AGENT ORANGE
G'day folks,
It took two generations and a lot of heartache among
the Vietnam veteran community, but the VA's “presumptive list” of
diseases that are caused by exposure to Agent Orange now includes
everything from non-Hodgkin lymphoma, prostate cancer, and multiple
myeloma to Parkinson's disease and ischemic heart disease.
Agent Orange was a powerful herbicide used by U.S. military
forces during the Vietnam War to eliminate forest cover and crops for North
Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops. The U.S. program, codenamed Operation Ranch
Hand, sprayed more than 20 million gallons of various herbicides over Vietnam,
Cambodia and Laos from 1961 to 1971. Agent Orange, which contained the deadly
chemical dioxin, was the most commonly used herbicide. It was later proven to
cause serious health issues—including cancer, birth defects, rashes and severe
psychological and neurological problems—among the Vietnamese people as well as
among returning U.S. servicemen and their families.
Operation Ranch Hand
During
the Vietnam War,
the U.S military engaged in an aggressive program of chemical warfare codenamed
Operation Ranch Hand.
From 1961
to 1971, the U.S. military sprayed a range of herbicides across more than 4.5
million acres of Vietnam to destroy the forest cover and food crops used by
enemy North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops.
U.S.
aircraft were deployed to douse roads, rivers, canals, rice paddies and
farmland with powerful mixtures of herbicides. During this process, crops and
water sources used by the non-combatant native population of South Vietnam were
also hit.
In all,
American forces used more than 20 million gallons of herbicides in Vietnam,
Laos and Cambodia during the years of Operation Ranch Hand. Herbicides were
also sprayed from trucks and hand-sprayers around U.S. military bases.
What Is Agent Orange?
The
various herbicides used during Operation Ranch Hand were referred to by the
colored marks on the 55-gallon drums in which the chemicals were shipped and
stored.
In
addition to Agent Orange, the U.S. military used herbicides named Agent Pink,
Agent Green, Agent Purple, Agent White and Agent Blue. Each of
these—manufactured by Monsanto, Dow Chemical and other companies—had different
chemical chemical additives in varying strengths.
Agent
Orange was the most widely used herbicide in Vietnam, and the most potent. It
was available in slightly different mixtures, sometimes referred to as Agent
Orange I, Agent Orange II, Agent Orange III and “Super Orange.”
More than 13 million gallons of Agent Orange was
used in Vietnam, or almost two-thirds of the total amount of herbicides used during
the entire Vietnam War.
Dioxin in Agent Orange
In
addition to Agent Orange’s active ingredients, which caused plants to
“defoliate” or lose their leaves, Agent Orange contained significant amounts of
2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin, often called TCDD, a type of dioxin.
Dioxin
was not intentionally added to Agent Orange; rather, dioxin is a byproduct
that’s produced during the manufacturing of herbicides. It was found in varying
concentrations in all the different herbicides used in Vietnam.
Dioxins
are also created from trash incineration; burning gas, oil and coal; cigarette
smoking and in different manufacturing processes such as bleaching. The TCDD
found in Agent Orange is the most dangerous of all dioxins.
Effects of Agent Orange
Because Agent
Orange (and other Vietnam-era herbicides) contained dioxin in the form of TCDD,
it had immediate and long-term effects.
Dioxin is
a highly persistent chemical compound that lasts for many years in the
environment, particularly in soil, lake and river sediments and in the food
chain. Dioxin accumulates in fatty tissue in the bodies of fish, birds and
other animals. Most human exposure is through foods such as meats, poultry,
dairy products, eggs, shellfish and fish.
Studies
done on laboratory animals have proven that dioxin is highly toxic even in
minute doses. It is universally known to be a carcinogen (a cancer-causing
agent).
Short-term
exposure to dioxin can cause darkening of the skin, liver problems and a severe
acne-like skin disease called chloracne. Additionally, dioxin is linked to type
2 diabetes, immune system dysfunction, nerve disorders, muscular dysfunction,
hormone disruption and heart disease.
Veteran Health Issues and Legal Battle
Questions
regarding Agent Orange arose in the United States after an increasing number of
returning Vietnam veterans and their families began to report a range of
afflictions, including rashes and other skin irritations, miscarriages,
psychological symptoms, type 2 diabetes, birth defects in children and cancers
such as Hodgkin’s disease, prostate cancer and leukemia.
In 1979,
a class action lawsuit was filed on behalf of 2.4 million veterans who were
exposed to Agent Orange during their service in Vietnam. Five years later, in
an out-of-court-settlement, seven large chemical companies that manufactured
the herbicide agreed to pay $180 million in compensation to the veterans or
their next of kin.
In 1991,
President George H.W. Bush
signed into law the Agent Orange Act, which mandated that some diseases
associated with Agent Orange and other herbicides (including non-Hodgkin’s
lymphoma, soft tissue sarcomas and chloracne) be treated as the result of
wartime service. This helped codify the VA’s response to veterans with
conditions related to their exposure to Agent Orange.
Legacy of Agent Orange in Vietnam
In
addition to the massive environmental devastation of the U.S. defoliation
program in Vietnam, that nation has reported that some 400,000 people were
killed or maimed as a result of exposure to herbicides like Agent Orange.
In
addition, Vietnam claims half a million children have been born with serious
birth defects, while as many 2 million people are suffering from cancer or
other illness caused by Agent Orange.
In 2004,
a group of Vietnamese citizens filed a class-action lawsuit against more than
30 chemical companies, including the same ones that settled with U.S. veterans
in 1984. The suit, which sought billions of dollars worth of damages, claimed
that Agent Orange and its poisonous effects left a legacy of health problems
and that its use constituted a violation of international law.
In March
2005, a federal judge in Brooklyn, New York,
dismissed the suit; another U.S. court rejected a final appeal in 2008, causing
outrage among Vietnamese victims of Operation Ranch Hand and U.S. veterans
alike.
Fred A.
Wilcox, author of Scorched Earth: Legacies of Chemical Warfare in Vietnam,
told the Vietnamese news source VN Express International, “The U.S. government
refuses to compensate Vietnamese victims of chemical warfare because to do so
would mean admitting that the U.S. committed war crimes in Vietnam. This would
open the door to lawsuits that would cost the government billions of dollars.”
Clancy's comment: 13 million gallons of Agent Orange later, and who won this bloody war? Not to mention, who made squillions of dollars selling this stuff to the US Army? Disgraceful, but war is hell - any war!
I'm ...
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