Coaltion Forces Employ Depleted Uranium
A Weapon Of Mass Destruction
At least 100 tons of uranium weapons have been used in Iraq
A short guide to DU, its effects and the weapons it's used in
"Our Lives begin to end the day we become silent about the
things that matter"
Depleted Uranium is a waste product of the nuclear industry and is given virtually
free to the weapons industry. Uranium is toxic and carcinogenic so it acts as both
a chemical and radiological weapon.
DU is the densest metal available and can penetrates all known armour. It ignites
spontaneously on impact and burns at 5000 degrees C, giving off black smoke, incandescent
sparks and carbonising its victims.
On ignition a firestorm of radioactive uranium dioxide particles is created which
stick to tanks and objects, penetrate the soil, sand and water and are inhaled by
animals and people. The emission of predominantly Alpha as well as Beta and Gamma
radiation from these particles and debris will persist for the life of the planet,
not only in target areas but also wherever they are carried by winds. The particles
can remain suspended in the earth's atmosphere for months and travel vast distances.
DU ammunition (from 30 mm to 120 mm penetrators) has been used in Iraq since 1991,
in Bosnia, and in Kosovo, Serbia and Montegro during the Balkans war. In 2001 DU
penetrators fired in the Balkans were found to have traces of Plutonium and other
higher radioactive contamination only found in recycled nuclear reactor rods (Dirty
DU). If particles of these transuranic isotopes are inhaled they carry even higher
cancer risks. During the 1991 Gulf war 320 tonnes of DU ammunition was used. Because
of its hardness it is also used as armour plating for tanks.
But much larger weapons with high penetration warheads have been developed since
1985 also using a secret, high density 'mystery metal'. US patents located recently
confirm that some bomb, missile and cluster bomb warheads are designed to use Depleted
Uranium for warhead casings, ballast or liners.
23 weapon systems are now suspected of using Uranium warheads (depleted or undepleted)
including Cruise Missiles, Bunker Busting Bombs, Small Smart Bombs, and Cluster Bombs.
New medical evidence from sick civilians in Afghanistan suggests that some bombs
or missiles may have used pure or undepleted uranium warheads so that contamination
appears to be natural uranium. During the Afghan war an estimated 1000 tonnes of
Uranium Oxide dust may have disbursed from 2,000 hard target guided weapons.
The US Shock and Awe attacks on Iraq relied on the same types of guided bombs
and missile systems but about 50% more were used than in Afghanistan - potentially
1500+ tons of uranium. Widespread tank battles using known DU munitions plus new
ground attack missiles may bring the total to 2000+ tonnes of Uranium contamination
(depleted and undepleted).
In most areas where DU has been used local populations as well as allied troops
in target areas have suffered from similar symptoms and illnesses: unexplained cancers
and leukemias, neurological disorders, respiratory problems, immune deficiency syndromes,
rare kidney and bowel diseases. Children are born with genetic defects, moderate
to severe deformities, rare illnesses and develop cancers very young.
The USA and British governments have delayed Uranium testing for veterans for
years. But some Gulf War veterans who have had private uranium testing still have
depleted uranium contamination in their systems 12 years after the first Gulf War.
One third of the troops involved in the first Gulf War developed Gulf War syndrome
and 200,000+ (1 in 4) US veterans are on disability programs. Several thousand have
died but with very few autopsies for uranium contamination. Radioactive particles
are inhaled or ingested. They are small enough to penetrate tissues where they become
embedded. They then sit there internally for the life of the individual emitting
a permanent source of internal radiation which damages chromosomes in adjacent cells.
Only one radioactive particle is needed to mutate a chromosome potentially leading
to crippling damage for the individual.
External Beta and Gamma radiation e.g. from high level sources cause most obvious
damage. But the UK M.O.D. website acknowledges that internal Alpha radiation causes
more damage to cells than equivalent Beta or Gamma doeses. The US military have known
about the dangers of uranium contamination since 1943.
The present radiation risk models accepted and used by the British and USA governments
were devised before the discovery of DNA and before the biological responses of living
cells to radiation were known. Now we know that one third of all genes exposed to
radiation die or mutate. This can result in the production of cancers, general impairment
of health and genetic defects which are passed on to future generations. Furthermore
some people are genetically more sensitive to radiation than others putting them
at greater risk when exposed to low levels of radiation.
The European Committee on Radiation Risk (ECRR) has just published a report which
determines that previous risk models for internal radiation exposures e.g. from DU
are incorrect. The report states that cumulative radiation exposure from internal
DU is 100 _1000 times higher than the present ICRP risk models recognise - based
as they are on external whole body exposure rather than highly concentrated internal
radiation hot spots.
European MEPs have already voted for an immediate moratorium on Uranium weapons
in Strasbourg on 13 Feb 03. If Uranium, depleted or undepleted, is being used in
large warheads — from 250 kg in the Tomahawk cruise missile to 1500 kg in the 2 ton
GBU-28 Bunker Buster guided bomb, then these will be large "Dirty Bombs"
spreading radioactive contamination over several miles. If 1 in 3 of the 10,000+
bombs and missiles used in the 2 week shock and awe campaign their plumes will merge
into a radioactive dust cloud across much of central Iraq, contaminating thousands
of people, communities, land and water supplies. Large uranium warheads are unquestionably
weapons with indiscriminate effects. In large numbers as used in Iraq they are also
weapons of mass destruction. Weapons of mass destruction cause sudden death or destruction
in target areas, some with long term or widespread effects. Weapons of indiscriminate
effect cause widespread or long lasting contamination liable to cause injury, chronic
illness, slow death or severe birth defects. Both are outlawed in the first protocol
of the Geneva conventions.
The international media have blocked all public questions about these new weapons
since the War on Terrorism began in October 2001. Only distorted Pentagon propaganda
that uranium contamination has no harmful effects has been broadcast. So most Iraqi
civilians and coalition troops are unaware even of the health hazards from tanks
in their streets burned out with uranium shells. Most have no concept of the radiation
that may have spread from the bombs. Nor is there any protection from widespread
contamination. However, United Nations health and environmental specialists do recognise
the dangers of low level radiation. They know more than most people about emerging
health problems in Afghanistan, and have been alerted to suspected large uranium
weapons. On 6 April the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) announced plans for environmental
depleted uranium testing in Iraq — when this can be started. Proposals for similar
uranium monitoring for the human population is hoped for soon from WHO. Hopefully
anti-tank ammunition is the only source of new uranium contamination but targets
still need urgent isolation, dust control and cleanup when possible. If many uranium
warheads have been used in bombs and missiles this must be identified very fast so
that local communities can be evacuated and down wind areas including neighbouring
Gulf countries alerted.
There is no economic clean-up procedure for multiple attacks with large radiological
bombs. The public health implications may be 5-10 worse that the epidemics of cancers,
leuakaemia and birth defects experienced in southern Iraq since the 1991 Gulf war.
There is no doubt that at least 100 tons of Uranium weapons have been used in
Iraq. The billion dollar question is how many more Uranium weapons have been used?
And how long will the facts about these weapons be kept secret by the US and UK governments
- even from their own troops?
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