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| |
Three decades later, Agent Orange still ravages
Vietnam, GIs
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Archive
Recent Editions
2006 Editions
May 13, 2006
Author:
Tim Wheeler |
People's Weekly World Newspaper,
05/11/06 13:52 |
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Photo by Daniel Shea of VFP72:
children of Friendship Village in Hanoi greet conference
delegates. |
An unprecedented meeting in Hanoi, Vietnam, March 28-29,
proved that wounds from the Vietnam War are still open and
bleeding three decades after that conflict supposedly ended.
It was the first International Conference of Victims of
Agent Orange, and it attracted people from more than a dozen
countries who are suffering the aftereffects of their
exposure to Agent Orange, dioxin, and other toxic agents
sprayed recklessly on Vietnam during the 10-year war.
The conference was sponsored by the Vietnam Association of
Victims of Agent Orange (VAVAO).
David Cline, president of Veterans for Peace (VFP), led a
delegation of five U.S. Vietnam veterans, including several
who have suffered cancer and other dioxin-related illnesses
or birth defects in their offspring which they blame on
their exposure to Agent Orange. Cline told the World he is
not an Agent Orange victim, but has struggled to recover
from three wounds he sustained as a combat infantryman in
Vietnam for which he received three Purple Hearts and a
Bronze Star.
Still a burning issue
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U.S. vet Ralph Steele talks to young
boy at physical therapy session. Photo by Daniel Shea
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“This conference showed us that Agent Orange is not just
a ‘blast from the past,’” Cline said in a phone interview.
“A huge number of children in Vietnam are suffering birth
defects and deformities from their parents’ exposure to
Agent Orange and other chemical agents. The Vietnamese are
asking: ‘How many generations will be facing these birth
defects?’”
Cline denounced successive administrations in Washington for
arrogantly rejecting any responsibility for this catastrophe
inflicted on the Vietnamese people. When the U.S. and
Vietnam established diplomatic relations, he said, “the
promises made in the Paris Peace Agreement of extensive
postwar aid were nullified. There would be no more legal
claims against each other. But the people in Vietnam are
still suffering. We want relief for all veterans, all
victims of Agent Orange. There is a certain level of
responsibility that our nation owes that nation.”
In his speech to the conference, Cline said the premature
death from cancer of fellow Vietnam vets first alerted him
that they had been exposed to some deadly toxins in Vietnam.
U.S. companies, gov’t liable
“While the chemical companies had responsibility and should
be held liable, the primary responsibility lies with the
U.S. government which ordered the continued use of these
poisons” after they were known to be toxic, he told the
conference. “Our demand has always been testing, treatment
and compensation for Agent Orange victims” by the U.S.
government.
Progress was made with passage of the Agent Orange Act in
1991 admitting that these chemicals cause a long list of
diseases, he continued.
“Today the Bush administration has led our country and the
world into another invasion and occupation, this time in
Iraq, and is now using depleted uranium that will in time
poison U.S. troops and Iraqi citizens,” Cline said. “They
have also used white phosphorus bombs against whole cities
like Fallujah. It is time for humanity to demand an end to
these weapons as part of our efforts to abolish war.”
Terrible deformities
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U.S. vets join in song at Ho Chi
Minh City hospital for victims of Agent Orange. Photo by
Daniel Shea |
Both at the conference itself and in a tour of Vietnam
after the conference, the U.S. delegation witnessed
firsthand the vast human tragedy, meeting deformed children
struggling to develop and live a normal life.
For Cline, it was a “homecoming,” in that the tour took them
to Cu Chi, a town near Ho Chi Minh City (formerly Saigon)
where he was deployed during the war and where thousands of
children now are suffering from exposure to Agent Orange.
“Sometimes I thought to myself it would be merciful if they
were to die because the deformities are so disabling,” he
said. “But they have a whole movement going to help these
children and their families live as close to a normal life
as possible”
Lawsuits, petitions
VAVOA is waging a struggle both inside Vietnam and
internationally to obtain the resources needed to carry on
this fight, including a lawsuit filed in the United States
against the chemical companies that produced Agent Orange
and dioxin.
VFP has fully backed VAVOA, sponsoring a 10-city tour of the
U.S. last fall in which Vietnamese Agent Orange victims
spoke to many thousands about their struggle. VFP’s web site
features a VAVOA petition addressed to the president of the
United States demanding that both he and the chemical
corporations named in the lawsuit, including Dow Chemical
and Monsanto, “accept their responsibilities for the damage
caused by their actions and products” and “pay full
compensation to the victims.”
So far nearly 700,000 people in the U.S. have signed the
petition and more than 12 million Vietnamese have signed.
Reaching across generations
Another delegate to the Hanoi conference was Joan Duffy, who
served as a U.S. Air Force nurse in Vietnam during the years
1969-70.
“I turned against the war while I was serving there,” she
told the World in a phone interview from her home in Santa
Fe, N.M. “Three months after I arrived, I looked around and
asked myself, ‘What are we doing here?’ They [U.S.
personnel] sprayed the perimeter of the base where I was
deployed with dioxin twice a week to ward off infiltrators.”
In recent years Duffy has fought breast and ovarian cancer
and her grandson was born with a bowel disorder that nearly
took his life, a condition known to be linked to dioxin
exposure.
“The legal presumption is that if you were anywhere in
Vietnam, you were exposed to dioxin,” she said. “It has a
half-life of between 50 and 100 years, and it is estimated
that 3 million Vietnamese, mostly children, are ‘profoundly
affected’ by exposure to these toxins.”
Cold shoulder from judge
Judge Jack Weinstein threw the VAVOA lawsuit out, rejecting
their argument that Agent Orange was a weapon subject to the
Geneva Conventions and their use against civilians was a war
crime. Weinstein held that Agent Orange did not target
people in Vietnam but was instead a “defoliant” aimed at
Vietnam’s jungle.
“My rebuttal to that is that it wasn’t used simply to
defoliate,” Duffy said. “It was a weapon to destroy food
supplies. I don’t care what the intent was, the result is
that it turned out to be a weapon. It violated so many
international laws. With weapons, you try to limit their
effect to combatants. But Agent Orange and dioxin affected
millions of noncombatants during the war and continues to
affect them today. This is a war crime.
“Agent Orange and dioxin are weapons of mass destruction,”
she said. “What would you call a weapon used to starve
people? If it quacks like a duck and waddles like a duck,
it’s a damn duck!”
Duffy said she was deeply impressed by the superb
organization of the conference held at the Ministry of
Defense in Vietnam’s capital and by the stature of the
participants, who included Vietnamese and international
scientific experts on toxic chemical agents, a member of
Parliament from New Zealand and top legal and medical
experts in the field. It was covered extensively by the
world media, although virtually ignored by the U.S. news
media.
‘We must take responsibility’
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Doctors charge third generation of
birth defects in Vietnamese children caused by Agent
Orange and dioxin spraying. Photo by Daniel Shea |
During the conference they traveled to Friendship
Village, built by the late George Mizo, a Vietnam veteran,
to shelter hundreds of child victims of Agent Orange and
dioxin.
“To see these children in person changes your life forever,”
Duffy said. “They are so afflicted by such bizarre
mutations. Yet the Vietnamese are doing a very good job of
educating those who can be educated and stimulating children
who are profoundly retarded.”
The experience, she said, strengthened her resolve to take
action when she returned home. “Let’s hope we can make a
difference in this year’s elections. Without a change in our
nation’s political direction, I fear we are lost. Bush’s
poll ratings go down, down. I just hope all those people who
are angry and disillusioned get out and vote.”
Another delegate to the Hanoi conference was Dan Shea of
Portland, Ore. He believes that his exposure to Agent Orange
during his tour of duty in Vietnam cost him his son’s life.
“I tried to put the Vietnam War on the back shelf when I
returned home, but my first child was born with a severe
congenital heart defect,” Shea told the World. When his son
reached age 3, heart surgery was performed. One day in 1981,
he went into convulsions and fell into a coma.
“He died in my arms,” Shea said. “The war has a way of
coming back to bite you. I never applied for any VA
benefits. I didn’t want to have anything to do with them. I
decided to devote the rest of my life to the search for
peace and justice.”
Shea continued: “Going back to Vietnam was a healing process
for me. I told the conference about the death of my child.
People came up to me with tears in their eyes to say how
sorry they were for my loss. And I was thinking about all
the children they have lost. We need to take responsibility
for what we did in Vietnam.”
Tim Wheeler (greenerpastures21212@yahoo.com) is national
political correspondent for the People’s Weekly World.
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