- KHARANJ,
Iraq -- The rusting tanks are gathered in Iraq's southern
desert like an open-air exhibit of the 1991 Gulf War.
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- But these are not just museum pieces. This
still radioactive battlefield - and the severe health
problems many Iraqis and some US Gulf War veterans ascribe
to it - may also be an omen of an unsettled future.
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- As American forces prepare to take on Iraq
in a possible Gulf War II, analysts agree that the bad
publicity and popular fears about depleted uranium (DU) use
in the first Gulf War, and later in Kosovo and Afghanistan,
have not dented Pentagon enthusiasm for its "silver
bullet." US forces in Iraq will again deploy DU as
their most effective - and most controversial - tank-busting
bullet.
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- War seems more imminent as the White House
indicated late this week that the decision for war could
come by late January.
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- But this bleak desert just north of Iraq's
border with Kuwait and Saudi Arabia offers a window on the
human impact nearly 12 years after a toxic stew of DU,
chemical agents, pesticides, and smoke from burning oil
wells poisoned this war zone. Few suggest that a new war, if
it involves Iraqi armored resistance, will have any less of
an effect. "Nobody thinks about what is going to happen
when the shooting stops," says Robert Hewson, editor of
the London-based Jane's Air-Launched Weapons. "The
people who are firing [DU] will demand that they have
it...they will not want to go to war without it. The primary
driver will always be the mission and getting the job
done."
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- DU is made from nuclear-waste material
left over from making nuclear weapons and fuel. American
gunners used 320 tons of it in 1991 to destroy 4,000 Iraqi
armored vehicles and swiftly conclude victory.
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- But the invisible particles created when
those bullets struck and burned are still "hot."
They make Geiger counters sing, and they stick to the tanks,
contaminating the soil and blowing in the desert wind, as
they will for the 4.5 billion years it will take the DU to
lose just half its radioactivity.
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- Unaware of the risks, two shepherds
earlier this week relaxed on the ground as their sheep
picked at scrub grass near one tank. Similar tanks struck by
DU during the Gulf War were deemed a "substantial
risk" and buried by US forces in Saudi Arabia or a
low-level radioactive waste dump in the US.
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- Pentagon spokesmen said yesterday that US
troops are being given no new DU protection training for any
Iraq campaign. In the mid-1990s, US troops were required to
wear full protective suits and masks within 50 yards of a
tank struck with DU bullets. Those rules, based on Nuclear
Regulatory Commission safety guidelines, were dramatically
revised in the late 1990s.
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- In most cases, the rules now say, any face
mask is sufficient. Pentagon officials note their policy has
been "inconsistent," but admitted in 1998 that
their "failure" to alert soldiers to the risks
before the Gulf War resulted in "thousands of
unnecessary exposures." The latest rules, a US Army
spokesman said yesterday, "reflect the most current ...
data regarding DU."
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- Critics charge that the official
downplaying of DU's dangers keeps the magic bullet in the
arsenal, while thwarting DU-specific compensation claims by
Gulf War vets.
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- The Iraqi battlefield will be "very
dangerous" in the aftermath of a new war, says Asaf
Durakovic, a former chief of nuclear medicine at a veteran's
hospital and head of the private Uranium Medical Research
Center. In the peer-reviewed journal "Military
Medicine" last August, he published results that 14 of
27 ill Gulf War vets had DU in their urine nine years after
the war.
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- Testifying before Congress in 1997, Dr.
Durakovic predicted DU will ensure that "battlefields
of the future will be unlike any...in history," and
"injury and death will remain lingering threats to
'survivors' of the battle for ... decades into the
future."
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- Though DU clearly enhances the chances of
victory, some say the price is too high. Risks are difficult
to quantify, but US military and expert reports indicate DU
can be a hazard that may cause cancer, and that total soil
decontamination is impossible.
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- British troops deploying to Kosovo in 1999
were sent out with full suits and masks, and told to use
them "if contact with targets damaged by DU ammunition
is unavoidable." A report commissioned by the US Army
on the eve of the Gulf War found that "no dose [of DU
particles] is so low that the probability of effect is
zero." Another report by the British Atomic Energy
Agency used an estimate of 40 tons of DU to create a
hypothetical danger level, and predicted that that amount of
DU - one-eighth of what actually was fired - could cause
"500,000 potential deaths."
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- "I don't think we know if DU can be
used safely, and until we know that, we shouldn't use
it," says Chris Hellman, a senior analyst with
Washington's Center for Defense Information. "The
military's mindset is clear: 'This is war, war is hell...the
guy who shoots first wins, and he hits them with everything
he has.'"
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- In the US, every aspect of DU creation,
use, and disposal is strictly controlled. The US Army alone
has 14 licenses to handle the substance. Disposal requires
burial in low-level radioactive waste dumps; particles must
be mixed with concrete and encased in two barrels.
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- But when it comes to fighting armor, no
substance can match DU bullets, denser than lead and
self-sharpening. They burn through armor on impact and are
cheap. US gunners love them and say DU saves lives on the
front line.
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- This graveyard of tanks shows why. DU
burns so hotly into its target that a targeted tank's own
ammunition ignites, causing a blast that often rips the
turret right off the top of a tank. In the process, however,
the DU round aerosolizes into a lethal dust that emits alpha
particles.
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- Though alpha particles have a limited
range of a quarter-inch or so, they pack a punch 20 times
more powerful than beta or gamma radiation, and can lodge
easily in the body if inhaled or ingested. Many US vets
believe DU may also be a key factor in Gulf War syndrome,
the set of symptoms for which the Veteran's Administration
has already provided compensation for nearly 1 in 4 vets.
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- Iraqis say DU is a major cause of the
severe health problems such as cancer and birth defects that
they graphically show are surging in southern Iraq, though
they do not have the clinical capability to link DU to
health problems.
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- "No one wins in war, everyone loses,
and Basra will again be a great battlefield," says
Thamer Ahmad Hamdan, an orthopedic surgeon in Basra. In
1998, when visited by the Monitor, he had one box of x-rays
depicting grotesque abnormalities. "Now it is
boxes," he says. "We will remember the Americans
used this again, that it was killing miserable people.
Hopefully, they are not going to do it."
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- Iraqi doctors say poverty, malnutrition,
and poor water and sanitation are key to current health
problems, along with DU and chemical exposures, and trauma
from the last war. Jawad Khudim al-Ali, director of the
cancer ward at Basra's Saddam Teaching Hospital, says
pre-war cancer rates have increased 11-fold; the mortality
rate 19-fold.
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- While US war planners in the Gulf War and
in campaigns since have taken great care to minimize
civilian casualties, the longterm impact of DU is tough to
define. And the reviled Iraqi regime of Saddam Hussein may
limit concerns of civilian suffering, analysts say. "I
don't think there is a consensus in this country about
whether war is the right thing to do," says CDI's
Hellman. "But there is a consensus that Saddam is right
up there with Satan on the evil-people-in-the-world list.
And therefore, whatever methods of warfare are going to
bring him down, and safeguard American troops in the
process, is going to be acceptable [to Americans]."
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- "If [fallout on civilians] was a
serious consideration," concurs Hewson, of Jane's,
"we would not be contemplating a major land battle in
Iraq. At the levels where this stuff is being planned, no
tears are being shed for those people."
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- Abdulkarim Hussein Subber, a gynecologist
at the Basra Maternity and Children's Hospital, has three
photo albums full of images of unimaginable birth defects
that he claims are six times more prevalent today than
before the Gulf War.
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- "We have become very familiar with
these cases," Dr. Subber says, adding that numbers have
leveled off since expectant mothers began using ultrasound
to detect - and terminate - severe cases. "The problem
is [our patients] are afraid of being pregnant again,
because of the fear of malformations," Subber says.
"The problem is the pollution from the war."
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