http://www.veteranstoday.com/2014/03/04/the-really-forgotten-of-the-vietnam-war/
What is Agent Orange? Agent Orange along with the Rainbow Defoliants
were use by the U.S. to deprive the Viet Cong and the North Vietnamese
army of the use of the jungle to hide troop movements, food, and cover.
Defoliants were part of the U.S. military’s herbicidal warfare program
to clear and prevent vegetation growth in the jungles and countryside of
South Vietnam. Operation Ranch Hand, which technically ran from 1961
to 1971 sprayed 20 million of gallons of defoliants over the countryside
and brought with it long-term consequences for the civilian populations
of Vietnam as well as for military personnel who were exposed to the
chemicals.
Agent Orange is sometimes used broadly when talking about all of the
defoliant chemicals that were used during the Vietnam War. Little known
to outsiders, the chief ingredient in the defoliant chemicals, Dioxin,
underwent military tests during the early Forties and revealed it to be
one of the most deadly compounds recorded to date and led Congress to
list Dioxin as a potential WDM (weapon of mass destruction). In the
jungle battles which ensued in the South Pacific during WWII, the
government opted not to use it to deprive the enemy of cover. The
thought about its exposure and subsequent health problems which could
occur with contact were overlooked when it came to Korea and again in
Vietnam.
The problems of using such chemicals were that true-to-form, and
understanding military training procedures, the safe handling, exposure,
and use of Dioxin was left to happenstance, with training passed
down from military personnel to military personnel, with little regard
to whether or not the training was sufficient to prevent mis-handling
during the mixture process; transportation; personal exposure during
application; and follow-up decontamination. Also nothing was done to
address the exposure our military would face when they went into the
jungles and countryside following aerial spraying by planes and
helicopters. And finally,
with wind currents able to carry the chemical for miles outside the
targeted area, it was impossible to curtail the sprayings to specific
boundaries.
READ MORE: http://www.veteranstoday.com/2014/03/04/the-really-forgotten-of-the-vietnam-war/
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