Johanthemonster666 said:
Soviet Heavy said:
Also it should be noted that many horrible weapons fall into this category, though people in the West might not care or have thought about it much. True, nuclear weapons are the most powerful, but if you've seen the civilian victims of US/NATO weapons (and talked to survivors) we spread this level of terror everyday. Fallujah is a grim example of absolute slaughter and mayhem whose effects are still being felt in malformed, or stillborn babies, and sick residents due to the depleted uranium-tipped rounds fired by US attack aircraft that have irradiate the water supply.
There are conventional bombs that literally suck the air out of victim's lungs upon detonation, before the air itself is ignited like a match to propane fumes with the entire area (a mile or so wide) is reduced to ashes.
I feel compelled to respond to the claims about DU. The radiological hazards of DU are actually very, very small. DU gives off alpha particles, which don't even penetrate more than a few inches of air and are blocked by clothing. The birth defects and still born issues aren't because of irradiated water, but because of the chemical toxicological hazard. The toxicological hazard of DU is most pronounced invitro. I am not arguing that what's happened in Fallujah isn't bad, but that the problem is far more likely to be linked to invitro chemical poisoning than to irradiated water.
It is also important to remember that wide-scale destruction of any kind produces elevated levels of all sorts of harmful materials. There needs to be more study of DU's effects on the environment, but the idea that DU is the cause of health issues in a broad spectrum of people in effected areas is not yet supported by scientific study. In fact, studies that have directly looked at DU's health effects have not found causal links to cancer or any other morbidity.
http://www.iaea.org/newscenter/features/du/faq_depleted_uranium.shtml
Unfortunately I'm not an expert (pending more research and discussing it with people who specialize in that).
You may very well be correct, it seems a lot of factors are at play in higher cancer rates and deformed infants.
I refer you to these articles- http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2012/01/2012126394859797.html
"Whilst caution must be exercised about ruling out other possibilities, because none of the elements found in excess are reported to cause congenital diseases and cancer except Uranium, these findings suggest the enriched Uranium exposure is either a primary cause or related to the cause of the congenital anomaly and cancer increases. Questions are thus raised about the characteristics and composition of weapons now being deployed in modern battlefields."
"As doctors, we know Mercury, Uranium and Bismuth can contribute to the development of congenital abnormalities, and we think it could be related to the use of prohibited weapons by the Americans during these battles," Alani said.
"Findings suggest the enriched Uranium exposure is either a primary cause or related to the cause of the congenital anomaly and cancer increases," says a recent scientific report on the incidence of birth defects in Fallujah [Dr Samira Alani]
"I made this link to a coroner's inquest in the West Midlands into the death of a Gulf War One veteran... and a coroner's jury accepted my evidence," he told Al Jazeera.
"It's been found by a coroner's court that cancer was caused by an exposure to depleted uranium," Busby added, "In the last 10 years, research has emerged that has made it quite clear that uranium is one of the most dangerous substances known to man, certainly in the form that it takes when used in these wars."
In July 2010, Busby released a study that showed a 12-fold increase in childhood cancer in Fallujah since the 2004 attacks. The report also showed the sex ratio had declined from normal to 86 boys to 100 girls, together with a spread of diseases indicative of genetic damage similar to but of far greater incidence than Hiroshima.
Dr Alani visited Japan recently, where she met with Japanese doctors who study birth defect rates they believe related to radiation from the US nuclear bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
She was told birth defect incidence rates there are between 1-2 per cent. Alani's log of cases of birth defects amounts to a rate of 14.7 per cent of all babies born in Fallujah, more than 14 times the rate in the affected areas of Japan."
This isn't just one news source, countless international and Iraqi investigations are unearthing thousands of cases in and around Fallujah.The problem with relying on the IAA and the US military is that they are compelled not to be straightforward about long-term hazards from military operations using their country's weapons (just look at the leading nations that comprise the IAA). They said the same thing about Monsanto's Agent Orange and various other chemical defoliates the US air force used in SE Asia, it took many years for veterans and Vietnamese peasant's 'scientifically unsubstantiated claims' to be internationally recognized.
As far as personal experience goes, a close friend of my father (who was in the airforce)foolishly (without permission) took a round from an A-10 ground attack aircraft and placed it on the mantel in his living room. This was one of the large, armor-piercing rounds from the aircraft's main 'tanker buster' canon. He was a flight line mechanic and within a week he began to suffer from radiation poisoning (later confirmed by doctors). Sure enough he was hospitalized and they prevented any further damage. This was widely published on the military bases' USAF newspaper so I'm not basing this on hearsay.