| AGENT ORANGE
DANGERS KNOWN AS EARLY AS 1965
Dow Chemical employee: "This material
is exceptionally toxic; it has a tremendous potential for
producing chloracne and systemic injury."
Note from
Larry Scott, VA Watchdog dot Org
... This information is no surprise to any Vietnam veteran.
But, to the uninitiated, it is an excellent tutorial on how
veterans of Vietnam have been jerked around by the government and
the chemical corporations for over 40 years. Use our search
engine for
more about Agent Orange.
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Chemical companies, US authorities
knew dangers of Agent Orange
Those responsible for exposing Vietnamese citizens and US troops
to toxic defoliants kept silent about known health implications, a
review of documents finds.
US chemical companies that made
Agent Orange and the government and military authorities who
ordered its spraying on Vietnam knew the human health toll it
could take, according to official and unofficial documents
detailing the history of the deadly defoliant.
A review of the documents related to the use of Agent Orange – a
dioxin-laden herbicide – in Vietnam, including decades-old
declassified papers from the companies that manufactured it and
the government and military that used it, provides compelling
evidence that those in charge also concealed evidence of the
devastating effects it could have on people.
Mum’s the word
A declassified letter by V.K. Rowe at Dow’s Biochemical Research
Library
to
Bioproducts Manager Ross Milholland dated June 24, 1965 clearly
states that the company knew the dioxin in their products,
including Agent Orange, could hurt people.
In reference to 2,4,5,-trichlorophenol and 2,3,7,8, -tetrachlorodibenzodioxin
(components of Agent Orange), Rowe stated:
“This material is exceptionally toxic; it has a tremendous
potential for producing chloracne and systemic injury.”
Rowe worried the company would suffer if word got out.
“The whole 2,4,5-T industry would be hard hit and I would expect
restrictive legislation, either barring the material or putting
very rigid controls upon it.”
So he said the company should keep quiet about the toxicity:
“There is no reason why we cannot get this problem under strict
control and thereby hopefully avoid restrictive legislation ... I
trust you will be very judicious in your use of this information.
It could be quite embarrassing if it were misinterpreted or
misused ... P.S. Under no circumstances may this letter be
reproduced, shown, or sent to anyone outside of Dow.”
Dow played its cards right, never getting in serious trouble. The
spraying of Agent Orange in Vietnam went on for another six years.
Dow did not return phone calls and emails requesting comment on
the Agent Orange issue.
‘Undisputed’
In the latest case of US veterans trying to sue Dow and Monsanto
for their cancers related to Agent Orange exposure, Supreme Court
Documents related to a petition for a Writ of Certiorari in Daniel
Raymond Stephenson, et al., petitioners, v. Dow Chemical Company,
Monsanto Company, et al., respondents, further implicates the
companies in cover-ups and misinformation.

The petitioners state that the companies knew their dioxins, such
as those used in Agent Orange, were harmful and lied about it
while concealing information, including the fact that several
factory workers had fallen sick after exposure to dioxin.
Several key facts “remain undisputed,” according to the document:
“Respondents never shared the information in their sole possession
about health risks attributable to dioxin,” it said.
“Respondents used proprietary, defective manufacturing processes
that dangerously contaminated 2,4,5- T with dioxin.” That is, the
chemical companies could have manufactured their products without
dioxin, as other companies had done, but the process was slower
and more expensive, so they chose a more dangerous method.
The companies “secretly tested their products for dioxin and hid
its extreme toxicity from the military,” according to the
petitioners.
The petitioners stated that the companies had been hiding
information during the ongoing court process: “Respondents also
misrepresent today’s medical understanding of the injuries caused
by exposure to dioxin. Instead of telling this Court that the
NAS/IOM has found that numerous cancers have been related to
exposure to dioxin-contaminated 2,4,5-T (ingredient in Agent
Orange) they quote a twenty-year-old Second Circuit opinion to
say: ‘Even today, . . . no . . . evidence that Agent Orange was
hazardous to human health.’”
The petitioners said the companies had misrepresented the health
effects with “patently false” assertions that none of their
workers had gotten sick from dioxin poisoning.
Inside job
Though numerous studies have uncontroversially demonstrated the
devastating effects of dioxin exposure on humans, the companies
that manufactured Agent Orange have gone out of their way to offer
their own unique perspective.
Through 2004, Dow and Monsanto funded several friendly studies by
Dr. Alvin L. Young to show that the exposure of US ground forces
to Agent Orange should be of minimal health concern.
Young’s schizophrenic reports go back and forth from saying that
dioxins are not harmful to saying they are harmful and his largely
debunked studies have drawn the scorn of prominent members of the
scientific community.
“Young is paid by the chemical companies,” Dr. Wayne Dwernychuk, a
retired senior/advisor at Hatfield Consultants, told Thanh Nien
Daily. “I don’t believe a word he says.” Hatfield Consultants is a
research leader in the field of contamination from dioxin
herbicides in Vietnam.
Not overly concerned
Though reports point to the fact that chemical companies like Dow
and Monsanto knowingly hid evidence of dioxin-related medical
problems from the government, the declassified 1990 Zumwalt Report
suggests that US military experts knew that Agent Orange was
harmful at the time of its use.
The report quotes a 1988 letter from Dr. James R. Clary, a former
government scientist with the Chemical Weapons Branch, to Senator
Tom Daschle. Dr. Clary was involved in designing tanks that
sprayed herbicides and defoliants in Vietnam, according to the
report.
Clary told Daschle:
“When we (military scientists) initiated the herbicide program in
the 1960’s, we were aware of the potential for damage due to
dioxin contamination in the herbicide. We were even aware that the
‘military’ formulation had a higher dioxin concentration than the
‘civilian’ version due to the lower cost and speed of manufacture.
However, because the material was to be used on the ‘enemy,’ none
of us were overly concerned. We never considered a scenario in
which our own personnel would become contaminated with the
herbicide. And, if we had, we would have expected our own
government to give assistance to veterans so contaminated.”
Chemical warfare: calling a spade a spade
Supporters of the US’s Agent Orange Campaign prefer to call it an
“herbicide program” rather than chemical warfare. But official
documents reveal that the US Senate knew its real name.
In US Senate Congressional Records dated August 11, 1969, a table
presented to senators showed that congress clearly classified
2,4-D and 2,4,5-T (main components of Agent Orange) in the
Chemical and Biological Warfare category.
The table also includes Cacodylic Acid, a main component of Agent
Blue, another chemical sprayed on Vietnam to kill plants, in the
official Chemical and Biological Warfare category. The table
describes it as “an arsenic-base compound... heavy concentrations
will cause arsenical poisoning in humans. Widely used in Vietnam.
It is composed of 54.29 percent arsenic.”
As Vietnam War Scholar and US Veteran W.D. Ehrhart put it
concisely in a Thanh Nien Daily interview last week: “It would be
hard to describe Agent Orange as anything other than a chemical
weapon. Dioxin is a chemical.” So is arsenic.
Reported by Jon Dillingham
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TOPICS:
veterans, veterans' benefits, VA, Department of Veterans' Affairs,
Agent Orange, dioxin, Dow Chemical, Vietnam |