Have DU — Will Travel: About This Feature…

DU Radiation Travels, Says UK Scientist

‘To my mind, it’s a human rights issue.’
Interview with Chris Busby

‘Depleted uranium is the trojan horse of nuclear war.’
Interview with Leuren Moret

‘What we’ve done is to replace the fallout from bomb testing with the so-called small permitted releases from nuclear plants.’
Interview with Dr. Ernest J. Sternglass

‘It violates all traditional ideas of war.’
Interview with Dr. Rosalie Bertell

‘There ain’t no buck stopping anywhere.’
Interview with Major Doug Rokke

‘We’re like little sheep, little lambs that didn’t know the truth.’
Interview with Major Denise Nichols

‘There is exposure, but exposure doesn’t mean that it’s a threat.’
Interview with Ann Ham

‘Depleted uranium arms are not utilized
by units currently deployed here in Iraq.’
Interview with Captain William Roberts

‘That reminds me of the ash with Mount St. Helens. It darkened the skies in different continents.’
Interview with Tim Hix

‘They have exposed close to a million of our troops.’
Interview with Karl Schwarz

When THE ICONOCLAST learned of a study conducted by Chris Busby and Saoirse Morgan that suggests that depleted uranium radiation had traveled from Iraq to Great Britain during "shock and awe," we knew it was time to more fully explore the implications.

We decided to "lay it all on the table," as best we could by interviewing noted scientists and people in the know about radiation, those who have become medical casualties, those who have gone through the military system, and those who possess an upper tier knowledge of radiation in general.

This is clear: the day that depleted uranium was introduced into the arsenal of doom was quite literally the day the earth stood still, with scientists worldwide uniting to voice concern that genocide had found a home on our planet. At the other extreme, militarists hailed the nuclear substance as their newest advantage in maximizing destruction. It became a trump card with the ability to destroy the masses, even those yet unborn.

On the battlefield, DU has been hailed as the best, and what country does not want its soldiers to be given the best of tools in a time of war? Yet the bloody afterglow of radiation and its dire consequences for civilization have caused others to describe DU as "death unlimited."

We were told by the U.S. military in Iraq that there is no longer a need for depleted uranium munitions there and that, indeed, the current deployment is not using DU. However, this past week it was announced that the Army has placed a $38 million order for new DU munitions, extending the original contract for fiscal year 2006 up to $77 million.

DU is a controversial subject.

THE ICONOCLAST attempted to get some answers.

We were pleased that some individuals were forthcoming when we attempted to interview them and we were disappointed at others who broke promises to call us back after they learned the subject matter was depleted uranium.

Although the quantity of text in this report tends to weigh heavier for individuals opposed to the use of depleted uranium, the ICONOCLAST spent considerable time attempting to obtain Q&A viewpoints that might be on the other side of the argument. It was in this venue that promised phone calls were not returned and our reporters got multiple run-arounds in reaching the "top brass."

Nevertheless, THE ICONOCLAST has produced this special feature which provides our readers a chance to listen in on some of the conversations and draw their own conclusions.

Among those interviewed, in the order they appear in this feature, were:

March 2006
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