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DEPLETED URANIUM IN HAWAII IS A COLD WAR
LEFTOVER --
DU came from a recoilless rifle capable of
firing a 76-pound
nuclear bomb, the Pentagon confirmed.

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Depleted uranium a Cold War leftover
By William Cole
Advertiser Military Writer
Depleted uranium that was left behind in Hawai'i in the 1960s came from
a recoilless rifle capable of firing a 76-pound nuclear bomb, the
Pentagon confirmed for the first time yesterday.
The Army told The Advertiser that the rifle's "spotting rounds," which
are fired in order to aim the trajectory of the nuclear device, were
used at Schofield Barracks and possibly at Makua Military Reservation
and Pohakuloa Training Area on the Big Island.
There is no evidence, however, that the fission bomb warhead itself was
ever fired here, and it's unclear if it was ever stored in Hawai'i. The
warhead had the strength of two to four times the explosive power that
destroyed an Oklahoma City federal building in 1995.
The aiming rounds of the weapon left behind depleted uranium, and the
military this summer is going to conduct radiological testing at
Schofield, Makua and Pohakuloa for traces of the heavy metal, an Army
official at the Pentagon said. The official requested to be identified
as a "U.S. Army spokesman."
COLD WAR GAMBIT
The weapon was known as a "Davy Crockett" and featured either a 120 mm
or 155 mm recoilless rifle that fired a fission bomb with a yield of .01
kilotons, equivalent to 10 tons of TNT.
Army statements confirm a link in Hawai'i to the smallest and lightest
fission bomb ever fielded by the U.S. — a weapon that experts say was a
desperate Cold War gambit to be used in fighting against Soviet or
Chinese forces.
The result for Hawai'i is residual depleted uranium that today is the
source of extreme controversy because of its possible health effects.
"I think it's a positive step that the Army is willing to investigate
uranium at the ranges," said Kyle Kajihiro, program director for the
American Friends Service Committee, an international Quaker organization
that supports Native Hawaiian rights and demilitarization. "But we're
going to reserve our judgment until we can see what their actual plans
are because it's unclear how thorough (they are) and whether it will be
adequate."
RANGE SURVEYS
The Army confirmed in January 2006 that 15 tail assemblies from spotting
rounds made of D-38 uranium alloy were found by contractors clearing a
range of unexploded ordnance at Schofield. At the time, the service said
they were from an obsolete weapon system.
The Pentagon yesterday said additional depleted uranium fragments were
identified near the initial find. The Schofield range is the only known
location for the spotting rounds, the Army said, but this summer it will
also survey ranges "with appropriate characteristics to have been used
with the Davy Crockett on Makua and PTA."
"We do not expect to find any fragments," the Army said in e-mailed
responses to The Advertiser, "but (we) need to verify that they do not
exist on these ranges."
The Army said it will conduct surveys with sensitive radiation detectors
capable of finding depleted uranium in the environment. Additional soil
and water samples will be collected and sent for laboratory analysis as
required, the service said.
A contract for those services still is being negotiated. Asked what has
to be done to clean up any depleted uranium sites, the Army said, "We
don't know yet. We need to do the initial scoping surveys to determine
the extent of the (depleted uranium) residue."
ARMOR-PENETRATING
A Nuclear Regulatory Commission license is required to fire depleted
uranium, or DU, rounds in the United States. The Army does not fire DU
rounds from its Stryker vehicles in Hawai'i, it said, and does not
intend to seek such a permit.
However, the Army said recently declassified records indicate depleted
uranium spotter rounds were used in Hawai'i between 1961 and 1968, and
may have been licensed. Additionally, the Army said it may have to apply
for an NRC license for the purpose of cleanup.
Depleted uranium is used in some weapons systems because of its
armor-penetrating capabilities. Produced in the reprocessing of spent
nuclear reactor fuel, depleted uranium, with about twice the density of
lead, has about 60 percent of the radioactivity of natural uranium,
according to the World Health Organization.
A 1971 National Academy of Sciences report states that the M-101 spotter
round for the Davy Crockett weapon system, fired from a gun fixed
beneath the larger recoilless rifle, was used to simulate the trajectory
of the physically larger nuclear bomb.
Asked yesterday if Davy Crockett warheads were stored in Hawai'i,
Schofield Barracks officials referred questions back to the Pentagon.
'EXPERIMENTAL' WEAPON
Nuclear weapons historically had been stored in Hawai'i for possible
bomber aircraft and ship missions.
Michael Pavelec, program chairman for diplomacy and military studies at
Hawai'i Pacific University, doubts the Davy Crockett warheads were ever
kept here, even with the spotter rounds being fired. Between 1956 and
1963, 2,100 of the bombs were produced, according to the Brookings
Institution.
The bombs could be fired up to three miles but likely would have
irradiated the soldiers using them. Then-Attorney General Robert F.
Kennedy witnessed a test fire and detonation of a Davy Crockett in
Nevada in 1962.
"These were completely experimental, but they were thinking about using
tactical nuclear weapons on the western European battlefront against a
potential Soviet aggression across western Germany," Pavelec said. "We
were worried about hundreds and hundreds of thousands, if not millions,
of either Red Army or Red Chinese, and the only way you could deal with
that, they thought in the Cold War, was with really, really big bombs."
The discovery of depleted uranium in Hawai'i and its effects on U.S.
troops exposed to it are part of a growing controversy over the
material, which some Iraq war veterans believe is the cause of a variety
of ailments.
The World Health Organization said inhaled uranium particles may lead to
irradiation damage of the lung. Measurements at sites where depleted
uranium munitions were used indicate only localized contamination within
a few yards of the impact site, the organization said.
CAUSE FOR CONCERN?
In Hawai'i, a bill that would mandate regular testing for depleted
uranium at Schofield Barracks was unsuccessful this past legislative
session.
"We should be concerned. DU has the potential to really harm the
public's health," said Marti Townsend, who's with Kahea, a Hawaiian and
environmental group. "But we don't know anything yet. And that's the
problem. We need an independent assessment of the contamination in
Hawai'i."
With that, she said, an informed decision can be made about what steps
need to be taken to protect the public's health.
Russell Takata, program manager for the state Health Department's Noise,
Radiation and Indoor Air Quality Branch, said he hasn't detected unusual
radiation levels.
"It's not like they are using the penetrating rounds here," Takata said,
"and this is old stuff, very restricted, apparently small amounts, and I
can't find it with my meter."
Reach William Cole at
wcole@honoluluadvertiser.com.
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Larry Scott --