WASHINGTON
— The fight over extending benefits to “blue water” veterans who served on
ships off the coast of Vietnam is now pitting former Veterans Affairs
secretaries against each other, adding to the confusion over Congress’ next
steps.
Last
week, four former VA secretaries — Anthony Principi, Jim Nicholson, James Peake
and Bob McDonald — wrote to the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee urging
lawmakers not to grant presumptive illness status to roughly 90,000 blue water
veterans who claim exposure to the chemical defoliant Agent Orange, saying
there is insufficient proof for their cases.
“(This
legislation) is based on what we believe to be inconclusive evidence to verify
that these crews experience exposure to Agent Orange while their vessels were
underway,” the group wrote. “We urge the committee to defer action … until such
a study is completed and scientific evidence is established to expand
presumptions to those at sea.”
The
recommendation is in line with arguments laid out by current VA Secretary
Robert Wilkie earlier this month. Department officials have argued that
granting the presumptive status to veterans could upend the system by
establishing new, non-scientific criteria for awarding benefits.
But
advocates for the Vietnam veterans have argued that scientific proof of exposure
is impossible given that proper sampling was not done decades ago, as the ships
patrolled the waters around the South China Sea.
They say
rare cancers and other unusual illnesses clustering among the blue water
veterans should be enough to spur action from Congress.
Earlier this year, members of the House agreed. They
overwhelmingly passed legislation that would require VA officials to
automatically assume those veterans were exposed to Agent Orange for benefits
purposes, the same status granted to troops who served on the ground in Vietnam
or on ships traveling upon inland rivers.
Under current department rules, the blue water veterans can
receive medical care for their illnesses through VA but must prove toxic
exposure while on duty to receive compensation for the ailments. Advocates have
argued that VA officials are systematically denying those claims.
In a letters to Wilkie and the committee this week, John Wells —
counsel to the Blue Water Navy Vietnam Veterans Association — blasted the
department’s stance as unfair and inhumane.
“Whether (the opposition) is due to bureaucratic intransigence or
incompetence I do not know,” he wrote. “The bottom line, however, is that they
have misrepresented and ‘cherry picked’ evidence to support their flawed position.
That is a stain on the national honor.”
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