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DEPLETED URANIUM: THE WAR CRIME THAT HAS NO END

 

by Paul Rockwell 2004-02-20 UN Observer

<http://www.unobserver.com/layout5.php?id=1462&blz=1>

 

“Depleted uranium is a crime against God and humanity.” Dr.  Doug Rokke, U.S. Army health physicist

 

The international dispatches about the U.S. invasion and  occupation of Iraq - replete with graphic details about  overcrowded hospitals, U.S. cluster bomb shrapnel buried in  the flesh of children, babies deformed by U.S. depleted  uranium, farms and markets destroyed by U.S. bombs – do not  make pleasant reading. The mounting evidence from the  invasion of Iraq establishes what many Americans may not  want to face: that the highest leaders of our land violated  many international agreements relating to the rules of war.  Unless we address the war crimes of the Bush administration  - and the prima facie evidence is overwhelming - we betray  our conscience, our country, and our own faith in democracy.

 

The United States is bound by customary law and  international laws of war: the Hague Conventions of 1889 and  1907, the Geneva Conventions of 1949, and the Nuremberg  Conventions adopted by the United Nations, December 11, 1945  - all of which set limits beyond which, by common consent,  decent peoples will not go. Under the Constitution, all  treaties are part of the supreme law of the land.  Humanitarian law rests on a simple principle: that human  rights are measured by one yardstick. Without that  principle, all jurisprudence descends into mere piety and  power. Nor do violations of the laws of war by one  belligerent vindicate the war crimes of another.

 

Of all the violations of the laws of war by the highest  officials of our country, none is more alarming or  portentous than the widespread, premeditated use of depleted  uranium in Iraq. Eleven miles north of the Kuwaiti border on  the "Highway of Death," disabled tanks, armored personnel  carriers, gutted public vehicles – the mangled metals of  Desert Storm - are resting in the desert, radiating nuclear  energy. American soldiers who lived for three months in the  toxic wasteland now suffer from fatigue, joint and muscle  pain, respiratory ailments - a host of maladies often known  as the Gulf War Syndrome.

 

Ever since the end of Desert Storm, when the Pentagon  unloaded 350 tons of depleted uranium, American officials  have been well aware of the health hazards of the residue  that is collected from the processing of nuclear fuel. When  President Bush and the Pentagon authorized the use of  depleted uranium for the shock-and-awe campaign against Iraq  in March 1983, the Bush administration not only committed a  war crime against the people of Iraq, it demonstrated  reckless disregard for the health and safety of American troops.

 

Article 23 of the Geneva Convention IV is clear and  unambiguous: “It is forbidden to employ poison or poisoned  weapons, to kill treacherously individuals belonging to the  hostile nation or army, to employ arms, projectiles or

 

material calculated to cause unnecessary suffering.” The  Geneva Protocol of 1925 explicitly prohibits “asphyxiating,  poisonous or other gasses, and all analogous liquids,  materials or devices.”

 

The radiation produced by depleted uranium in battle is a  poison, a carcinogenic material that causes birth defects,  lung disease, kidney disease, leukemia, breast cancer,

 

lymphoma, bone cancer, and neurological disabilities.

 

Depleted uranium is much denser than lead and enables U.S.  weapons to penetrate steel, a great advantage in modern war.  But under the Geneva Conventions, “the means of injuring the  enemy are not unlimited.” When DU munitions explode, the air  is bathed in a fine radioactive dust, which carries on the  wind, is easily inhaled, and eventually enters the soil,  pollutes ground water, and enters the food chain. Unexploded  casings gradually oxidize, releasing more uranium into the  environment. Handlers of depleted uranium in the U.S. are  required to wear masks and protective clothing - a  requirement that Iraqi and American soldiers, not to mention  civilians, are unable to fulfill.

 

After the Gulf War in 1991, Iraqi hospitals recorded a surge  in cancer and birth defects. Hospital statistics from Basra  show that in 1988 there were 11 cancer cases per 100,000  people. By 2001, after schools, homes, and entire  neighborhoods were leveled from the air, the number  increased to 116 per 100,000. Breast and lung cancer and  leukemia showed up in all areas contaminated by depleted  uranium. Dr. Jawad al-Ali, cancer specialist at the Basra  Training Hospital, noted that, “The only factor that has  changed here since the 1991 war is radiation.” Thirteen  members of his staff, all present when the hospital area was  bombed, are now cancer patients.

 

The Christian Science Monitor recently sent reporters to  Iraq to investigate long-term effects of depleted uranium.  Staff writer Scott Peterson saw children playing on top of a  burnt-out tank near a vegetable stand on the outskirts of  Baghdad, a tank that had been destroyed by armor-piercing  shells coated with depleted uranium. Wearing his mask and  protective clothing, he pointed his Geiger counter toward  the tank. It registered 1,000 times the normal background  radiation.

 

The families who survived the tragic decade of sanctions,  even the children who recently survived the bombing of

 

Baghdad, may not survive the radiated aftermath of military  profligacy. Uranium remains radioactive for two billion  years. That's a long time for reconstruction.

 

According to Dr. Doug Rokke, U.S. Army health physicist who  led the first clean-up of depleted uranium after the Gulf  War, “Depleted uranium is a crime against God and humanity.”  Rokke's own crew, a hundred employees, was devastated by  exposure to the fine dust. “When we went to the Gulf, we  were all really healthy,” he said. After performing clean-up  operations in the desert (mistakenly without protective  gear), thirty members of his staff died, and most others -  including Rokke himself-developed serious health problems.  Rokke now has reactive airway disease, neurological damage,  cataracts, and kidney problems. “We warned the Department of  Defense in 1991 after the Gulf War. Their arrogance is

 

beyond comprehension.”

 

The growing outcry against the use of depleted uranium is  not a matter of minor legal technicalities. The laws of war  prohibit the use of weapons that have deadly and inhumane  effects beyond the field of battle. Nor can weapons be

 

legally deployed in war when they are known to remain  active, or cause harm after the war concludes. The use of  depleted uranium is a crime whose horrific consequences have  yet to run their course.

 

Years ago in the midst of France's brutal war in Algeria,  the philosopher Jean Paul Sartre admonished the French

 

intelligentsia:

 

“It is not right, my fellow-countrymen, you who know very  well all the crimes committed in our name. It's not at all  right that you do not breathe a word about them to anyone,  not even to your own soul, for fear of having to stand in  judgment of yourself. I am willing to believe that at the  beginning you did not realize what was happening; later, you  doubted whether such things could be true; but now you know,  and still you hold your tongues.”

 

Paul Rockwell

 

For addtional information...

 

Afghan DU Recovery Fund: <http://www.afghandufund.org/>

 

Canadian Peacekeeping Veterans Association:  <http://members.shaw.ca/cpva/>

 

Coalición Internacional para la Abolición de las Armas

 

Radiactivas: <http://www.amcmh.org/>

 

The Eos life~work resource centre: <http://www.eoslifework.co.uk/du2012.htm>

 

GULF WAR SYNDROME UK SUPPORT GROUP: <http://www.gwsuk.org.uk>

 

Pandora DU Research Project:<http://www.pandoraproject.org>

 

Traprock Peace Center:  <http://traprockpeace.org/RokkePressConf23July03.html>

 

United Nations Sub-Commission on the Promotion and  Protection of Human Rights: <http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu2/2/sc.htm>

 

Uranium Medical Research Centre: <http://www.umrc.net/>

 

Uranium Weapons Conference;  <http://www.uraniumweaponsconference.de>

 

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Last Revised: 4/7/2004

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