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Depeleted Uranium Hurts US Veterans

By Eric Jaffa, Monday, August 29, 2005

From "Radioactive Wounds of War: Tests on returning troops suggest serious health consequences of depleted uranium use in Iraq" by Dave Lindorff, In These Times, August 25, 2005:
In the current wars in Afghanistan and, especially, Iraq, DU has become the weapon of choice, with more than 1,000 tons used in Afghanistan and more than 3,000 tons used in Iraq. And while DU was fired mostly in the desert during the Gulf War, in the current war in Iraq, most of DU munitions are exploding in populated urban areas.

The Pentagon has expanded DU beyond tank and A-10 shells, for use in bunker-busting bombs, which can spew out more than half a ton of DU in one explosion, in anti-personnel bomblets, and even in M-16 and pistol shells. The military loves DU for its unique penetration capability—it cuts through steel or concrete like they’re butter.

The problem is that when DU hits its target, it burns at a high temperature, throwing off clouds of microscopic particles that poison a wide area and remain radioactive for billions of years. If inhaled, these particles can lodge in lungs, other organs or bones, irradiating tissue and causing cancers.

Worse yet, uranium is also a highly toxic heavy metal. Indeed, while there is some debate over the risk posed by the element’s radioactive emissions, there is no debate regarding its chemical toxicity. According to Mt. Sinai pathologist Thomas Fasey, who participated in the New York Guard unit testing, the element has an affinity for bonding with DNA, where even trace amounts can cause cancers and fetal abnormalities.

The In These Times article describes New York State National Guardsmen who discovered when they returned to New York that their bodies were carrying depleted uranium contamination from their exposure Iraq.

Depleted uranium in weapons should be banned. It can be replaced with a less-toxic heavy metal.


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2 Comments

1. Actually, DU is being replaced by Tungsten as a heavy metal penetrator throughout the military. Also, DU is only used in diffrent calibers of gun/cannon ammunition for use against armored targets such as tanks and bunkers.

Comment above by Nate,  September 9, 2005 11:00 PM  

2. Nate-

Where are you getting the information that the US military is switiching from DU to Tungsten?

Comment above by Eric Jaffa,  moveleft.com,  September 9, 2005 11:36 PM  

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