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From: Rick Rozoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, January 24, 2001 5:52 PM
Subject: Axis Sees No Damage At Guernica, Addis Ababa, Shanghai [STOPNATO.ORG.UK]


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

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[Consider the source. Would you trust Charles Manson to investigate the
Tate murders?]

Wednesday January 24 11:08 AM ET
NATO Committee Sees No Depleted Uranium Illness
By Douglas Hamilton
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - A committee of 50 nations hastily set up by NATO
two weeks ago has found no evidence so far to support claims that
depleted uranium (DU) munitions can cause cancer, NATO said on
Wednesday.
Soldiers who served as peacekeepers in the NATO-led missions in Bosnia
and Kosovo -- where U.S. aircraft fired some 40,000 DU shells -- were no
sicker than those who had not, committee chairman Daniel Speckhard told
a news conference.
NATO spokesman Mark Laity said it was ``quite possible´´ that tiny
traces of highly radioactive plutonium and uranium 236 would turn up in
Balkans soil samples now being taken or analyzed by international
experts.
``We´re not predicting it...we will not be surprised, neither will we
be worried,´´ he said, stressing that scientific evidence showed the
traces were too small to ``add in any way to the existing low-level
health risk.´´
Risk Of Political Heart Attack
The toxic chemical effects of DU, a heavy metal used for its
armor-piercing capability, could cause kidney problems if its dust were
ingested in sufficient quantities.
Mere mention of plutonium contamination, however, can trigger political
heart attacks among some of Europe's most environmentally sensitive
governments.
On Tuesday, in a bid to help European allies allay public fears, a
Pentagon spokesman said plutonium traces got into DU rounds made 30
years ago because of contaminated equipment at a nuclear plant, but
amounts were incredibly small and harmless.
Plutonium and U-236 would still be in America's DU munitions today, he
said, because no new stocks were made since the 1970s.
In Athens, NATO's Supreme Commander Europe, U.S. Air Force General
Joseph Ralston, said he would not hesitate to authorize firing DU rounds
``tonight,´´ in the unlikely event that peacekeepers or civilians in
Kosovo faced a tank attack.
NATO says there is simply no evidence that DU's weak radioactivity can
cause cancer. This is questioned by some recent studies which suggest
ingested DU emits alpha radiation that can cause significant damage to
cells.
``To date no nation has found evidence of an increase in the incidence
of illness among peacekeepers in the Balkans compared with the incidence
of illness among armed forces not serving in the Balkans,´´
Speckhard said.
``None of the nations reported finding a health link between health
complaints of personnel employed in the Balkans and depleted uranium
munitions,´´ he added.
Tuesday's standing-room-only meeting of the committee reinforced the
report issued last week by NATO's top military medical officers showing
no link to cancer, but the committee would continue meeting weekly as
``scores´´ of studies -- national and multilateral -- were carried
out.
Everyone's Testing
Speckhard said more than a dozen nations had tested their soldiers or
sent teams to the region since the DU scare erupted shortly after
Christmas. ``To date, based on preliminary findings, there has been no
indication of increased levels of radioactivity at any of the sites
tested,´´ he said.
Countries on the DU committee include the 19 NATO members and some 30
partners most of whom have deployed troops in the Balkans missions. They
include Malaysia, Argentina, Jordan, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and
Azerbaijan.
Laity said NATO had posted a detailed map on its Web site (www.nato.int)
showing the target sites in Bosnia and Kosovo where DU munitions had
been fired. The alliance was determined to provide ``maximum
transparency and openness,´´ he said. He suggested some European
media had handled the issue irresponsibly, failing to look at available
scientific facts before deciding to spread fears.


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