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VETERANS' RARE CANCERS RAISE FEARS OF TOXIC
BATTLEFIELDS -- Some soldiers are returning to
America
to find they have debilitating illnesses or
cancers that
they suspect are related to battlefield
conditions.

For more on toxic conditions, use the VA Watchdog search
engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/ses
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Story here...
http://www.nysun.
com/article/59915?page_no=1
Story below:
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Veterans' Rare Cancers Raise Fears of Toxic
Battlefields
BY R. B. STUART - Special to the Sun
In the wake of an Iraqi official last month blaming America's use of
depleted uranium munitions in its 2003 "Shock and Awe" campaign for a
surge in cancer there, the Defense Department is facing an October
deadline for providing a comprehensive report to Congress on the health
effects of such weapons.
The report is required by the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2007, which President Bush signed into law last year.
The request for the study is an outgrowth of claims by Iraq war veterans
that exposure to depleted uranium and other toxic substances there has
negatively affected their health and that, therefore, their illnesses
should be recognized as war-related and the treatment covered by the
Veterans Administration.
Currently, the State Department's Web site says fears about adverse
health effects of depleted uranium, or DU, are "unwarranted," and it
lists worries about DU under a section called "identifying
misinformation."
The site says the American military uses the material in ammunition "to
take advantage of its unsurpassed ability to penetrate armored
vehicles," and it cites four separate studies — by NATO, the Rand
Corporation, the European Commission, and the World Health Organization
— that found no evidence of adverse health effects from depleted
uranium.
Even so, worries persist. According to Rep. Jim McDermott, a Democrat of
Washington who pushed for the report from the Pentagon, "There are
countless stories of mysterious illnesses, higher rates of serious
illnesses, and even birth defects. We do not know what role, if any, DU
plays in the medical tragedies in Iraq, but we must find out."
Modern wars have produced a number of specific medical complaints,
ranging from "Gulf War Syndrome" — a group of immune disorders and
cancers whose connection to service in the 1991 Persian Gulf conflict is
being studied — to the long-term effects of a defoliant, Agent Orange,
for which some Vietnam veterans obtained a settlement in 1984.
While their causes can't be pinpointed definitively, some soldiers who
have avoided being killed or wounded in the current Iraq conflict are
returning to America to find they have debilitating illnesses or cancers
that they suspect are related to battlefield conditions, whether it is
the depleted uranium used in projectiles, the remains of Saddam
Hussein's chemical weapons, or the smoke from burning oil wells.
An Army chaplain, Captain Fran Stuart of the 101st Airborne was based in
Mosul, Iraq, where "Shock and Awe" bombings occurred, for a year
beginning in March 2003. In March 2006, the 40-year-old chaplain — who
is this reporter's sister — was diagnosed with a rare condition only
seen in teenage girls: Stage IV dysgerminoma, an ovarian germ cell
cancer. She was flown from Germany to Walter Reed Army Medical Center in
Washington, D.C., where doctors removed a volleyball-sized tumor from
her abdomen and she faced daily battles with the side effects of an
aggressive chemotherapy regimen — 35 rounds to date.
"My body isn't mine anymore. I can feel the other tumors inside of me. I
look like a monster," Captain Stuart said last May as patches of her
strawberry blond hair fell out.
A Bronze Star-winning Vietnam Veteran and reservist, Army Sergeant First
Class James Lauderdale Jr. of Tuscon, Ariz., was activated to serve in
Iraq in January 2005 and was deployed to Camps Doha and Arijhan in
Kuwait, where oil refineries released clouds of brown smoke from their
stacks.
"I knew what the pollutants in the air meant, and what I would be
exposed to — as well as the brown water I bathed and washed my clothes
in," he told a reporter.
In March 2005, Lauderdale developed a sore throat and began having
difficulty sleeping on his right side because his jaw hurt. After seeing
two medics, one prescribed a root canal, but rather than alleviating the
pain, it only worsened, he said.
At the end of the month, Lauderdale saw a dentist in Kuwait City, who
lifted his tongue and found a lesion. Biopsy results came back as Stage
II squamous cell cancer of the mouth floor and tongue.
On April 1, 2005, Lauderdale was sent to Walter Reed, where a doctor
said, "The sergeant is in a unique group. We don't know what would
stimulate him to have this type of cancer since he isn't a smoker."
Another doctor added, "I saw a 21-year-old here who just came back from
Iraq with the same type of cancer."
When his family asked if the cause could have been something Lauderdale
was exposed to in Kuwait — the air pollutants, contaminated brown water,
or depleted uranium, for which he was never tested — the doctors said
they couldn't be certain of the cause, family members said.
By June 2006, the cancer had spread to his neck and jaw, lungs, ribs,
and spinal column, and Lauderdale had undergone five surgeries,
including a tongue reconstruction, right and left radical neck
resections and a tracheotomy, two rounds of chemo, and 39 rounds of
radiation. Within a month, "hundreds and thousands of lesions appeared,
canvassing the entire part of his upper body," his wife of 34 years,
Dixie Lauderdale, said. The doctors were dumbfounded by how aggressive
his cancer was, she added.
After a valiant fight, Lauderdale, 59, died at Walter Reed on July 14,
2006. His final wish was to be buried at Arlington National Cemetery.
In April 2005, Army Sergeant Charles Lewis, who saw combat in Iraq with
the 101st Airborne, was diagnosed with Stage II testicular cancer.
"There was no family history. We asked the doctors if being in Iraq had
anything to do with it, but most weren't sure," he said. "We had been
told to contact the VA to see if there were any other soldiers returning
with cancer, but they would not give us any information.
"Four different people we know and who have been in combat with me have
either had tumors removed or have been tested for cancer," Sergeant
Lewis continued. "So we have often questioned if Iraq or vaccinations
could have played a part in this cancer."
Army Sergeant First Class Charles Frenzel has served in the military for
more than 30 years; during the last four years, he has been stationed at
Forts Jackson and Lee in America and at Camp Caldwell in Iraq. While he
was on assignment in Iraq in October 2005, he was diagnosed with a brain
tumor and evacuated to Walter Reed, where an 8.5-by-4.5-inch
nonmalignant meningioma was removed.
Asked what he thought had caused his tumor, Sergeant Frenzel offered
several possibilities. "I think Saddam had a lot more advanced chemical
programs than what was originally suspected," he said. "I was exposed to
daily oil smog. Iraq burns straight nonprocessed crude oil, and the smog
was horrific. The water was contaminated, and we were bathing and
washing our clothes in it."
In June 2006, while undergoing a chemo treatment on Ward 65 at Walter
Reed, Captain Stuart met Army Staff Sergeant Frank Valentin of the
Transportation Battalion, a 34-year-old Brooklyn native who had been
based at Camp Spearhead in the port of Kuwait City on the Iraq-Kuwait
border for two years.
Situated amid two oil refineries, a cement factory, a chlorine factory,
and a sulfuric acid factory, Sergeant Valentin and other soldiers who
assisted at the camp knew immediately that their bouts of burning eyes,
hot, red facial skin, and unrelentingly runny noses were caused by a
cesspool of noxious fumes, he said.
The soldiers tried complaining, Sergeant Valentin said, "but nobody
wanted to hear it — we just stayed quiet. They just wanted us to do our
job."
Sergeant Valentin was diagnosed with hemorrhoids eight times and sent
back to work, but when the pain and discomfort did not abate, he
instinctively knew something was wrong, he said. Finally, a reservist
who was an oncologist diagnosed Sergeant Valentin with colon cancer.
The reservist oncologist told him that there were six other soldiers
with newly found cancers in his unit, Sergeant Valentin said. The
sergeant said he personally knew of two that had been diagnosed with
cancer: one with leukemia and one with Hodgkin's lymphoma. And a third
had had a nonmalignant brain tumor.
"Between the chemicals in the air overseas, the shots they give you, and
not eating well or sleeping more than four hours a day … your body just
isn't strong enough to fight anything off.
"Right now, it's cancer, cancer, cancer. A lot of these kids, 21 years
old, are coming back with cancer. How did they get it? How did it happen
to me when I was healthy?" he asked.
In 2005, Sergeant Valentin underwent surgery at Walter Reed. It was
during that surgery that the doctors discovered the cancer had advanced.
He woke to find himself with a colostomy bag and prognosis of incurable
colon and lung cancer.
In contrast to soldiers who have lost limbs to explosive devices in
Iraq, who qualify for Traumatic Servicemembers Group Life Insurance
injury benefits of up to $100,000, "people like us don't get benefits,"
Sergeant Valentin said.
"Because cancer is a disease and not a war wound, we don't qualify. No
one even knows we're on the oncology ward. The press, celebrities, and
politicians go to the third floor when they want publicity shots with
the amputee soldiers. But what about the seventh floor, Ward 71, with
soldiers that are coming back with cancer?" he asked.
On July 23, Iraq's environment minister blamed "at least 350 sites in
Iraq being contaminated during bombing" with depleted uranium weapons
for about 140,000 cases of cancer there and for between 7,000 and 8,000
new cases each year.
A U.N. Environment Program report states that depleted uranium poses
little threat if spent munitions are cleared from the ground. However,
no major clean-up or public awareness campaigns have been reported in
Iraq, the report added.
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Larry Scott --