EXPOSURE TO DEPLETED URANIUM WORRIES LAWMAKERS --
CONCERNED
THAT EXPOSED VETERANS ARE AT RISK FOR
SERIOUS HEALTH PROBLEMS

Story here...
http://www.wtopnews.com/index.php?nid=428&sid=746356
Story below:
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Exposure to Depleted Uranium Worries Lawmakers
Apr 5th - 5:08am
Mark Segraves, WTOP Radio
WASHINGTON -- A new weapon in the war on terror could be putting American
troops at risk, and that has some lawmakers on Capitol Hill asking questions
about depleted uranium.
Lawmakers are worried that veterans exposed to the heavy metal are at risk
for serious health problems.
The Depleted Uranium Munitions Study Act, introduced by Rep. Jim McDermott,
D-WA, in May of last year, would require the Pentagon to conduct a long-term
study on the effects of exposure to depleted uranium. McDermott also is a
physician, and he says the increase in birth defects among Iraqi children
since the first Gulf War shows a need for this study.
"The military keeps saying there's no problem, but what I saw in Iraq makes
me feel like I'm going though Vietnam again with what they said about Agent
Orange."
The U.S. military uses depleted uranium in many of its weapons because of
its armour-piercing capabilities. When depleted uranium strikes a target,
small particles of the high-density metal are released into the air.
Soldiers on the battlefield may inhale those particles, or worse, have
depleted uranium fragments embedded in their bodies.
"We should not expose our troops to something that we have not studied
carefully and know what the problems may or may not be," says McDermott.
A study by the Department of Defense finds little health risk to soldiers
who inhaled the airborne particles of depleted uranium. Since 1993, the
Veterans Affairs department in Baltimore has been monitoring 74 soldiers
exposed to depleted uranium during the first Gulf War.
"To date those individuals do not show any medical effects from their
exposure to depleted uranium," Dr. Michael E. Kilpatrick, deputy director
for Deployment Health Support in the Office of Deputy Assistant Secretary of
Defense, tells WTOP.
Another study by the DoD found that even in extreme cases, exposure to
depleted uranium did not pose a health risk. The Capstone Study measured the
amount of airborne depleted uranium particles in an armored vehicle after it
was hit with a round made from depleted-uranium. No soldiers were physically
examined in the five-year, $6 million study.
Kilpatrick said of the 2,122 individuals from
Operation Iraqi Freedom who were tested for depleted uranium exposure, eight
tested positive.
"I don't think their study is thorough enough, nor broad enough nor long
enough in time for us to really know. I think that they just want to get the
situation off of the radio and out of the newspapers." says McDermott.
Despite assurances from the government that exposure to depleted uranium is
safe, some states want extra measures taken.
Connecticut and Louisiana have passed laws providing state funded testing
for troops returning from Iraq to determine if they have been exposed. At
least 10 other states have similar bills pending approval.
There are federal tests available to some troops returning from Iraq to
determine if they have been exposed to D-U. Steve Robinson, executive
director of the National Gulf War Resource Center, said these tests are
outdated. Robinson added there are newer, more sophisticated tests to detect
for depleted uranium exposure.
Meanwhile, the Unites States Navy as well as the British Royal Navy are
phasing out the use of depleted uranium munitions.
Rob Arcamona contributed to this report
---------------
Larry Scott
(go
back to VA Watchdog dot Org Home Page)
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