The same depleted uranium munitions that poisoned Iraq now headed to Ukraine
Eight-year-old Ahmed Raadi is comforted by his mother Telba Ramadan as he waits Monday, January 15, 2001, for his weekly treatment of chemotherapy at the Ibn-Gazwan Children's Hospital in Basra, Iraq. Due to exposure to depleted uranium used in U.S. weapons during the first Gulf War, Raadi was born blind and suffered from a brain tumor which developed when he was seven. The cancer spread to his abdomen, causing it to swell. Doctors said his case was hopeless. | Enric Marti / AP

LONDON—In a shocking development, the British government has announced it will be sending depleted uranium (DU) rounds to Ukraine along with Challenger 2 tanks.

As we know from several wars in the past few decades, the health consequences for Ukrainian civilians will be high. DU is a chemically toxic and radioactive heavy metal and it’s a by-product of the enrichment process used to make reactor-grade uranium.

Its chemical and physical properties have made it popular for a range of military and commercial uses. Its density and ability to self-sharpen attracted the attention of the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) in the late 1950s. The military was looking to increase the armor-piercing capacity of munitions and strengthen the armor of tanks.

DU seemed to fit the bill. But its use has had a devastating impact on the populations caught up in numerous conflicts, with the terrible type of health consequences that we associate with radiation impacts.

DU is used for armor-piercing tank rounds and bullets as it is so heavy, meaning it can easily penetrate steel. Because of its heaviness, DU has also been used as ballast in airplanes, notably in hundreds of Boeing 747s—the early jumbo jets—that were built before 1981.

The practice became particularly controversial after an El Al cargo jet crashed into an apartment block in Amsterdam in 1992. Forty-three people were killed, and the cargo, which included 10 tons of chemicals, as well as flammable liquids, gases, and caustic substances, burst into flames, along with hundreds of kilos of DU carried as weighting.

A pile of 30mm anti-tank rounds in a former factory in the Sarajevo suburb of Hadzici, in 2001. The plant was a target during 1995 NATO airstrikes which used depleted uranium munitions. The radioactive weapons were used again during the air war in Kosovo against Yugoslavia in 1999. The anti-tank rounds pictured here were fired from American A-10 jets. | Hidajet Delic / AP

Although residents were assured that no health risk was posed, it was apparent that much of the DU had been released as dust particles into the atmosphere.

The risk is not that DU munitions will cause a nuclear explosion. It’s that the impact of their use causes toxic or radioactive dust to be released, and if this is subsequently inhaled or ingested in other ways, it has very significant negative health consequences.

After the first Gulf War, the DoD Office of the Special Assistant for Gulf War Illnesses (OSAGWI) identified several DU exposure scenarios, including through wounds caused by DU fragments, inhalation of airborne DU particles, ingestion of DU residues, or wound contamination by DU residues.

DU munitions were used on a large scale by the U.S. and Britain in the Gulf War in 1991 and in Iraq in 2003. Their use has caused a sharp increase in the incidence rates of some cancers, such as breast cancer and lymphoma, in the areas where it has been used.

It has also been implicated in a rise in birth defects from areas adjacent to the main Gulf War battlefields. Other health problems associated with DU include kidney failure, nervous system disorders, lung disease, and reproductive problems.

A report funded by the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 2013 showed that more than 400 tons of DU ammunition were estimated to have been used in 1991 and 2003, the vast majority by U.S. forces.

Harold Court of Pennsylvania, stages a mini-protest in front of the U.S. Capitol on July 9, 2010, saying that he could not get a member of Congress to help him get medical costs paid for by the U.S. Government after he lost a lung from exposure to depleted uranium. Court was a gunner in a U.S. Army tank and fired 4,200 rounds of depleted uranium when he was sent to fight in Iraq. | Douglas Graham / CQ Roll Call via AP

The report showed that the Iraqi government’s Radiation Protection Center had identified between 300 and 365 contaminated sites by 2006, mostly in the Basra region in southern Iraq.

As well as warning of contamination being spread by poorly regulated scrap metal dealers, including children, it also shared evidence that DU munitions were fired at light vehicles, buildings, and other civilian infrastructure, including the Iraqi Ministry of Planning in Baghdad—despite official assurances of military-only armored targets.

Its use in the former Yugoslavia by NATO forces in 1995 and 1999 led to the same type of consequences. It was also used by the U.S. in Syria in 2015. The impacts have not been confined to local populations—they have also affected the troops involved in or close to their use, and also military clean-up teams sent to deal with the impact of the DU.

The severe health consequences have led to the terms “Gulf War syndrome” and “Balkan syndrome” entering our vocabulary. The U.K. Ministry of Defence disputes the risks of DU, yet it recommends “ongoing surveillance” for veterans with embedded DU fragments.

No treaty explicitly banning the use of DU is yet in force, but it is clear that its use runs counter to the basic rules and principles of international humanitarian law. In 2006, the European Parliament strengthened its previous calls for a moratorium by calling for an introduction of a total ban, classifying the use of DU, along with white phosphorus, as inhumane.

Since 2007, repeated U.N. General Assembly resolutions have highlighted serious concerns over the use of DU weapons. Britain, together with the U.S., France, and Israel are the only states that have consistently voted against the resolutions.

The British government must put an immediate end to its use of DU—inflicting it on the people of Ukraine is the last thing they need.

Morning Star

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CONTRIBUTOR

Kate Hudson
Kate Hudson

General secretary of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND). Hudson has been a key figure in the anti-war movement nationally and internationally and considers international cooperation and solidarity to be the key to ultimate success. Kate was Head of Social and Policy Studies at London South Bank University prior to working for CND. She is author of a number of books, including a history of CND.

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