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Destroying The Village To Save
Weapons Manufacturers
One of the
legacies of the Vietnam War is the now infamous quote from an American
military press officer, "we had to destroy the village in order to
save it." Rings some bells these days. In the name of "fighting
terror," countries with secret weapons programs are poised to
pulverize Iraq because of its secret weapons programs. And Weapons of Mass
Destruction (WMD) are being used against civilians in order to prevent WMD
from being used against civilians.
Case in point: the American
military's ongoing use of depleted uranium (DU), despite numerous
independent studies warning of DU's toxic-radioactive effects. Research
conducted six months before the Gulf War found that short-term high doses
of DU could result in death, and long-term low doses could lead to cancer.
Regardless, American forces used DU weapons in the 1991 Gulf war, the 1999
Balkan conflict, and the recent hostilities in Afghanistan. It can be
assumed that DU weaponry will be used in any upcoming attack on Iraq as
well.
The implications are
staggering. The Geneva Conventions clearly ban weapons that continue to
kill or cause genetic effects after the fighting ends, not to mention
weapons that unduly damage the natural environment. DU fails miserably on
each count. And DU makes no distinction between friend and foe - its
victims include local civilians as well as service members sent abroad to
fight.
Hundreds of thousands of US
and allied troops entered areas heavily contaminated by DU dust and debris
in the Gulf War, and at least 11 tons of DU was used by NATO forces in the
Balkans. In Afghan cities subjected to allied bombing, uranium
concentrations were recorded at 400% to 200% above normal, with birth
defects sharply on the rise.
Stats like these would
indicate an urgent push to unravel DU's deadly legacy and prevent further
harm; instead, there seems to have been an urgent push to cover up the
facts.
In an ominous 1991 memo, US
Lt. Col. Ziehmn said that despite concerns over their toxic effects, if DU
weapons "proved their worth during our recent combat activities, then
we should assure their future existence ... I believe we should keep this
sensitive issue at mind when after-action reports are written." This
institutionalized denial could explain why governmental studies into the
health effects of DU on Gulf war veterans have included flaws and
omissions, such as lengthy delays ensuring that many DU acute exposure
victims have been dead too long for autopsies to be adequately performed.
It may also explain why the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) took
a full 18 months after the Balkan conflict to begin investigating post-war
uranium contamination, and why, even as late as last year, the US and UK
governments vetoed a proposed World Health Organization (WHO) study into
the health effects of DU on Iraqi civilians.
DU's ability to penetrate
hard targets is desirable militarily, but alternatives such as Tungsten
can achieve similar results without the radiation hazards. What then
justifies the continued use of DU?
One answer might lie in a
powerful corporate lobby: 99% of nuclear industry uranium waste is DU. In
other words, by providing DU for weaponry, the nuclear industry not only
makes a tidy profit but avoids the expensive hassle of disposing nuclear
waste as well. Pretty sweet deal.
Bush has been a friend to the
nuclear industry from the start, by opposing the Comprehensive Test Ban
Treaty and thumbing his nose at the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. With
2002's Nuclear
Posture Review (NPR), however, the Bush administration raised
the nuclear ante to critical heights. Among other proposals, NPR says the
US could use nuclear weapons in the vaguely worded "event of
surprising military developments," and lists such cases as a
China-Taiwan conflict, an attack by Iraq on one of its neighbors, or an
Arab-Israeli war.
In tandem with NPR, the Bush administration has publicly euphemized
nuclear weapons as "low-yield," "tactical," and
"user-friendly." (How significant that one of the brains behind
current US nuclear policy, Dr. Keith Payne, is best known for his 1980's
essay "Victory is Possible," an optimistic approach to all-out
nuclear war.)
Meanwhile, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld continually warns of rogue
states holding "America hostage to nuclear blackmail," but fails
to mention his own contribution: Rumsfeld
was on the board of ABB, a company that sold
hundreds of millions of dollars of equipment and services to North Korean
nuclear plants. It's another intriguing coincidence that despite
his administration's slamming "axis of evil" nukes, Bush
recently requested $3.5 million in funding for a consortium currently
building nuclear reactors in North Korea.
Double speak? Denial? Impending danger? And don't forget that India and
Pakistan are still rattling nuclear sabers, Israel has a complete nuclear
arsenal, and Britain's Tony Blair has publicly declared the possibility of
using nuclear weapons in an attack on Iraq.
Yet every day
we're told the important issue is that "time is running out for
Saddam," a message ludicrous at best: Iraq's army is weak, its
population vanquished by years of inhumane sanctions and as Secretary
of State Colin Powell recently admitted, even he has not seen the supposed
evidence linking Iraq with al-Qaeda or ongoing development of
weapons of mass destruction.
But it's true that time is
running out - for the planet and its people. DU/nuclear weapons are just
symptoms of a larger world completely out of balance. Billions upon
billions are poured into weapons of mass annihilation when the focus
should be on mutual survival.
If we don't change our focus
to protecting the village, it may soon be too late to save it.
©Heather
Wokusch 2002
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