Monday, May 14, 2007

I hope the Veteran's administration is ready for this

Because this will go on for years. We are poisoning our own soldiers along with everyone else in Iraq:
Governments deny it, but many people have long suspected that depleted uranium weapons may cause cancer. It looks as if the suspicions were right.
Depleted uranium (DU) is a dense, weakly radioactive metal used in armour-piercing shells. Hundreds of tonnes of them were fired by US and UK forces in Iraq in 2003. Previous research at the US government's Sandia National Laboratories in New Mexico found that people exposed to DU dust were at little extra risk of developing cancers.
Now the first study of DU's effects on human lung cells suggests otherwise. Toxicologist John Wise and colleagues at the University of Southern Maine in Portland exposed cultures of human bronchial fibroblasts to particles of uranium oxide typically found in DU dust. Chromosomes in the cells mutated and the cells died, genotoxic effects that increased with the particle concentration. This may increase a person's risk of lung cancer, the team conclude.
Update 5/15: Didn't we force our troops to get these shots as well?

Some Israeli soldiers have reportedly developed tumours and suffered infections after being used in tests by the Israeli military to develop an anthrax vaccine.

The report televised on Israel's Channel 2 on Monday said that several of the 700 soldiers who volunteered to test the vaccine have since suffered medical problems.

Giora Martinovich, the former chief medical officer for the Israeli military, confirmed that the tests were conducted from 1998 to 2006 and that some of the volunteers had suffered side-effects.

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