In 1968, Leroy Foster was a master sergeant in the US Air Force, assigned to the Anderson Air Force Base in Guam, a United States island territory in the Pacific. The day after he arrived on the island, he recalled being ordered to mix “diesel fuel with Agent Orange”, then spraying “it by truck all over the base to kill the jungle overgrowth”.
Soon after, Foster suffered serious skin complaints and eventually fell sick with Parkinson’s and ischemic heart disease. Later, his daughter had cancer as a teenager, and his grandchild was born with 12 fingers, 12 toes, and a heart murmur. Foster died in 2018.
A new book, Poisoning the Pacific, to be released Monday,
chronicles the US military’s decades-long contamination of indigenous lands
across the Pacific as well as the ocean itself, endangering lives and
ecosystems across the vast Pacific Ocean.
Written by British journalist Jon Mitchell, Poisoning the
Pacific is based on more than 12,000 pages of documents obtained under the US
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) and through interviews with local residents,
military veterans and researchers.
The book argues that for decades, the US has treated its
territories in the Pacific with negligence, allowing its military to violate
indigenous rights, seize land, and damage delicate ecosystems.
US military planes parked on the tarmac of Andersen Air
Force base on the island of Guam, a US Pacific Territory.
Alongside Foster’s case - after years of campaigning the
airman was ultimately compensated for his exposure on the island - Mitchell’s
book details US military operations over decades contaminating the Pacific with
toxic substances including radioactive waste, nerve agents, and dioxin-tainted
Agent Orange.
“US authorities have repeatedly tried to cover up
contamination through lies, disinformation and attacks on reporters,” Mitchell
told The Guardian. “I have experienced this pressure firsthand.”
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