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Sent: Monday, November 15, 1999 4:50 PM
To: Multiple recipients of list OK-SUSTAINABILITY
Subject: Our legacy of shame



Newsweek

Of Peace and Poison By Ron Moreau

Miscarriages, birth defects, chronic illnesses and early deaths�but no one
can prove that Agent Orange caused them.

Roughly a quarter century after the Vietnam War, the vestiges of the Ho Chi
Minh Trail run through a nightmare landscape. Vast swaths of blighted
countryside, once dense forest, now support almost no vegetation but the
coarse weed known locally as American grass, useless for feeding humans,
livestock or most wildlife. The afflicted region�s inhabitants, about 5
million all told, get much of their dietary protein from fish raised in
decades-old bomb craters. But the real horror is in the people�s eyes. For
more than a generation, practically every family in this stretch of central
Vietnam has endured a medical hell of repeated miscarriages, crippling birth
defects, chronic illnesses and untimely deaths.

This is the heart of Agent Orange country. From 1961 to 1971, U.S. warplanes
deluged strategic sectors of southern Vietnam from Quang Tri province to the
Mekong Delta with more than 20 million gallons of chemical herbicide, of
which 60 percent was Agent Orange. The Hanoi government says that as many as
600,000 Vietnamese have fallen victim to serious illnesses from exposure to
the defoliants. The chemicals� manufacturers and the U.S. government dispute
any such figure. They say no one has ever produced conclusive scientific
proof that the herbicides caused those medical problems. They blame a whole
range of other factors such as disease, malnutrition and lack of health
care.

Even so, researchers keep piling up unsettling evidence. The Ho Chi Minh
Trail region, still not entirely open to foreigners, offers a huge natural
lab-oratory. Late last year Hatfield Consultants, an independent
environmental-assessment firm based in Canada, published a report summing up
a four-year series of medical investigations in the A Luoi valley, some 65
kilometers west of Hue. The study, funded largely by Canadian government
agencies and conducted with Vietnamese doctors� help, found extraordinary
levels of TCDD, an extremely toxic form of dioxin that existed as an
unwanted contaminant in Agent Orange. The toxin was everywhere: in the soil,
in the fish and in the children�s bloodstreams. We have to get a handle on
this problem, says Chris Hatfield, the company�s president. If something�s
not done, and soon, this problem could haunt Vietnam for another 10, 15, 20
years or longer.

Just about everyone of war age here has stories of getting caught in the
milky fog, as it�s often described. Immediate symptoms of exposure included
runny nose, weeping eyes, nausea, respiratory difficulty, dizziness and skin
rashes. Trees lost their leaves in three to five days, and fruit quickly
spoiled. Chemical makers continue to insist that Agent Orange is not toxic
to fish, fauna and people. Even so, most elders in A Luoi say after heavy
sprayings they would find fish and other animals dead or dying�frogs, rats,
snakes, even wild pigs in the forest. Sometimes the villagers would cook and
eat the scavenged meat. When you�re hungry, you�ll eat anything, says Kan
Nghia, 52, a former guerrilla in A Luoi. She gradually lost the use of her
legs in 1968 and is now paralyzed from the waist down. Her problem is not
uncommon in the valley. Vietnamese researchers suspect that heavy doses of
TCDD can cause permanent nerve damage, but they lack the lab resources to
test the theory properly.

The Hatfield team was especially disturbed by what they found in the young.
Physical deformities and severe mental handicaps are frighteningly common.
So are miscarriages and stillborn monster fetuses, as locals call them. Even
more troubling, in some cases the young had blood levels of dioxin even
higher than their elders�. Once it�s in the ground, TCDD can last for
decades. The Canadians say it washes down the denuded hillsides in the
region�s heavy rains. The dioxin accumulates in the valleys and carp ponds,
where fish ingest it. The poison concentrates in their fatty tissues and
innards, which thrifty Vietnamese peasants have been cooking and eating for
centuries. It has become a recipe for environmental disaster. Any place in
the West or Japan that had such high dioxin readings would immediately be
evacuated and a huge chemical cleanup would be launched, says Hatfield.

The villagers here can�t afford to leave their homes. They can�t afford to
incinerate the topsoil, the industrialized world�s standard way of cleaning
up such major dioxin hot spots as the notorious 1970s toxic-waste dumping
disaster in Times Beach, Missouri. Most of them can�t even afford to stop
feeding locally grown fish to their hungry children. For the time being,
village officials on Hatfield�s advice are urging people to eat only the
flesh of the carp they raise, and to throw away the fat, liver and innards.

Vietnamese officials say they aren�t seeking U.S. war reparations or damages
from the chemical industry. The last thing Hanoi wants is to hurt Vietnam�s
chances of winning normal trade relations with Washington as soon as
possible. Meanwhile the Vietnamese say they need help with their ongoing
public-health disaster�especially scientific cooperation to understand it
better. We must save ourselves, says Nguyen Viet Nhan, a doctor who treats
handicapped children in Hue. But dioxin is the whole world�s problem, not
just Vietnam�s. Maybe so. But it won�t be easy getting the Americans to come
back and fight another invisible enemy here.

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-------------------------------------------------- In Memory of Col. Ted W,
Guy, USAF Ret. Former PoW http://www.soft-vision.com/hanoi Never Forgotten!!
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