Hi %FirstName%: The Depleted Uranium health crisis is still brewing... and hopefully will be exposed soon...
DU Death Toll Tops
11,000
Nationwide Media Blackout Keeps U.S. Public Ignorant
About This Important Story
http://www.americanfreepress.net/html/du_death_toll.html
By James P. Tucker Jr.
The death toll from the highly toxic weapons
component known as depleted uranium (DU) has reached 11,000 soldiers and the
growing scandal may be the reason behind Anthony Principi's departure as
secretary of the Veterans Affairs Department.
This view was expressed
by Arthur Bernklau, executive director of Veterans for Constitutional Law in New
York, writing in Preventive Psychiatry E-Newsletter.
"The real reason for
Mr. Principi's departure was really never given," Bernklau said. "However, a
special report published by eminent scientist Leuren Moret naming depleted
uranium as the definitive cause of 'Gulf War Syndrome' has fed a growing scandal
about the continued use of uranium
munitions by the U.S.
military."
The "malady [from DU] that thousands of our military have
suffered and died from has finally been identified as the cause of this
sickness, eliminating the guessing. . . . The terrible truth is now being
revealed," Bernklau said.
Of the 580,400 soldiers who served in Gulf War
I, 11,000 are now dead, he said. By the year 2000, there were 325,000 on
permanent medical disability. More than a decade later, more than half (56
percent) who served in Gulf War I have permanent medical problems. The
disability rate for veterans of the world wars of the last century was 5
percent, rising to 10 percent in Vietnam.
"The VA secretary was aware of
this fact as far back as 2000," Bernklau said. "He and the Bush administration
have been hiding these facts, but now, thanks to Moret's report, it is far too
big to hide or to cover up."
Terry Johnson, public affairs specialist at
the VA, recently reported that veterans of both Persian Gulf wars now on
disability total 518,739, Bernklau said.
"The long-term effect of DU is a
virtual death sentence," Bernklau said. "Marion Fulk, a nuclear chemist, who
retired from the Lawrence Livermore Nuclear Weapons Lab, and was also involved
in the Manhattan Project, interprets the new and rapid malignancies in the
soldiers [from the second war] as 'spectacular'—and a matter of concern.'
"
While this important story appeared in a Washington newspaper and the
wire services, it did not receive national exposure—a compelling sign that the
American public is being kept in the dark about the terrible effects of this
toxic weapon. (Veterans for Constitutional Law can be reached at (516)
474-4261.)
Not Copyrighted. Readers can reprint and are free to
redistribute - as long as full credit is given to American Free Press - 645
Pennsylvania Avenue SE, Suite 100 Washington, D.C. 20003