Thursday, August 24, 2006

Depleted Uranium--It's the New Black (Agent) Orange!


H/T First-Draft.

I'm surprised this hasn't gotten as much publicity, but I suppose when you're dealing with IED's, ambushes, mortars fired into your bases pretty much every day...and a plain lack of control over a supposedly "defeated" country, health concerns about depleted uranium, regardless of how deadly the long-term consequences might well be, are likely to get triaged down:

Chuck Hubert of Ocala fought in Iraq, and he said he believes he is suffering from the "new" Agent Orange...

Hubert said he and thousands of others who have returned from the Iraq war are battling the effects of inhaling depleted uranium yet no one's listening.

"I just want answers. I mean simple answers," Hubert said.

What happened in the deserts of Iraq caused Hubert to fear for his life on American soil

"I'm only 33 years old. I want to live to see 70," he said.

As a medic aboard Blackhawks in 2003, Hubert was living his dream.

"I was going to be a lifer. I was going to stay in my 20," he said.

Dreams of a continued Army career turned to dust. Hubert was medically discharged, strange symptoms emerged and he was nauseated and dizzy all the time.

"That's when they determined I had Grave's Disease," he said.

"He's an expert supposedly on depleted uranium," his wife, Monica, said.

She has done plenty of research and found so many other families suffering from strange medical symptoms. They believe uranium that rubs off from bullets and even tanks triggers illnesses when it's inhaled.

"If a bullet is coated with depleted uranium it will pierce further. It will hit harder," Monica Hubert said.

The family said it wants to know if Chuck Hubert has the new Agent Orange and they want to know why the government won't test him.

"It could be as simple as trying to hide something," he said.

The Huberts said they hope someone will hear their cry for help.

Hubert works but can only perform certain duties because of his ongoing medical condition. The government pays some disability but he said it's not enough to support a family of five.


The consequences will be just as bad--or worse--for the Iraqis, particularly women who want families...and the young children themselves. Of course, this is yet another example of wingnut dualism: their supposed "concern" for "the Iraqi people" extends neither to their long-term nor short-term health. On the one hand, you've got Abu Ghraib, Mahmudiya, Haditha (and goodness knows where else). On the other hand, the effects of depleted uranium will continue for who knows how long.

And D.U. doesn't discriminate, as Mr. Hubert has, sadly, discovered.

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