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DEPLETED URANIUM TOXICITY IN AFGHANISTAN

Can DU used in Afghanistan will have an effect on Pakistan


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A.Rahman

GUEST
DEPLETED URANIUM TOXICITY IN AFGHANISTAN
By Richard S. Ehrlich
<animists@...>
The Laissez Faire City Times
Vol 5, No 44, October 29, 2001

http://www.zolatimes.com/V5.44/afghan_uranium.htm

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan ‹ American warplanes are attacking Afghanistan with
depleted uranium weapons which could poison combatants and civilians,
especially children, according to U.S. officials.

The possibility of radioactive dust storms sweeping across Afghanistan and
polluting rivers has meanwhile sparked fears in Pakistan.

"The radioactive dust released by the impact of these weapons can easily get
into the food chain and the water supply through the Kabul River in
Afghanistan and thus into Pakistan&#39;s Indus [River]," reported Dawn
newspaper.


"There are simply no contingency measures to brace people against such a
disastrous humanitarian fallout," Dawn added.

The narrow Kabul River cuts through the center of the heavily bombed,
mile-high Afghan capital and provides drinking water for the people who
dwell there.

After meandering east along the highway past Jalalabad and other U.S. bomb
targets, the Kabul River crosses into Pakistan and feeds the Indus River,
the country&#39;s biggest waterway. The Indus provides much of the liquid
nourishment to Pakistan&#39;s farms and people along its route south to the
Arabian Sea.

Pakistani Dr. Ali Rind warned Dawn&#39;s readers: "All flying bombs -- Tomahawk,
JDAM etc. -- are made of depleted uranium metal."

Many experts insist the dangers of depleted uranium are often exaggerated.

Dr. Michael H. Repacholi of the World Health Organization, however, said in
a January report: "DU [deleted uranium] is released from fired weapons in
the form of small particles that may be inhaled, ingested or remain in the
environment."

Dr. Repacholi said, "For smaller particles, a larger fraction will deposit
in the lungs, where they may remain for months or years, unless they
dissolve. Very small amounts may be retained in the lymphatic system for
longer."

He added, "Breathing ultra-fine particles could lead to a theoretical risk
of cancer.

"In arid regions, most DU remains on the surface as dust. It is dispersed in
[non-arid] soil more easily, particularly in the areas of higher rainfall."

Dr. Repacholi stressed, "Children rather than adults may be considered to be
more at risk of DU exposure when returning to normal activities within a war
zone through contaminated food and water, since typical hand-to-mouth
activity of inquisitive play could lead to high DU ingestion from
contaminated soil."

Depleted uranium is "used in several types of munitions, but primarily in
two types: it&#39;s used in 120-millimeter tank rounds and it&#39;s used in
30-millimeter rounds fired by the A-10," Defense Department spokesperson
Kenneth H. Bacon told a newsconference in January.

The dreaded A-10 "Wart Hog" is a so-called a "tank killing" aircraft.

Every 30-millimeter round it fires has a 0.3-kilogram, depleted uranium
"penetrator" to bust through armor, according to military reports.

Depleted uranium is "primarily for anti-armor, and those are its main uses,"
Mr. Bacon said.

"We obviously put out instructions about avoiding depleted uranium dust," he
added.

"Troops are instructed to wear masks if they&#39;re around what they consider to
be atomized or particle-ized depleted uranium -- that is if rounds have
struck tanks, there could be depleted uranium dust around.

"So if they were working around an [enemy] tank that had been disabled by a
depleted uranium round, they would be instructed to wear some sort of mask
to prevent breathing in particles," Mr. Bacon said.

"All our studies show that in cases where there is dust, it [depleted
uranium] is washed away and nullified by the first heavy rain.

"But there aren&#39;t a lot of heavy rains in the desert, so obviously, when we
were advising our soldiers how to deal with depleted uranium damage, or
damaged vehicles in the desert, we were careful to point out that they
should wear masks."

Depleted uranium is described as uranium that is 40 percent less radioactive
than natural uranium, though it retains identical chemical properties.

Natural uranium is found in everyday air, water and soil and, as a result,
is also in each person&#39;s body.

Depleted uranium, however, has a half-life of 4.5 billion years.

In 1998, the Pentagon noted: "Depleted uranium is the most effective
material for [military] uses because of its high density and the metallic
properties that allow it to &#39;self-sharpen&#39; as it penetrates armor.

"Armor containing depleted uranium is very effective at blunting anti-tank
weapons," the Pentagon added.

"The major health concerns about DU relate to its chemical properties as a
heavy metal rather than to its radioactivity, which is very low."

Shrapnel from a depleted uranium weapon&#39;s explosion can pepper a victim&#39;s
body much like a shotgun blast.

If the shrapnel remains embedded in a person, then the radiation "isn&#39;t
eliminated," an expert said at a Defense Department briefing.

"By accumulation, is the [radioactive] dose increasing with time? Yes, it
is," the expert added.

Dr. Ross Anthony, from the Rand Corporation, told the Defense Department
briefing, "The kidney is the part that is the most susceptible."

In experiments with animals, however, "there seem to be no real highly
negative effects until you get a very, very high dose," Dr. Anthony said.

In 1999, Steve Fetter and Frank von Hippel wrote in the Bulletin of the
Atomic Scientists: "Radiation doses for soldiers with embedded fragments of
depleted uranium may be troublesome.

"Apart from radiation, however, the risks related to the heavy-metal
toxicity of uranium inhaled and ingested by soldiers in direct and
unprotected contact with vehicles struck with DU munitions could be
significant.

"Primarily at risk are those who were in vehicles when they were struck, or
their rescuers, as well as those who worked for extended periods in cleanup
efforts inside the vehicles without adequate respiratory protection," they
added.

"Very prolonged exposure to high concentrations of depleted uranium is
required to give radiation doses significantly above [normal] background"
levels.

"Pieces and particles of depleted uranium lying about would be sources of
most of the external radiation dose, which would come primarily from
penetrating gamma rays.

"Inhalation of DU-contaminated dust -- either directly or after resuspension
[in the air] -- would be the source of most of the internal dose, which
would be primarily from very short-range alpha particles."

Referring to desert dust storms, the bulletin said, "The ground the
DU-contaminated plumes passed over would be coated with a thin layer of DU
dust, some of which would be later kicked up by wind and human activity.

"The munitions could deposit a layer of [depleted uranium] dust on crops
that could be eaten directly by humans or by animals later consumed by
humans.

"However, rough estimates suggest that the cancer risk from consumption of
contaminated produce would be less than from inhalation."

As a result of the U.S.-Gulf War, "the number of Iraqi soldiers with
embedded DU fragments could be in the thousands," the bulletin said.

"Natural curiosity may also lead children and other passersby to investigate
the interiors of destroyed tanks and other vehicles...which would subject
them to danger from DU dust," it warned.

"Such vehicles should be made inaccessible, perhaps by being buried and then
pumped full of concrete."

Critics have expressed concern over depleted uranium contamination on
battlefields which do not receive environmental clean-ups.

Some critics claimed birth defects among babies born in Iraq after the Gulf
War -- including headless victims and others with deformed limbs -- may be
linked to the U.S. use of depleted uranium.
 
Originally posted by Yahya@Nov 24 2005, 09:55 AM
the DU rounds are good for peircing armour..what armour did the taliban havE?
[post=3597]Quoted post[/post]​

tanks?
 
Originally posted by A.Rahman@Nov 24 2005, 06:54 PM
tanks?
[post=3620]Quoted post[/post]​
they did not have any tanks and the ones they had could be penetrated by machine gun. so i am not certain about the use of DU rounds in afganistan how ever i am certain they where used in Iraq along with a weopen americans themselfes declare illegal and so does the geneva convention and the UN. this is the cluster bomb...which litters the bomb site with dozens of un exlpoded mines...
 
Originally posted by Yahya@Nov 25 2005, 08:49 AM
they did not have any tanks and the ones they had could be penetrated by machine gun. so i am not certain about the use of DU rounds in afganistan how ever i am certain they where used in Iraq along with a weopen americans themselfes declare illegal and so does the geneva convention and the UN. this is the cluster bomb...which litters the bomb site with dozens of un exlpoded mines...
[post=3671]Quoted post[/post]​


Tomahawk,
JDAM etc. -- are made of depleted uranium meta
 
Originally posted by A.Rahman@Nov 25 2005, 08:22 PM
[post=3697]Quoted post[/post]​
JDAM is a conventional bomb with moving tail fins controled by a computer guided by GPS.
 

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