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VETERAN SAYS DIRECT EXPOSURE TO DEPLETED URANIUM
CAUSED ILLNESSES -- "This infuriates me. This
whole
situation just infuriates me. All I want is for
them
to acknowledge this. I want validation."

For more about depleted uranium, use the VA
Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=depleted+uranium&op=ph
Story here...
http://www.duluthnewstribune.com/artic
les/index.cfm?id=62495§ion=homepage&freebie_ch
eck&CFID=15615581&CFTOKEN=81495600&jsess
ionid=88301ad791fc305e3db4
Story below:
-------------------------
Duluth veteran believes the government is wrong
about his diagnosis
Brandon Stahl
Duluth News Tribune
What you first notice about John Marshall is his haircut, buzzed bald on
the sides and back of his head, with the top shaved in a way that suggests
an arrow pointing at you. It’s unusual, and when asked about it, Marshall
smiles as if to admit as much, but he says he just wanted a reminder of
who he was at his strongest and most proud, a servant of his country.
“I miss the military,” he says in a slow, calm voice.
Beyond the haircut, you don’t see anything more than a 37-year-old man who
looks relatively healthy, able and normal. He lives in an immaculate home
in Duluth’s Riverside neighborhood. Pictures of his family are
interspersed in his living room with black-and-white photos of relatives
and paintings of Jesus and various saints. What you don’t see is the pain
he has, which he says is constant and rumbles all over his body.
“I wouldn’t wish this on anybody,” he said. “It’s tough, man. It’s tough.”
Article continues below:
(use left/right arrows in screen to view more videos)
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Like many veterans, his war story is at the
ready, and in an instant he’ll tell you in rat-a-tat-tat cadence about
when he was a 20-year-old Army corporal with visions of a lifetime in the
military and was quickly moving up the ranks, despite not finishing high
school.
He was serving on the front lines in the Gulf War, which lasted more than
100 days. His tour lasted just 82 hours.
Marshall was part of a nine-man Bradley Fighting Vehicle squad that on
Feb. 27, 1991, was hit by a friendly fire tank shell containing depleted
uranium, a radioactive metal used in U.S. weapons and armor. As he tried
to make his way to an enemy bunker, he believes shrapnel containing
depleted uranium pierced his back and lungs.
Marshall blames uranium he inhaled and that lodged in his lungs for
numerous health problems that have left him completely disabled, ending
his career in the military and requiring him to take 19 prescribed
medicines.
“Once I lost my health and my career, I lost my identity as a man,” he
said.
Marshall and his story stand in direct contradiction to a government study
begun in 1993 of about 80 veterans exposed to depleted uranium.
“To date,” according to the military’s Force Health and Protection
division Web site, “there have been no adverse clinical effects noted in
these individuals related to DU; specifically, there has been no kidney
damage, leukemia, bone or lung cancer, or other uranium-related health
effects.”
Marshall is one of the veterans who have taken part in that study.
“This infuriates me. This whole situation just infuriates me,” he said.
“All I want is for them to acknowledge this. I want validation.”
Marshall is speaking out, hoping for just that, joining a list of
organizations vocal about the perceived dangers of depleted uranium. But
he has an uphill battle, as the U.S. government, along with other
prominent groups such as NATO and the World Health Organization, claim
that depleted uranium exposure is harmless. It is a debate that recently
has fallen mostly quiet, even as rounds containing depleted uranium
continue to be used in Iraq and a chorus of activists call for it to be
stopped.
Cancer at 20
For Marshall, the pain is often so intense that it’s a struggle to get out
of bed. There are days he wants to give in to the pain and the agoraphobia
brought on by his post-traumatic stress disorder. To stay busy, he said,
is the only way to fight the demons that would consume him if he let them.
He is a member of 20 service organizations, ranging from the VFW to the
American Legion to the Disabled American Veterans, the Duluth Memorial
Hall Committee, as well as a member of the Shriners, the Scottish Rite and
the council president of his church. But he is most active as commander of
the Duluth Combined Honor Guard, for which he travels to 120 to 130
funerals a year to provide veterans with a military burial. His service on
the honor guard has seen him at the state Capitol, where he successfully
lobbied for increased funding for his volunteer group. He also has helped
other veterans receive medals owed to them for their combat.
“His wellness comes from serving other veterans,” said Phil Ringstrom, a
counselor with the Duluth Vets Center.
As a result, he has become one of the best-known and well-respected
members of the Duluth veteran’s community.
“He’s one of the most dedicated people I’ve ever met,” said Durbin Keeney,
regional director of the Minnesota Assistance Council Duluth. “I’d trust
John with my life, on or off the battlefield.”
To Marshall, it’s also a way to serve a veterans community and a country
he loves fiercely. He doesn’t feel the same way about the military, by
whom he feels betrayed.
“I love this country,” he said. “But I’m not very proud of it right now.”
Almost immediately after being exposed to depleted uranium, Marshall said
he started getting strange rashes and illnesses. A few months later, a
tumor started growing on the left side of his neck. At first, he said,
doctors dismissed it as benign, but he said it grew larger. It was
biopsied in November 1991 and discovered to be lymphatic cancer. He was
still 20.
Radiation treated the cancer, but other problems developed, including more
rashes, stomach ulcers, a failed thyroid gland, high blood pressure, a
weakened immune system, tachycardia — which causes rapid pulse rates —
fibromyalgia and severe arthritis. He now has symptoms of Parkinson’s
disease and multiple sclerosis such as twitching and memory loss. And then
there are the mental-health problems — the depression, the PTSD, the panic
and anxiety attacks and the anger-control issues he deals with. He will
soon be tested for traumatic brain injury.
Veterans Administration documents confirm his diagnoses.
He believes that the Army has been slow to acknowledge his illnesses, if
at all. It wasn’t until a suicide attempt in
1997 that the Veterans Administration granted him full disability, but he
said he still has to fight to get tests and medications.
“Nothing is ever easy,” he said.
And he said no one has given him an official explanation for why he has
become so sick.
Studies 'inconclusive'
Part of that is because of the controversy surrounding depleted uranium,
which is enriched from natural uranium for use in nuclear reactors,
according to the military’s office of public health and environmental
hazards. Depleted uranium is twice as dense as lead, cheaper to produce
and can pierce armor, making it a highly effective weapon.
When it hits a target it ignites and burns, spreading a toxic dust into
the environment. It was first used in the Gulf War, where the office of
public health said 320 tons was used. The number of soldiers like Marshall
who had the highest risk of exposure because they were in or near vehicles
struck by depleted uranium was 110, said Dr. Michael Kilpatrick, deputy
director of the Force Health Protection & Readiness Department.
As of three years ago, Kilpatrick said, about 125 tons of depleted uranium
was used in Iraq during the current war. Data since that point is
classified, he said, but he said of the 2,200 soldiers tested for
exposure, 10 were found to have positive levels of depleted uranium in
their body.
The study Marshall is involved in, conducted at the University of Maryland
at Baltimore, requires participants to be tested every two years for
uranium in their body. Kilpatrick described the study as “the only data we
have on people inhaling the dust.”
He said the results have shown no correlation between depleted uranium
exposure and health problems.
“I’ve talked [with the study director] on a regular basis and have not
seen anything that would change what I’ve been saying over the years,” he
said.
Kilpatrick said everyone carries uranium in their bodies, and that uranium
found in everyday soil is more toxic than depleted uranium. He couldn’t
comment on Marshall’s situation, but he said there are many injured
soldiers from the Gulf War who have unexplained illnesses.
Some believe that the military’s studies are inconclusive, or just wrong.
“Some science is showing that that DU, when inhaled or gets in a wound,
can cause long-term health problems because it is a heavy metal and
radioactive,” said Paul Sullivan, director of the advocacy group Veterans
for Common Sense. But he acknowledged that studies are limited.
A 2000 report by the private, nonprofit Institute of Medicine reviewed
studies on depleted uranium and its health effects and found, according to
Abigail Mitchell, a senior program officer with the institute, that there
was inadequate or insufficient data to find a link between the two.
Mitchell said since then new studies have come out and the Institute of
Medicine is doing another review, which will be released in June.
Others believe the military hasn’t been willing to fully research the
effects of DU.
“It’s a very powerful weapon and they don’t want to give it up,” said Rep.
Jim McDermott, D-Washington. “They’re having trouble forcing themselves to
look at the effects of this very powerful weapon.”
McDermott was successful in pushing legislation that called for a new
report to be done on the depleted uranium studies. That report, released
last year, said studies have been inconclusive.
“My feeling is perhaps we’re looking at another Agent Orange,” McDermott
said, referring to a defoliant used in the Vietnam War later found to
cause serious illness in U.S. soldiers. “The military denied and denied
and denied until they finally had a study that found out it was toxic. I
don’t want to go down that road.”
The truth about the issue, said Sullivan, is probably somewhere in the
middle.
“Unfortunately, the debate has fractured into the pro-DU and anti-DU, and
that doesn’t serve veterans very well,” he said.
To Marshall, there’s no question about the effects of depleted uranium,
and he worries that it might also affect his children. Two of his three
children are biological, and they have started showing some strange
illnesses and rashes.
He said he plans to become more of an activist and voice on the issue not
only in Duluth, but on the state and national levels.
“If I can hold people accountable — if I can hold the government
accountable — then that’s what I’ll have to do,” he said. “If this is
happening to me, it’s happening to others. That’s my biggest concern.”
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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