----- Original Message ----- 
From: Rick Rozoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2001 8:46 AM
Subject: Deaths Threaten Unity Of NATO [STOPNATO.ORG.UK]


STOP NATO: NO PASARAN! - HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK

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RIP

  
The Times (London)  
SATURDAY JANUARY 06 2001 
 
Deaths threaten unity of Nato 
 
BY RICHARD BEESTON, DIPLOMATIC EDITOR AND RICHARD OWEN
IN ROME 
 
NATO was struggling to contain growing tensions within
its ranks last night over the so-called Balkans
Syndrome as the mystery illness was blamed for
further deaths among alliance veterans. 
Despite the organisations best attempts to contain
the political fallout, there were fears that the
dispute  mainly between the United States and Italy 
could jeopardise future Nato peacekeeping operations. 

The casualty toll rose to 27 yesterday as reports
flooded in from across Europe of further cases of
veterans of peacekeeping missions in Bosnia and Kosovo
dying or falling ill with cancer-related diseases. 

In Italy, Il Giornale described Balkans Syndrome as an
epidemic after the death toll climbed to nine. The
latest three victims  two soldiers and a nurse  died
of cancer after serving in Bosnia. 

Many victims and their families blamed the epidemic on
the use of depleted uranium (DU) by the US Air Force
for its armour-piercing rounds and there were calls
for the munitions to be banned. 

Romano Prodi, President of the European Commission,
said: Even if this risk was not there, I do not like
the idea of using these particular weapons. I want the
truth to be ascertained. 

In Washington the Pentagon insisted that there was no
evidence linking its DU weapons with leukaemia, but
privately senior Nato officials were furious at Signor
Prodis remarks and said that they risked whipping up
public hysteria. 

The US, Britain and most of the other Nato countries
insist that they have found no evidence linking
depleted uranium weapons with cancer or any other
illnesses. 

Nato has been forced to respond and, in a letter to
Amedeo De Franchis, Italys Ambassador to Nato, Lord
Robertson of Port Ellen, its Secretary-General,
assured the Italians that all information available on
the use of depleted uranium in the Bosnia air campaign
of 1995 would be made available.
 

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