| IN BALAD, SMOKE AND
FIRE FROM THE BURN PITS
A first-hand account from Dan Clare,
an Airman who served at "Mortaritaville."
NOTE from
Larry Scott, VA Watchdog dot Org
... For more information,
refer to our Iraq War Toxins page.
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Home Fires: In Balad, Smoke and
Fire
By DAN CLARE
http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/01/20/hom
e-fires-in-balad-smoke-and-fire/
Balad Air Base in
northern Iraq was once nicknamed “Mortaritaville” by the soldiers
and airmen who called it home. When I was there from 2007 to 2008,
mortar attacks were so common and seemingly ineffective that the
frequent interruptions were often a welcome break from the daily
grind.
For most airmen on base, a trip
beyond guarded gates of Balad was unthinkable. Beyond the usual
mortar or rocket attack, I know it’s strange to say, one would
have to go to the hospital to be sure there was a war going on.
Yet, a dark cloud loomed above
us, never letting us forget that we were not on home station.
Balad, like bases throughout
Iraq and Afghanistan, burned its own waste.
Hundreds of tons of Styrofoam, plastic, uniforms, oil, fuel
and other trash went into the air from an open, smoldering pit.
When I first arrived in Iraq, I thought a portion of the base was
under attack. We later learned the floating plume was the source
of Balad’s signature stench.
At times, the wind would change
directions and a toxic cloud would hang low and overwhelm the
housing area. It could influence flight line
operations,
limit visibility and make eyes and lungs burn. It was inescapable.
More than once it made me sick. I went to medical for help and was
told that my nausea and symptoms were minor compared to people who
were coughing up black phlegm and having constant attacks.
As a member of the public
affairs team, I was surprised the obvious health concerns the burn
pit caused had not reached the media. The release of information
was inevitable.
Long before our deployment, in
late 2006, Lt. Col. Darrin Curtis, then bioenvironmental flight
commander at Balad,
wrote a letter analyzing the situation.
He spoke of acute and possibly
chronic health hazards associated with the smoke. Like hundreds
who deployed before me, I came off of active duty with Colonel
Curtis’ letter.
Since details from the
burn pit were
brought to light by Military Times reporter Kelly Kennedy,
then subsequently
by CNN and other news sources, hundreds of veterans have come
forward who have mild to severe health concerns that they
attribute to burn pit exposures in Iraq and Afghanistan. (Kelly
Kennedy’s latest update on Balad’s burn appeared in the
Military Times this week.)
Stories of soldiers, veterans
and widows who attribute cancers and life-threatening illnesses to
exposure to the burn pit are coming to light, as are more numerous
reports of unexplained shortness of breath, asthma-like symptoms,
respiratory issues and other problems. Nearly 500 have come to the
Disabled American Veterans to be counted.
The military initially dismissed
its own reports on any longtime exposure concerns associated with
the burn pit. It has since
relented and
is looking closer at the matter. The issue has gone
as far as the Commander in Chief.
Recent headlines reported the
president saying
burn pits would not be another Agent Orange — harkening to the
exposure hazard that plagued Vietnam veterans. I’m hopeful that he
is right. Especially because that exact comparison was made by a
military official when I was in Iraq.
Recently, I was contacted by a
Navy chief who was stationed a quarter-mile from the burn pit at
Balad from November 2005 to March 2006. He told me about a
helicopter pilot he knew during his deployment who was diagnosed
with unspecified asthma-like conditions.
He wanted to be on the record
also, and said he was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s Lymphoma in June
2007 and underwent five months of chemotherapy and one month of
radiation. He has no family history of the disease and was exposed
to cancer-causing agents in paints early in his Navy career — but
he feels nearly certain the burn pit was the cause of his illness.
He said his physicians just shrugged their shoulders when he asked
about the burn pit.
His illness cost him $400 a
month in military flight pay. There’s no telling how much time it
will take off of his life.
It makes me feel fortunate that
my V.A. diagnosis is minor — shortness of breath. My inhaler is
working and aside from a persistent cough and sinus problems, I
can hope that any exposure I faced won’t cost days or months of my
life.
Beyond the traditional threats
that service members face in a combat zone, there are, inevitably,
invisible injuries we bring home. It will take additional studies
and perhaps decades for us to fully understand any long term
impacts the burn pits may cause our fighting men and women.
But if we owe them anything, if
we share an obligation for their service and sacrifices, we have
to answer every question and own up to our responsibilities in the
case of potentially deadly exposure issues.
Anything less would be
unpatriotic.
Note from the author:
Military members and veterans who have
been exposed to burn pits in Iraq and Afghanistan and have since
been diagnosed or experienced illnesses which may be related to
their exposure are encouraged to contact the D.A.V. at
legislation@davmail.org
.
Dan Clare is a former Marine
who enlisted in the Air National Guard in 2001. He serves as
Assistant National Director of Communications for the non-profit
Disabled American Veterans (D.A.V.).
In 2007-2008, he served at Balad Air Base, Iraq, as an Air Force
public affairs specialist.
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