Sunday, December 26, 2004

Depleted Uranium

Why Has Our Military Refused to Show This Training Video To Our Troops Now Serving In Iraq?

US ARMY TRAINING VIDEO:

Depleted Uranium Hazard Awareness

Between October and December 1995, the U.S. Army's Depleted Uranium (DU) Project completed a series of training videos and manuals about depleted uranium munitions. This training regimen was developed as the result of recommendations made in the January 1993 General Accounting Office (GAO) report, "Army Not Adequately Prepared to Deal with Depleted Uranium Contamination."

The training materials were intended to instruct servicemen and women about the use and hazards of depleted uranium munitions. In addition, the training regimen included instructions for soldiers who repair and recover vehicles contaminated by depleted uranium.

Throughout 1996, these videos sat on a shelf, while U.S. soldiers continued to use and work with depleted uranium munitions. In June 1997, Bernard Rostker, The Department of Defense (DoD) principle spokesperson for their investigation of Gulf War hazardous exposures, stated that the depleted uranium safety training program would begin to be shared by a limited number of servicemen and women in July 1997.

STILL TODAY the vast majority of servicemen and women in the U.S. military, and likely in the armed forces of other countries which are developing or have obtained depleted uranium munitions, are unaware of the use and dangers of depleted uranium munitions, or of the protective clothing and procedures which can minimize or prevent serious short-term exposures.


The issue of Depleted Uranium has been an issue since Gulf War I. (Click on link below.)

Introduction:

I first heard about the military using depleted uranium for bullets from the Native Americans for a Clean Environment (NACE) in Gore, Oklahoma. Kerr Magee was operating a factory there, and in a liquid waste spill a young man, about twenty-one years old, was sprayed with the mixture and died. Many members of the public were also exposed, and were taken to the University in Oklahoma City for medical examination and feces analysis. It seems that the liquid waste contained primarily uranium and other heavy metals.

Local people had found this factory to be very polluting. When I visited the town to see what was happening and to decide whether or not I could help, they showed me rust marks scattered over the surface of their automobiles where the toxic corrosive spray released from the factory routinely had impacted on the paint. People complained of burning throats and eyes, some with even more serious complaints, but little systematic information which would show that the factory was the source of their problem.


This is an article about a visit to Iraq on March 11, 2003; just before the unilateral invasion by the USA.

Winston-Salem Journal

Tue, March 11, 2003

Iraq isn't a threat, minister says after mission Nation is 'beaten down to a pulp,' pastor says; clergy flew in as guests of Christian fellowship

By John Railey
JOURNAL REPORTER

The Rev. John Mendez says he's haunted by what he saw on a peace mission to Iraq last week.

He saw the burn marks left where more than 400 people died in a Baghdad bomb shelter in the Gulf War in 1991.

He saw people weakened by the U.N. economic sanctions that have continued since the war.

"It ain't what we think," said Mendez, the pastor of Emmanuel Baptist Church. "We have beaten that country down to a pulp. It isn't a threat to anybody."

Mendez flew to Baghdad with eight other clergy as guests of the Middle East Council of Churches, a fellowship of Christians in the predominantly Muslim Middle East. His group was made up mostly of black ministers from Washington and New York who have corresponded with friends in the Middle East. A Muslim cleric from the United States was also part of the delegation.

This is the personal webpage to Rev. Mendez trip to Iraq.

Reverend John Mendez of Emmanuel Baptist Church recently visited Iraq.

He's a nice man.

Baghdad, Iraq BEFORE George's Invasion, but, AFTER Gulf War ONE

Reverend John Mendez of Emmanuel Baptist Church recently visited Iraq.

Thank you for sharing your pictures with us!

Read the Winston Salem Journal Article

Winston-Salem Journal
Tue, March 11, 2003Iraq isn't a threat, minister says after mission Nation is 'beaten down to a pulp,' pastor says; clergy flew in as guests of Christian fellowshipBy John RaileyJOURNAL REPORTERThe Rev. John Mendez says he's haunted by what he saw on a peace mission to Iraq last week.He saw the burn marks left where more than 400 people died in a Baghdad bomb shelter in the Gulf War in 1991. He saw people weakened by the U.N. economic sanctions that have continued since the war."It ain't what we think," said Mendez, the pastor of Emmanuel Baptist Church. "We have beaten that country down to a pulp. It isn't a threat to anybody."Mendez flew to Baghdad with eight other clergy as guests of the Middle East Council of Churches, a fellowship of Christians in the predominantly Muslim Middle East. His group was made up mostly of black ministers from Washington and New York who have corresponded with friends in the Middle East. A Muslim cleric from the United States was also part of the delegation.Most Iraqis welcomed his group, Mendez said."One little kid, though, he was shining my shoes, when he discovered I was an American. "He said, 'George Bush,' and spit on the ground. He was 8 years old," Mendez said.He said he tried to talk to the child, but got nowhere. "These kids tomorrow will remember what we did to them today," Mendez said.The group didn't see Iraqi President Saddam Hussein during its week there, Mendez said, but it did meet with other officials with the Iraqi government. The group gave those officials their position paper, which asks Iraq to embrace peace by disarming. Mendez said he can't say whether the country is disarming its chemical and biological weapons."That's why we're so adamant about the U.N. doing its work without interference or intervention,'' he said. "Let the U.N. tell us whether or not they're disarming."The Bush administration has repeatedly expressed skepticism about Iraq's promises that it is disarming. While Mendez and the rest of his group were in Iraq, President Bush edged the United States closer to war. Bush said Thursday night that the United States will drive Saddam from power if it comes to war in Iraq - with or without support from Germany, France and other United Nations allies opposed to the use of force.The U.N. Security Council may vote this week on a U.S.-sponsored resolution authorizing war against Iraq.Mendez said he's not holding out much hope that the group of ministers, which also met with U.S. officials before traveling to Iraq, would help prevent a war.But he said he and the others accomplished one goal of their trip: "To build relationships and let them know we're not all warmongers." He said he plans to keep in touch with Iraqi friends he made. Mendez said that Iraqis he met believed that attacks would begin last week, and they feared for the safety of his group. The Iraqis said little about Saddam, he said, perhaps out of fear or perhaps because they are tired of talking about it. But Mendez said that one point was clear: The majority of Iraqis don't want war.There have already been U.S. bombings in no-fly zones in Iraq. U.S. officials have released few details about casualties, but Mendez said Iraqi reports indicated that six people were killed in bombings while he was there."When the sirens go off, people don't even respond anymore," Mendez said. "They just resolve within themselves that what's going to be is going to be."• John Railey can be reached at 727-7288 or at
jrailey@wsjournal.com