Plutonium is a fuel that is toxic
beyond human experience. It is demonstrably carcinogenic to
animals in microgram quantities [one millionth of a gram].
The lung cancer risk is unknown to orders of magnitude.
Present plutonium standards are certainly irrelevant." - Dr.
Donald P. Geesaman, health physicist, formerly of Lawrence
Livermore Lab
The Bush White House fooled most of the world's press with
its unverified claims of intercepting a "dirty bomb" attack
against the U.S. On its front page, USA Today barked: "US:
'Dirty Bomb' Plot Foiled." Newspapers everywhere explained
breathlessly what radioactive materials could do if
dispersed in populated areas. As Alex Cockburn reports in
The Nation, when the story faced some mild scrutiny, Deputy
Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz backed away from the
propaganda saying, "I don't think there was actually a plot
beyond some fairly loose talk."
Meanwhile, the real-time, worldwide use by the
United States of radiological dirty bombs has moved well
beyond the plotting and shooting stage, and has begun to
produce dire consequences. Toxic, radioactive uranium-238 --
so-called depleted uranium -- used in munitions, missiles
and tank armor may be responsible for deadly health
consequences among U.S. and allied troops and populations in
bombed areas, and has probably caused permanent radioactive
contamination of large parts of Iraq, Bosnia, Kosovo and
perhaps
Afghanistan. Depleted uranium "penetrators" as they are
called burn on impact and up to 70 percent of the DU is
released (aerosolized) as toxic and radioactive dust that
can be inhaled and ingested and later trapped in the lungs
or kidneys.
In January 2001, the world press finally discovered depleted
uranium (DU) weapons(1), the super hard munitions made with
waste U-238 -- an alpha emitter with a radioactive half-life
of 4.5 billion years. Nine years of radiation-induced death,
disease, and birth abnormalities in Iraq did not move major
news organizations to investigate, but the deaths from
leukemia of 15 Western Europeans -- after their
participation in military missions in Bosnia and Kosovo --
prompted the major media, the European Parliament and 11
European governments to launch investigations into the
health and environmental consequences of what Dr. Rosalie
Bertell calls "shooting radioactive waste at your enemy."
DU is left after uranium ore has gone through the gaseous
diffusion process that removes most of the fissionable
isotope U-235. The refuse also of nuclear weapons and
reactor fuel production, some 700,000 tons (2) are now left
in the U.S. as "resource material" -- a legal definition
that saves the Energy Department the cost of managing DU as
radioactive waste.
Prized for its high density, DU is used in munitions for
piercing armor plate. Shot from planes like the USAF A-10
Warthog, the DU shells are called "tank killers." But by
building radioactive waste into armaments, the U.S. is, in
effect using poisoned weapons as gene busters in war. At
least five types of U.S. munitions contain DU, which is also
used in casings for bombs, shielding on tanks,
counter-weights for commercial jet aircraft, and "ground
penetrators" on missiles. DU shells are made by Starmet
Corporation in Concord, Mass., Aerojet Corp. in Sacramento,
Calif. and others. Alliant Techsystems in Minneapolis
(formerly
Honeywell Corp.) assembled over 15 million DU shells for
the Air Force in the 1990s.
Between 300 and 800 tons of DU munitions were blasted into
Iraq, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait by U.S. forces in 1991.(3) The
Pentagon says the U.S. fired about 10,800 DU rounds -- close
to three tons -- into Bosnia in 1994 and 1995. More than
31,000 rounds, about 10 tons, were shot into Kosovo in 1999
according to NATO.(4)
British journalist Dai Williams (an independent researcher
and occupational psychologist) reports that as much as 1,000
tons of DU may have been used against
Afghanistan, although the Pentagon and the British MOD
have not acknowledged its use. They say a "heavy metal" is
used in bunker busting and earth penetrating munitions, but
have not specified what this metal is. Williams writes: "If DU is the mystery metal used in most of the systems
suspected in the report then I estimated that 500-1000 tons
(of DU) may have been used by the end of December. "(4.5)
A total of 24 soldiers from Europe have died of cancer since
their 1994 and '95 service in Bosnia.(5) In response,
Portugal's Prime Minister Antonio Guterres wrote to NATO's
Robertson demanding an explanation of where and why DU
munitions were used in Europe.
The Pentagon and the nuclear industry reacted typically to
European politicians who in 2001 demanded health physics
information from the Pentagon; after a laughable week-long,
study NATO assured them that DU used in the Balkans can be
"ruled out" as a significant health hazard.(6) And when
Italy, Germany, Greece, the Netherlands and Norway all
called for a moratorium on the use of DU, NATO ministers
flatly rejected the suggestion.(7)
NATO denials contradicted Prominent scientists also worked
to calm the uproar. Dr. John Boice, of the International
Epidemiology Institute, told the
New York Times, "To get leukemia you need to get the
radiation to the bone marrow. The radiation does not go to
the marrow. And Uranium 238 will not get to the bone marrow.
I don't think it causes leukemia at all."(
U.S. physicist Steve Fetter told the Times that uranium did
not penetrate to bone and bone marrow where leukemia
originates.
This sophisticated obfuscation refers to external DU
exposure and ignores the hazard from DU ingestion or
inhalation. Jean Francois Lacronique, director of France's
National Radiation Protection Agency, flatly contradicted
NATO, saying, "U-238 has been found stored in bone, and if
it gets into bone, it can reach the bone marrow."(9)
Dr. Frank von Hipple, author of a December 1999
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists article on DU, told
me, "Yes, it does get to the bone. We looked at that in our
study." And the December 2000 Science for Democratic Action
-- from the Institute for Environmental and Energy Research
(IEER) -- reports that, "Some [DU] particles remain in the
body where they can build up in lung [tissue], or enter the
blood stream where it can accumulate in bone tissue."
Internal exposure, the IEER article says, "increases the
risk of leukemia and lung, bone and soft tissue cancers,
particularly when inhaled or ingested."
At the height of the January 2001 media frenzy over cancers
among peacekeeping troops deployed in Bosnia, a 17-year-old
advisory bulletin from the Federal Aeronautics
Administration (FAA) was leaked to the press. Still in
effect today, it puts the lie to industry, Pentagon, UK and
NATO denials of health risks associated with DU exposure.
The 1984 memo warns FAA crash site investigators that, "if
particles are inhaled or ingested, they can be chemically
toxic and cause a significant and long-lasting irradiation
of internal tissue."(10)
More recently, the prestigious British Royal Society's
second DU study found that troops who inhale or ingest "high
levels" of DU could suffer kidney failure within days, and
that children in DU-bombed areas face a long-term risk of
cancer and heavy metal poisoning.(11) The United Nations
Environment Program (UNEP) warned in March 2002, that there
is a danger of groundwater contamination from corroding DU
ammunition at six sites in Serbia and Montenegro bombed in
1999. UNEP president Pekka Haavisto said he, "was surprised
to find DU particles still in the air two years after the
conflict's end."(12)
Canadian researchers have found "unequivocal evidence" of
long-term DU contamination of Persian Gulf vets: they found
that eight years after the bombing, Canadian veterans were
still passing U-238 in urine.(13) Italy announced last
August 5 that its soldiers -- afflicted with cancer after
service in the Balkans and potential exposure to some of the
three tons of DU exploded there by U.S. jets -- will be
awarded medical compensation. British researcher Albrecht
Schott has found that UK soldiers exposed to DU in wartime
have suffered 10 times more genetic damage than the general
population. Prof. Schott said of this study, "This level of
genetic damage doesn't occur naturally."(14) And in the
U.S., a Dept. of Veterans Affairs study recently found that
children of veterans of the Persian Gulf bombardment are two
to three times as likely as those of other vets to have
birth defects. The U.S. vets also reported more
miscarriages.(15)
In Iraq, government figures show an increase in cancer cases
from 6,555 in 1989 to 10,931 in 1997 -- mostly in areas
bombed by the U.S.-led coalition in 1996 -- and the number
of reported cancer cases increased 12 fold between 1991 and
2001.(16)
Ironically, the clearest U.S. government admission of the
dangers of DU, came from U.S. intelligence officers fighting
in
Afghanistan, when Knight Ridder Newspapers reported Dec.
21, 2001, that uranium-238 had been found in "Taliban
hideouts."
U.S. officials, who spoke only on the condition of
anonymity, had concluded, "al-Qaida intended to use the
U-238 to make dirty bombs, which use conventional explosives
to spread radioactive material over a wide area. In addition
to killing people in the bomb blast and poisoning others
with radiation, the officials said, such a bomb could render
large areas unusable and require lengthy and expensive
clean-up efforts."
Agreeing it had sufficient evidence of harm from DU, the
European Parliament, on Jan. 17, 2001, voted 394 to 60 in
favor of a moratorium on the use of DU among its members.
NATO commanders issued a one-page statement Feb. 13, 2001
dismissing concerns. But the Navy and Marines decided
sometime before June to stop using DU. "Were not considering
[DU] anymore because of the environmental problems
associated with it.... We don't want to be in a position of
having someone say, You can't bring your armor piercing
rounds on the battlefield," said Col. Clayton Nans, head of
the Marines Advanced Amphibious Assault Vehicle program.(17)
As press coverage began to fade, and NATO felt it was
bringing the DU "hysteria" under control, the weapons
contamination with highly radioactive plutonium was
disclosed.
Plutonium contamination raises stakes In Europe, a wildfire
of publicity was lit anew by the
United States official admission that its DU contains
plutonium and other reactor-borne fission products far more
radioactive and carcinogenic than uranium-238.
The discovery of uranium-236 contamination in spent
munitions used against Kosovo revealed that the DU was not
obtained before the nuclear reaction process. The Pentagon,
NATO and the British Ministry of Defense have always
downplayed the danger of DU saying it was "less radioactive
than uranium ore." But at least half of the DU (250,000
metric tons) is now known to have been left over from the
reprocessing of irradiated reactor fuel (done to extract
weapons-grade plutonium), leaving it salted with fission
products.(1
"If it has been through a reactor, it does change our idea
on depleted uranium," says Dr. Michael Repacholi of the
World Health Organization, which has demanded to know how
much plutonium is in DU ammunition. The U.S. Department of
Energy (DOE) is still working on an answer to that question.
As early as January 2000, the DOE admitted that its DU
munitions are spiked with plutonium, neptunium and americium
"transuranic" (heavier than uranium) fission wastes from
inside nuclear reactors.(19) The health consequences here
are fearsome: americium-243 -- with a half-life of 7,300
years -- decays to plutonium-239, which is more radioactive
than the original americium.
DU "contains a trace amount of plutonium," said the DOEs
Assistant Secretary David Michaels, who wrote to the
Military Toxics Project's Tara Thornton January 20, 2000.
"Recycled uranium, which came straight from one of our
production sites, e.g. Hanford [Reservation, in Richland,
Washington], would routinely contain transuranics at a very
low level...." Michaels wrote. "We have initiated a project
to characterize the level of transuranics in the various
depleted uranium inventories," he said.
Dr. Von Hippel says in The
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists that plutonium-239 is
200,000 times more radioactive than U-238. Plutonium "is
probably the most carcinogenic substance known," according
to Dr. Arjun Makhijani, President of IEER, writing in his
1992 book Plutonium.
The governments bland assurances regarding material
carcinogenic to animals in microgram quantities appear
scientifically preposterous, yet the AP reported Feb. 3,
2001: "U.S. officials have said the shells contained mere
traces of plutonium, not enough to cause harm." On Jan. 19,
after a one-week "investigation," NATO officials said,
"traces of highly radioactive elements such as plutonium and
americium were not relevant to soldiers health because of
their minute quantities."(20) This public relations ploy
failed to calm the furor raised across Europe, especially
after the leak of a July 1, 1999, "hazard awareness" memo
issued by the Pentagon. The memo warned military personnel
entering Kosovo against touching spent ammunition, suggested
the use of protective masks and skin covering while in
contaminated areas, and recommended follow-up health
assessments.(21) The warning was sent to defense ministries
in Europe but it is not known to have been given to
civilians or returning refugees.
Poison weapons illegal in any armed conflict The U.S. Air
Forces 1976 manual, "International Law: The Conduct of Armed
Conflict and Air Operations" governs the actions of all USAF
commanders and pilots, including the top guns shooting DU.
"It is especially important," the Air Force manual says,
"that treaties, having the force of law equal to laws
enacted by the Congress on the
United States, be scrupulously adhered to by the
United
States armed forces." The manual names treaties
specifically recognized as binding, including the Hague
Conventions of 1907, the Geneva Gas Protocol of 1925, and
the Geneva Convention Relative to the Protection of
Civilians in Time of War, 1949.(22)
The Geneva Gas Protocol outlaws, " ... asphyxiating,
poisonous or other gases, and all analogous liquids,
materials or devices." The Hague Conventions explicitly
outlaw poison saying, "It is especially forbidden: To employ
poison or poisoned weapons."
Poison is defined by the Air Force manual as, "biological or
chemical substances causing death or disability with
permanent effects when, in even small quantities, they are
ingested, enter the lungs or bloodstream, or touch the
skin."
Although the law could not be clearer, NATO spokesman
Francois Le Blevennec told Knight Ridder that depleted
uranium, "has never been declared illegal by any war
convention." However, the Air Force law manual says, "any
weapons may be put to an unlawful use." The Air Force
declares unequivocally that, "A weapons may be illegal per
se if either international custom or treaty has forbidden
its use under all circumstances. An example is poison to
kill or injure a person."
Because the U.S. government has known since at least 1984
about the poisonous effects of its DU warfare, the
commanders of its bombing raids over Iraq, Bosnia, Kosovo
and
Afghanistan may well hope the White House wins its fight
for immunity in the International Criminal Court. If not,
the Pentagons dirty bomb contamination may move from the
gene pool and the water table into the court room.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
In the first move by someone in Congress to investigate the
military's use of DU weapons, U.S. Rep. Cynthia McKinney
(D-GA) has introduced the Depleted Uranium Munitions
Suspension and Study Act of 2001, H.R. 3155. McKinney's bill
would:
* Suspend the U.S. military's use and approval for foreign
sale or export of DU munitions, pending a certification from
the Sec. of Health and Human Services that DU munitions will
not pose a long-term threat to the health of U.S. or NATO
military personnel or jeopardize the health of civilian
populations in the area of use;
* Suspend the foreign sale and export of
plutonium-contaminated DU munitions;
* Initiate a GAO investigation of plutonium contamination of
DU, and
* Initiate a study of the health effects of DU on current or
former U.S. military personnel who may have been exposed and
medical personnel who treated such affected personnel.
In an appeal for co-sponsors McKinney wrote, " ... the U.S.
should take care not to leave a toxic legacy for either
people in a foreign land, nor to our own military personnel.
Approximately 300 tons of DU munitions were used in the Gulf
War, much of which still sits on the ground in Iraq. Since
we really do not know the comprehensive consequences of DU
contamination, I urge you to support this legislation, and
protect our soldiers and innocent citizens from any
unnecessary health threats."
(Centre for Research on Globalisation, August 2002)
(McKinney has since suffered
defeat in her riding after a major effort was launched to
unseat both her and her father, a people's Congressman for
many years. McKinney's disaffection resulted from her
vociferous demand for a public inquiry into possible
Whitehouse involvement in the 911 catastrophe.)
Notes:
1. "Alarm over NATO uranium deaths,"
BBC News, Jan 3, 2001; "UN raises alarm on toxic risk in
Kosovo," Guardian Weekly, March 30 - April 5, 2000, p.5.
2. The New Nuclear Danger, by Helen Caldicott, The New
Press, New York, 2002, p.146; The Nation, April 9, 2991,
p.24; Dan Fahey uses the figure 505,000 tons in his chapter
"Collateral Damage," in Metal of Dishonor: Depleted Uranium,
Ed. by DU Education Project, New York, 1997, p.26.
3. The Nation, May 26, 1997.
4. Knight-Ridder, Jan.2, 2001.
4.5 Dai Williams, Letter to J.M. LaForge, Feb. 21, 2002.
(See also,
Le Monde
Diplomatique, March 2002)
5.
New York Times, Feb. 14 & Jan. 29, 2001.
6.
New York Times, Jan. 17 & 19, 2001.
7. Wis. State Journal, Jan. 1;
New York Times, Jan. 11, 2001.
8.
New York Times, Jan. 13, 2001.
9.
New York Times, Jan. 29, 2001.
10. "Avoiding or Minimizing Encounters With Aircraft
Equipped With Depleted Uranium Balance Weights During
Accident Investigations," FAA Advisory Circular 20-123, by
M.C. Beard, Dec. 20, 1984.
11. "The health hazards of depleted uranium munitions, Part
II," The Royal Society, March 2002, p. ix.
12. United Nations Environment Program, Press Advisory,
March 27, 2002.
13.
BBC, Aug. 27, 1999.
14. The Express, UK, Dec. 24, 2001.
15. Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Oct. 6; Chicago Tribune,
Oct. 10, 2001.
16. Arabic News, Feb. 18, 2002.
17. USA Today, June 25, 2001.
18. Ibid.
19.
New York Times, Feb. 14, 2001.
20.
New York Times, Jan. 18, 2001.
21.
New York Times, Jan. 9, 2001.
22. Department of the Air Force, "International Law -- The
Conduct of Armed Conflict and Air Operations," Judge
Advocate General Activities, Air Force Pamphlet 110-31, 19
Nov. 1976