The same deadly chemicals
found in the herbicide Agent Orange that was sprayed on the jungles of Vietnam
during the Vietnam War are being released in burn pits on U.S. military bases
across Iraq and Afghanistan.
“Otherwise healthy U.S.
service members are returning from deployment with cancer, leukemia,
respiratory illnesses and other chronic conditions,” said Chelsey Poisson, a
RIC nursing student with prior military service in the R.I. Army National
Guard. Poisson has made it her mission to advocate for service members who have
been exposed to burn pits and to push for legislation to change military
policies.
Burn pits are massive
holes backhoed in the ground to dispose of waste/garbage on U.S. military
bases. One of the largest burn pits –
at Joint-Base Balad in Iraq – spanned 10 acres. Smaller metal barrels are used
at smaller platoons. The danger, Poisson said, is what is being burnt in them.
“Everything is burned,”
she said. “Because you’re in a war zone, you can’t call up the local waste
management or recycling company to come by and pick up your trash. So the
military thought the best way to get rid of their waste is to dig a large hole,
pour in diesel fuel and set the trash on fire.”
“Burn pits smolder for
weeks or months at a time, often around the clock,” she said.
And plastics proliferate
on base, she said. Plastic water bottles have replaced canteens, and
plastic utensils have replaced their metal counterparts. When plastic burns it
releases the same dioxins found in Agent Orange, another known carcinogen.
Exposure to benzene, dioxins and other toxic chemicals
occurs through inhaling or passively ingesting the fumes, gases or ashes. If
toxic ash settles in water bottles, eating utensils or
on cigarettes, it can be passively ingested orally, while airborne
ash that settles on the very fine Iraqi sand can enter the lungs during
strenous work or outdoor exercises.
Joint-Base Balad, an air base, had one of the largest burn
pits in Iraq, said Poisson. “On average, 147 tons of garbage were burned per
day,” she said. “Burning operations ran 24 hours a day, seven days a
week, to keep up with the trash accumulating on the base.”
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