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Depleted
Uranium Haunts Kosovo and Iraq
Scott
Peterson
(Scott
Peterson covers the Middle East for the Christian Science Monitor.)
Iraq
and Kosovo may be thousands of miles apart, but they share the dubious
distinction of contamination with radioactive residue from depleted
uranium (DU) bullets used in American air strikes. After several
years of silence, US officials finally admitted that 340 tons of
DU were fired during the Gulf war. In Kosovo, American delays in
providing details of quantities and target points have frustrated
international efforts to assess health risks. Despite repeated requests,
NATO waited almost a full year after the start of bombing in March
1999 to say that 31,000 DU bullets--a fraction of the number fired
in Iraq--were fired by A-10 "tankbuster" aircraft over
Kosovo. A Belgrade report published this April estimates that about
50,000 DU bullets had been used in parts of Serbia and Montenegro
as well as Kosovo. Evidence is plentiful on the ground that DU was
used in heavily populated areas, and that civilians and returning
refugees were never warned of the danger.
The
high-density bullet is made of low-level radioactive waste left
over from manufacturing nuclear fuel and bombs. DU bullets were
designed in the 1970s to defeat top-line Soviet tanks. Some 20 nations
now keep the world's best armor-piercing rounds in their arsenals.
First used in combat during the Gulf war, they proved to be unmatched
tank slayers. (A Pentagon official points to one other benefit:
the US can give away its 1.2 billion pound stockpile of radioactive
waste to weapons manufacturers.) When DU smashes into a hard target,
it pulverizes into breathable dust that remains radioactive for
4.5 billion years. American nuclear scientists have found that DU
dust can travel at least 26 miles. Scientists of the National Institute
for Health Protection in Macedonia detected eight times higher than
normal levels of alpha radiation--the primary type emitted by DU--in
the air during the air war. Yugoslav soldiers have found DU rounds
in Bujanovic in the south, and a Swiss-led international team found
"serious radioactivity" when it dug up many rounds at
a radio tower near Vranje.
Despite
predicting that "every future battlefield will be contaminated"
with DU, the Pentagon asserts that DU risk is minimal. But training
materials developed in the 1990s require full protective gear and
masks in contaminated areas, in line with Nuclear Regulatory Commission
(NRC) rules. The US military requires an NRC license to handle the
smallest amount of the restricted material. A US Army-commissioned
health report issued just days before the Gulf war noted that radiation
is linked with cancer and said that "no dose [of DU] is so
low that the probability of effect is zero." Still, the Pentagon
argues that "residual DU from battlefields in Kosovo does not
pose a significant risk to human health."
US
soldiers partly ascribe Gulf war syndrome to DU exposure. British
troops deployed in Kosovo are suing their defense ministry for ailments
they attribute to DU. The UN refugee agency in Kosovo now includes
papers in personnel files to note work in potentially DU-contaminated
areas. In Kosovo, Western de-mining groups were told by NATO to
"exercise caution" and not to climb on destroyed armored
vehicles. Last October Col. Eric Daxon, the US Army's top radiological
expert, said: "The best thing I can tell anybody about entering
a contaminated vehicle or damaged vehicle is: 'Don't do it. It is
a dangerous place to be.'"
But
that message never got through to hundreds of thousands of Kosovar
Albanians, in whose name the Kosovo campaign was fought, and whose
DU exposure could be highest. Rexh Himaj, a mechanic who lost most
of his tools during the conflict, didn't think twice about salvaging
parts from destroyed Serbian vehicles. Like thousands of returning
refugees, he was just glad to get back to work.
But
the concrete surface of a Serbian military base on the west side
of Djakovica where I found him working was pockmarked with DU hits,
as was the nearby road. The ground was littered with spent aluminum
shell casings that are unique to 30 mm DU bullets. A boy climbed
on a burned-out armored vehicle, then jumped off and kicked at a
shell casing.
"Now
I know it's dangerous, but that is a risk I've got to take,"
said Himaj, when the telltale casings are explained. His hands were
greasy-black with work. "If [the Americans] didn't use this
stuff, then we might still have Serbs here. On the other hand...I
hope they clean it up." But cleanup is virtually impossible.
One US Defense Department report lists eight soil decontamination
techniques, including multiple nitric acid washes, but "in
no case did the achieved separation suffice to allow unrestricted
disposal."
A
confidential preliminary UN report leaked in May 1999, as the bombing
continued, did not mince words: "This type of ammunition is
nuclear waste, and its use is very dangerous and harmful,"
it said. After NATO released its figures, the UN recommended that
"measures should be taken to prevent access." For Kosovars,
like Iraqis, such warnings may be too late.
For
comprehensive coverage of depleted uranium, visit <http://www.csmonitor.com/durable/1999/04/29/p1.htm>
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