Who
Has Weapons of Mass Destruction? We do.
By
James T. Moore on Aug 08, 07
Theres
something horribly bizarre going on. But our mass media apparently never considered
it bizarre enough to write about. So I will.
Weve
hunted for five years for weapons of mass destruction which we swore over and
over that Iraq had, but didnt; while all along weve been using WMDs---lethal
chemical weapons---not only on the Iraqi people, but on our own soldiers, who
cant help getting in the way.
This
killer chemical is known as depleted uranium dust (DU), and is a by-product
of the chemical ingredients used in making artillery shells.
Please
dont call it the fortunes of war. Thats going too easy on the battle-happy
goons at the Pentagon. But wait. Ill let a Sergeant in Baghdad (who asked
not to be identified) assigned to a Bradley Fighting Vehicle give it to you straight,
in his own words: After we shoot something with depleted uranium ordnance,
were not supposed to go around it, due to the fact that it could cause cancer.
We dont know the effects of what it could do. If one of our vehicles burnt
with a DU round inside, we wouldnt go near it, even if it had important
documents inside. We play it safe.
And
play it safe they should, because lest you think this Sergeant is making mountains
out of molehills, listen to what Nuha Al Radi, Iraqi artist and author of the
Baghdad Diaries had to say. Everyone seems to be dying of cancer.
Every day one hears about another acquaintance or a friend dying. How many more
die in hospitals that one does not know? Apparently, over thirty percent of Iraqis
have cancer, and there are lots of kids with leukemia. The depleted uranium left
by U.S. bombing has turned Iraq into a cancer-infested country. For hundreds of
years to come, the effects of the uranium will continue to wreak havoc on Iraq
and its surrounding areas.
Shortly
after saying this Nuha Al Radi died of leukemia.
So,
just what is depleted uranium dust and what makes it so deadly? Well,
this writer, being chemically illiterate, will have to defer to Dr. Dan Bishop
who is on the International Depleted Uranium Study Team. Dr. Bishop tells us that
natural uranium (NU) is fairly safe because most of it is excreted from the body
within 24 hours. But depleted uranium (DU) is a different animal. When a DU bomb
hits a hard target most of its energy becomes heat; hot enough to ignite the DU.
This heat, Dr, Bishop says, converts up to 70% of the DU to a super fine dust.
It is this dust---particles about the size of the ash in cigarette smoke---that
does the damage, and makes it different from natural uranium (NU) which seldom
reaches such a small size.
What
damage does DU cause? These minute particles get into the lungs, become lodged
in place, then dissolve slowly into the bloodstream and lymphatic fluids causing
severe damage: DU was identified in the bloodstream of Gulf War veterans nine
years after the war. This testifies to the permanence of DU-oxide in the lungs.
Children
in particular are susceptible to DU poisoning. They have a much higher absorption
rate, as their blood is being used to build and nourish their bone tissue. Cancer
of the lymph system, which has rarely been seen before the age of 12 is now common.
And
it is this lethal, depleted uranium dust now lodged deep in the Iraqi environment
that is poisoning by radiation a significant portion of the adult civilian population,
and up to 600 Iraqi children per day, and God only knows how many American soldiers.
The
Deadly Dust, a poem by Douglas Westerman, is a stunning and fitting tribute to
the many victims of depleted uranium poisoning: Child and soldier, as one
we breathe the dust deadly. Our strength it saps, burns, sickens and kills, this
powder accursed. We hurt, weep, die, sperm and ovum corrupted, born without eyes
little sister mine. Birds fall, die, turn black. Death we embrace gladly. We cry,
stop this poisoned madness.
Which
brings us sadly back to the Unproductive Hunt. The fact that the Bush administration
never found any weapons of mass destruction in Iraq is so absurd its uncanny.
Weve been using them.