Fort Wainwright, Adak, Dutch Harbor and Attu 
where chemical weapons were or may have been tested, stored or discarded'.

I have also learned that Army dosimeters were specifically designed to pick up any 
form of ionizing radiation, not only the kind used in x-rays, but also ionizing 
radiation emitted from reactors. John's and Jason's dosimeter results always came back 
o.k., but if they were the only two people on base wearing dosimeters, how else was 
the leak discovered if the tanks were buried underground. If their dosimeter results 
were truly all right then the Army's only other clue that radiation was leaking had to 
come from the number of people coming down with cancer on base.

And now I turn to an article entitled, "B-2 successfully drops improved bunker buster 
bomb", written by Senior Airman Adam Stump of the 354th Fighter Wings, Public Affairs, 
released March 26, 1998. The article boasts "A B-2 Spirit bomber dropped two B61-11 
bomb shells to test their improved ground penetration capability March 17 at the 
Stuart Creek Impact Area, 35 miles southeast of Fairbanks". It goes on to say "The 
B61-11 is a new modification to a nuclear weapon that has been in the Air Force 
inventory since the 1960's". "The bomb cases contained simulated nuclear components 
made of depleted uranium...". The writer of the article goes on to explain the 
scientific experiment and attempts to assure the public that no danger exists. Did 
Eielson drop depleted uranium bombs on a Ft. Greely range during Operation Desert 
Storm and later attempt to test our lungs to ascertain whether or not the radioactive 
material we inhaled impaired our lung capacity? How long have they been testing 
depleted uranium on Ft. Greely?

The Mayor of Delta Junction, Mr. Glenn Wright, told me that aviation tanks located on 
Ft. Greely and Delta Junction were removed due to radioactive contamination. Certainly 
it is logical to deduce that these tanks took part in depleted uranium exercises out 
on the range. In a Newsletter of the Military Toxics Project, First Quarter-1997, 
called Touching Bases, there appears a letter from Mary Grisco, Chair, Military 
Accountability Committee, Sierra Club, Alaska Chapter--January 8, 1996 which states, 
"Ft. Greeley, outside of Fairbanks, contains many unexploded ordinance as well as 
storage areas of unidentified weapons. Neighbors complain of headaches and nausea and 
wildlife (their subsistence) tasting 'funny'. Ft. Greely continues training while 
issuing statements that public health is not being threatened".

According to a Central Intelligence Agency document entitled, "Radiation Sickness or 
Death Caused by Surreptitious Administration of Ionizing Radiation to an Individual", 
it states, 'In 1954, a Soviet Secret Agent, Mikolai Khokhlov, gave himself up to U.S. 
authorities rather than carry out an assassination in West Germany. He subsequently 
joined the emigrant Russian revolutionary movement centered in West Germany. In 1957, 
while attending a Frankfurt conference, he became sick with nausea, vomiting and 
fainting.' It goes on to say, 'Thallium poisoning was suspected. On review of his 
activities on the day he became sick, he recalled a bad-tasting cup of coffee after 
his speech; he thought this coffee may have been poisoned'. This is exactly what 
residents of Ft. Greely and Delta Junction have been complaining about for a very long 
time. The date of this document is 1969,  so it is quite obvious that our government 
has been fully aware of the   situation and has refused to act responsibly in this 
regard.

At the DOE Openness: Human Radiation Experiments website, located at 
tis-nt.eh.doe.gov/ohre/, I searched the archives, performed a fielded search, and 
typed in the terms "Greely" and then "Gerstle". Our own government has already 
admitted to nuclear testing that occurred on Ft. Greely that had resulted in fallout. 
They have admitted to chemical testing performed on soldiers at Ft. Greely without 
their knowledge. It is here that you will find the admission from our government that 
these tests occurred at the expense of residents of Ft. Greely and Delta Junction and 
that our government simply did not care. They placed the importance of these tests 
above the safety and welfare of the very citizens it professed to protect.

And lastly, the most striking evidence to date has come from Mrs. Joyce Riley, head of 
the American Gulf War Veterans Association. This previously classified document is 
entitled,
"Installation Assessment of Gerstle River Test Site,
Records Evaluation Report No. 105, Volume 1,
December 1976,
Department of the Army,
Office of the Project Manager for Chemical Demilitarization and Installation 
Restoration,
Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland 21010,
For Official Use Only".
It begins with this statement, 'During 1976, a Records Research (R/R) study was 
conducted at Fort Greely to establish possible contamination at the Gerstle River Test 
Site by chemical, biological, and radioactive material, and to assess the possibility 
of contaminants migrating beyond the boundaries of the installation'. At least three 
times it is explained that this report is incomplete because they were unable to 
obtain all of the data for these tests. It states, 'Only the main post of Fort Greely 
is improved. The outlying test sites - Gerstle River, Delta Creek, Bolio Lake, Beales 
Range, Texas Range - are considered semi-improved, with mostly temporary structures.  
Although Fort Greely is not a U.S. Army Test and Evaluation Command (USATECOM) 
installation, the U.S. Army Cold Regions Test Center (a tenant activity at Fort 
Greely) has operational control of Fort Greely. Chemical, biological, and 
dud-producing high explosive munitions (and riot control munitions) have been employed 
in these areas in recent years. The Cold Regions Test Center also uses these ranges 
for environmental testing. The same area is used by the 172d Infantry Brigade (Alaska) 
for training. Civilian use of the area is almost entirely recreational'

How many people have been exposed to these ranges over the years? By shipping most of 
its personnel out every one or two years and bringing in new soldiers and families, by 
training other companies of soldiers from all over America and even inviting private 
enterprise to train employees there, it seems that the numbers of people potentially 
exposed are astounding. In reference to the Gerstle River Test Site, this report 
states, 'The land is unsuitable for agricultural purposes'. In another section it 
states, 'Hunting is not allowed at Fort Greely. The entire post, with post cantonment 
and areas immediately adjacent to roads and recreational lakes, is not open to general 
hunting and trapping'. Well, people sure are hunting there now and  these same people 
are getting ill because of it. Every year, Delta  Junction holds a buffalo cookout. 
These buffalo roam all over Texas range, eat the groundcover prepared for them, and 
the people eat the buffalo. The U.S. Army has no way of controlling moose who might 
wander into those areas to graze and must be held accountable to those who subsist off 
of that meat.

'In the early 1970's, the Gerstle River Test Site at Fort Greely became a matter of 
controversy for Alaskan politicians in Washington, D.C. The discovery that the U.S. 
Army had conducted chemical and biological tests at Fort Greely initiated an intense 
investigation. Numerous articles appeared in local papers, federal releases, and 
national television accusing the U.S. Army of being responsible for the deaths of 
various animals in Delta Junction, Alaska, approximately 10 miles from Fort Greely. 
Newspaper articles also accused the U.S. Army of being responsible for the paralysis 
of two children in Fairbanks, Alaska, and an outbreak of tularemia in Vermont in 1968, 
in addition to many other accusations. There has been no evidence or scientific proof 
to link the Alaska tests with any of the above accusations'. Old habits die hard and 
once again people are asking for explanations.

'Earth-covered ammunition storage magazines are overgrown with natural grasses, 
Kentucky Bluegrass, and Artca Red Fescue. The goal is to camouflage the nature of the 
facility from aerial observation and four or five more years of undisturbed growth 
will complete the program'. And yet, '..the Team cannot vouch for the accuracy of the 
data'. How can anyone be sure that all nuclear, chemical and biological weapons have 
been removed from the area. They can not, nor do they care to find out.  Many of the 
symptoms I experience are the same symptoms experienced by the Gulf War Veterans, yet 
I was never there. Before moving to Ft. Greely I was an extremely healthy and vibrant 
person who never had any need to visit a physician. Now I am a sick 29 year old 
housewife and mother of four. Shall I, like a hypocrite, go with my family to church 
every Sunday and turn my back on this issue? To the contrary, every stone must be 
overturned. This type of knowledge requires responsibility and is an extremely 
delicate matter. Before her transfer back to the lower 48, my girlfriend confided that 
she had ovarian cancer. She told me that it had spread so quickly  that she had only 
months to live. Her face of anguish haunts me. My   husband, John, has for many years 
now discouraged me from trying to find  out exactly what happened on Ft. Greely. He is 
a veteran and the idea  that the military would do anything like this is almost like 
blasphemy to  him. As a patriotic American, it is not my intention to disgrace the 
military  in any way, rather, as a Christian woman, I feel a moral obligation to have 
this matter addressed and investigated further.

It is especially important that the military be held accountable before they pull out 
in the year 2001 and leave the Delta Junction community and the state of Alaska with 
this mess. Up to this date they have not been forthright in their findings concerning 
the human health situation and environmental contamination. Those who passed through 
Fort Greely may be suffering and dying without even realizing why.

Don Jenkins recalls, "Come to think of it, that is all we ever treated people on 
Greely for: headache and nausea with accompanying flu like symptoms. Besides that, we 
treated soldiers for broken bones which were the result of training exercises. For a 
three month period of time we had a real problem on Greely and were very worried. 
Everyone was coming in with these symptoms. We did not treat them, just ensured they 
did not become dehydrated."

Mr. Jenkins is extremely ill these days. He served his nation in the Gulf and then on 
Greely. Don was told that he is by far the sickest man to come out of the Fox Trot 122 
Main Support Battalion and it is no wonder. The variety of symptoms he experiences 
include: gastrointestinal problems, loose bowel syndrome, headaches, chronic fatigue, 
swelling of lymph nodes with those on the right side of his neck very pronounced, 
respiratory problems, extreme joint pain and weakness, and stabbing pains due to 
noticeable liver swelling. For his meritorious duty, he has been rewarded with slaps 
in the face by our government and has no cheek left to turn.

John Vitek also has the Gulf War Syndrome. His stay on Greely had been brief. John has 
been consulting physicians ever since returning from Alaska for aches in his joints, 
muscle spasms, headaches, memory loss, ringing in the ears and stiff necks due to 
lymph node swelling . No one has been able to diagnose him. After relaying this 
information to him, he said, "Thank you. It is such a comfort to know why I am ill. 
Thank you so much".

Heather Breece still experiences chronic fatigue and just feels sick all of the time.

Jason Kelly said, "One thing I do recall about my health on Ft. Greely is that I was 
always tired and worn down. All day long in the clinic I felt tired and worn down. I 
always remember that". After Jason left Ft. Greely, he returned to feeling healthy 
again.

My husband, John received 12 hours of sleep a night while on Ft. Greely and never woke 
up feeling refreshed. Today he is in good health.

The U.S. Army may have slowed me down by inflicting this disease upon me, but I have 
not been stopped, nor will I stop until their reckless actions of nuclear, chemical 
and biological weapons testing have been stopped. How many times must the face of 
humanity be slapped before he rises up and cries, "JUSTICE!"? America, we lived and 
worked on a nuclear, chemical and biological weapons playground. Today many of us are 
ill. It is just this simple. Our government has perpetrated The Gulf War Illness upon 
this nation's people. Today I am calling for a revolution of Truth in this country. I 
am calling every good American to arms. Arm yourself with Truth. Truth is our 
government's greatest enemy. Truth shall prevail every time. It is only when we are 
once again armed with Truth that our nation will be great. As these words leave you 
now, sing to yourself the words of "America the Beautiful"� and weep.

UPDATE: After contacting Laura Cuozzo and realizing that innocent people were still 
being subjected to the aftereffects of nuclear, chemical and biological testing, I was 
contacted by representatives of the Canadian Parliament. They are now asking serious 
questions involving the experiments, which may have a direct effect on the caribou 
migration into Alaska and throughout the northwest. To satisfy my curiosity about the 
health effects on the civilian residents of Delta Junction, I contacted Delta Junction 
City Hall, the Public Health Nurse, the one local physician and several others. They 
confirmed to me that the incidence of rare tumors and cancers appears to be much 
higher than that found in the general population. Bolio Lake no longer has any fish in 
it and several areas on the base are totally off limits.

It is because of the real American Patriot's such as Laura Cuozzo and magazines like 
the Free American that we are still able to disclose information vital to the health 
and well being of all Liberty loving Americans. We must be our own advocates and 
research these issues as if our very lives depend upon them---BECAUSE THEY DO. We have 
heard ad nauseam of the experiments conducted on unwitting American children, the 
mentally retarded, prisoners and also the military. It is time the experiments be 
revealed, individuals be justly compensated and prosecution be pursued with regard to 
those who have perpetrated these illnesses and diseases on the very people the 
Constitution, Declaration of Independence, the Bill of Rights and the Nuremberg Code 
was designed to protect.

If you have information on this or any other experiments regarding nuclear, biological 
or chemical testing, please contact the American Gulf War Veterans Association:

3506 Highway 6 So. #117, Sugarland, Tx. 77478-4401, 1-800-231-7631

There can be a million lies; there is only one truth. We will continue to bring you 
the truth.

For God and Country,

Joyce Riley vonKleist & Dave vonKleist

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