Agent Orange is a combination of two chemicals that undergo a
chlorinated chemical process, creating the by-product 2,3,7,8-TCDD, “
the most toxic member of the family of chemicals known as dioxin.” This form of dioxin, in fact, has been described as “
perhaps the most toxic molecule ever synthesized by man.” Peter Schuck writes in
Agent Orange on Trial,
“As early as 1952, Army officials had been informed by the Monsanto
Chemical Company…that 2,4,5-T was contaminated by a toxic substance.”
As American casualties in Vietnam mounted, it became increasingly clear
that superior fire power had little consequence in a dense,
guerilla-friendly jungle and that open-field combat would be to the
Americans’ advantage. For this reason, the U.S. military scorched up to
“
25 percent of the country’s forests with the deadly chemicals Agent Orange, and also Agent White, Blue, Pink and Purple,” totaling approximately
20 million gallons
of herbicides. In April of 1970, the military ceased all operations
involving Agent Orange. The lasting damage, though, would be
devastating and irreversible.
A generation born after the last U.S. jet returned from Vietnam would become the most affected victims, as up to
150,000 “
deformed children have been born to parents who were directly sprayed with Agent Orange or exposed through contaminated food and water.”
In Vietnam,
BBC News journalist Tom Fawthrop
met what the “local villagers refer to as an Agent Orange baby” in the
town of Cu Chi. As Fawthrop testifies, Tran Anh Kiet is 21 years old;
“his feet, hands and limbs are twisted and deformed. He writhes in
evident frustration, and his attempts at speech are confined to
plaintive and pitiful grunts….He is an adult stuck inside the stunted
body of a 15-year-old, with a mental age around six.” Many journalist
who visits Vietnam has similar encounters.
Jill Schensul of New Jersey’s
The Record
reports on her meeting with Nguyen Thi Lan and her five year old son,
Minh. Nguyen lifts up Minh’s T-shirt to show the American journalist
the effects of U.S. foreign policy: “Instead of the chubby belly of
childhood, this torso is twisted, the skin taut over a gnarled rib cage
that juts grotesquely from the right side of the chest…. He cannot see,
hear, or speak.” Others write about
children who are not allowed in school because their appearance frightens the other students, or
babies whose life span only reaches a few hours, or adults who were children during the war and
still randomly bleed from the ears and nose. There are countless horror stories like these in Vietnam, with new ones constantly emerging.
One public health study at Columbia University found that “
up to 4.8 million Vietnamese were living in 3,181 villages that were directly showered with Agent Orange”
and that dioxin levels are four times higher today than what was
previously predicted. The most discouraging studies, though, are those
that prove how toxic the environment still is in parts of Vietnam. In
2003, “Dr. Arnold Schecter, a leading expert in dioxin contamination in
the US, sampled the soil [in the former military base Bien Hoa]…and
found
it contained TCCD levels that were 180 million times above the safe level set by the US Environmental Protection Agency.” Today, as many as
three million Vietnamese suffer from the effects of toxic herbicides, as do tens of thousands of American veterans.
While a variety of justifications and official doctrines have been
employed by state officials to explain violent foreign policies, the
injury inflicted by the U.S. military on American soldiers in Vietnam
stands as a unique source of shame. In Fred Wilcox’s book
Waiting for an Army to Die, he
writes that,in addition to soldiers’ own Agent Orange related ailments,
at least 2,000 children with a range of deformities and birth defects
have been born to Vietnam War veterans. Wilcox interviewed many
veterans, including John Green, Ray Clark, and Jerry Strait.
John
Green, a medic in the war, says, “I really didn’t know what they were
spraying….Some of our food was undoubtedly sprayed with Agent Orange.
But how were we to know? The army told us the stuff was harmless.”
The government and the military denied the effects of Agent Orange on
soldiers from the beginning and would deny adequate treatment for
years. The Veterans Administration (VA), the second largest government
bureaucracy with an annual budget of approximately $24 billion, was
responsible for letting veterans’ conditions worsen while their doctors
withheld treatment. When veteran Ray Clark began urinating blood, the
doctors at the VA “insisted [he] was putting ketchup and water in the
specimen jars” so that he could receive disability and they told him
the problem was “all in the mind,” a refrain echoed to countless other
ailing veterans. When former infantryman Jerry Strait, whose daughter
was born with half a brain missing, visited the VA hospital to complain
about severe headaches, he was told that it was “obviously due to
war-related stress.” He was never informed that “he spent more than
three hundred days in the most heavily sprayed region of Vietnam or
that the food he ate and water he drank may have been contaminated with
dioxin.” Jerry Strait and thousands more were poisoned by their own
government. There was no accountability, no responsibility taken, and
nowhere to turn.
It took almost two decades after the end of the war and years worth of
litigation for the federal government to finally offer assistance to
American victims of Agent Orange. Congress authorized financial
assistance for veterans in 1991, but the government was careful in
calling the link between Agent Orange and the veterans’ health problems
“presumptive,” allowing the government to “
effectively sidestep a de facto admission of guilt in Vietnam and avoid offering compensation to Vietnamese victims.” The U.S. government still maintains that “
there are no conclusive links between Agent Orange and the severe health problems and birth defects that the Vietnamese attribute to dioxin.”
The United States government has used every method of denial,
stonewalling, and manipulation to hide the truth about the effects of
Agent Orange. Even the paltry research that has been conducted has been
riddled with problems. Despite investing $140 million into an Air Force
Health Study on Agent Orange, “a design flaw…has resulted in a
quarter-century of inaccurate findings,”
according to two scientists who were involved in the study. There was criticism of this research from the very beginning, as the journal
Science expressed concern in 1979 that “there may be a conflict of interest in having the Air Force study itself….”
Many Vietnamese citizens and government officials have called upon the
United States to admit wrongdoing, take responsibility, express
contrition, and aid the process of reconciliation (for more on this,
see “Part 2: What Must Be Done” [
link here]).
Yet, American foreign policy is far too complex and riddled with human
rights abuses for such an admittance or apology to be made without
jeopardizing legal standing and ability to continue current practices.
The United States could not apologize to Vietnam, for instance, while
ignoring the fact that, in the same year that troops withdrew, the CIA
and the Nixon administration helped orchestrate the military overthrow
of democratically-elected President Salvador Allende in Chile to
install Augusto Pinochet, one of the most brutal and murderous
dictators of the 20th century. Nor would it be satisfactory for the
U.S. to apologize for Agent Orange, but not mention the
terror-spreading
Phoenix Program that resulted in the killing of up to 70,000 Vietnamese,
many of whom were civilians and family of Vietcong, or the elite U.S.
Army unit, “Tiger Force,” which, in the Central Highlands in 1967,
committed the “longest series of atrocities in the Vietnam War,”
killing hundreds of unarmed civilians,
as reported by the Toledo Blade.
It is unclear what the U.S. could specifically apologize for in a war
in which “every returning combat soldier can tell of similar incidents
[to My Lai], if on a somewhat smaller scale,"
according to Robert Jay Lifton,
a psychologist who extensively interviewed Vietnam veterans. Even more
importantly for the U.S., apologizing for or openly acknowledging the
damage caused by Agent Orange could adversely affect current practices
in Iraq, most notably the use of
white phosphorus as a weapon in Fallujah.
The use of Agent Orange was a tragedy and a crime that is recommitted
everyday as Vietnamese citizens and U.S. veterans suffer from the
effects and pass them on to their children. One of the many unheeded
“lessons” of Vietnam is that atrocities do not end with the war, but
linger and fester. By not admitting the truth about what was done, the
U.S. allows the trauma of Vietnam to remain an open wound. By not
taking steps towards justice and acknowledging what must now be done,
the U.S. allows Agent Orange to remain an open atrocity.
Aaron Sussman is the co-founder and Executive Editor of Incite Magazine (www.InciteMagazine.org); he can be contacted at Aaron@InciteMagazine.org.For more of Sussman's work, visit www.ACrowdedFire.com.