Israel uses DU shells
Anti-war group demands investigation
By John
Catalinotto
A major anti-war organization in the United States is
calling for an international investigation of Israeli use of
depleted uranium shells in its attempt to repress the Al-Aqsa
Intifada--the uprising of Palestinians against the
occupation.
International Action Center Co-director Sara Flounders told
Workers World Nov. 12 that the IAC was calling upon
"international organizations, NGOs, environmental and health
organizations to investigate the Israeli military's use of
prohibited weapons in the West Bank and Gaza, and to mobilize
to stop it. These weapons include dumdum bullets, CS gas and
depleted uranium weapons."
Flounders was in occupied Palestine from Oct. 28-Nov. 2 as
part of a four-person IAC delegation. The delegation was on a
fact-finding mission and also delivered medical supplies to
Palestinian clinics and hospitals in the territories.
"Such use of DU weapons," says Flounders, "adds to the
crimes the Israeli forces are committing against the
Palestinian population. Israeli helicopter gun ships are firing
into densely populated areas. According to international law
these attacks on civilian areas are war crimes, as is the
long-term destruction of the environment from depleted uranium
contamination.
"The radioactive materials enter into the land, the water
and the whole food chain, contaminating the densely-populated
West Bank and Gaza, where water is a scarce resource. The
wanton radioactive contamination of this region is a crime
against all of humanity and a threat to the entire region now
and for generations to come.
"We urge scientists, doctors and soldiers who have handled
these weapons to come forward with information. Information
supplied this way in Puerto Rico, Okinawa and south Korea
recently have helped mobilize against DU use and put the
Pentagon on the defensive. This crime and its long-term impact
must be fully exposed and stopped."
Pentagon hid DU use
The draft of a paper on DU the IAC intends to release Nov.
16 shows that in Vieques, Puerto Rico, and in Okinawa, Panama
and south Korea, the Pentagon had either kept secret or denied
using DU until popular organizations challenged the U.S.
military.
Following the protests, the Pentagon was forced to admit DU
use. In Okinawa the U.S. apologized and promised not only to no
longer use DU but also to begin to clean up spent DU
shells.
In addition, movements in France, Italy and other NATO
countries occupying Kosovo have sparked official investigations
of the dangers their troops face from exposure to DU from
shells fired by U.S. planes during the 1999 war. There are
reports that the Portuguese government will withdraw its troops
because of DU dangers.
Flounders told how the IAC delegation witnessed "Israeli
attack helicopters, which people described to us as 'Apache'
helicopters from the U.S., firing shells and rockets at targets
in and around Ramallah. We then examined a small office used by
the Fatah organization that the projectiles hit and
destroyed."
Israeli authorities seized
IAC's materials
"We also saw Israeli tanks and other armored vehicles firing
machine-gun rounds and larger projectiles at youthful
demonstrators in Ramallah," Flounders added. "We collected some
of the shell casings and metal fragments from the different
target areas to bring back to the United States for evaluation
and testing."
Flounders said: "As we were preparing to leave from Ben
Gurion Airport in Tel Aviv, members of our delegation were
stopped, searched and interrogated. The shell casings and metal
fragments were confiscated. While this prevented us from doing
our own tests, it made us even more suspicious that the Israeli
forces were using DU shells."
A 1995 report from the U.S. Army Environmental Policy
Institute asserts that Israel is one of the countries with DU
munitions in its arsenal. Given Israel's own nuclear program
and well-developed military industry, the IAC believes Israel
is quite likely a manufacturer of its own DU ammunition.
The "Apache" and the Cobra helicopters--both used by the
Israeli armed forces--are equipped to fire DU shells. Also, the
Israeli Sabra tank is modeled on the Abrams M1A1 tank, which is
also capable of firing DU shells.
DU is a waste product of the process that produces enriched
uranium for use in atomic weapons and nuclear power plants.
Because it is extremely dense, when turned into a metal DU can
be used to make a shell that penetrates steel. It's also
pyrophoric; that is, it burns when heated by friction when it
strikes steel.
When DU burns, it spews tiny particles of poisonous and
radioactive uranium oxide into the air. The small particles can
be ingested or inhaled by humans for miles around. Even one
particle, when lodged in a vital organ, can be dangerous.
At least 600,000 pounds of DU and uranium dust was left
around Iraq, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia by U.S. and British forces
during the 1991 war against Iraq. A symposium in Baghdad in
December 1998 found higher rates of childhood leukemia and
other cancers in people living around Basra, and attributed
this to DU contamination. For some cancers the rates were 5 to
10 times higher than normal.
A reason to refuse duty
DU is also considered at least a contributing cause to the
120,000 reported cases of "Gulf War Syndrome." Numerous
international studies in Britain, the United States and Iraq
have linked Gulf War Syndrome to the use of radioactive weapons
in the bombing. The chronic symptoms of this ailment range from
sharp increases in cancers to memory loss, chronic pain,
fatigue and birth defects in the veterans' children.
While the Pentagon continues to deny any great dangers from
DU, the 1995 U.S. Army Environmental Policy Institute study,
entitled "Health and Environmental Consequences of Depleted
Uranium in the U.S. Army," stated: "If DU enters the body, it
has the potential to generate significant medical consequences.
The risks associated with DU in the body are both chemical and
radiological.... Personnel inside or near vehicles struck by DU
penetrators could receive significant internal exposures."
DU is also used to make tank armor and is used in heavily
armored Israeli vehicles. Exposure to radiation for those
remaining in the tanks for a long time or from handling weapons
can be another source of danger.
"Like the U.S. generals who are the main supplier of Israeli
weapons," said Flounders, "the Israeli general staff are
indifferent to protecting the long-term health of their own
rank-and-file soldiers, not to speak of their racist contempt
for the Palestinians.
"For groups inside Israel who oppose the repression of
Palestinians, challenging DU use could increase the
conscientious resistance from individual Israeli troops that
has already surfaced."
For more information on the campaign against DU weapons,
visit the IAC Web site at www.iacenter.org or read the book
Metal of Dishonor, which can be ordered on-line from
www.leftbooks.com.
This article is copyright under a Creative
Commons License.
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