Did The
Government Let Its Veterans Die?
Since 12-11-05
From:
Waspscpo@aol.com [mailto:Waspscpo@aol.com]
Sent: Saturday, December 10, 2005 9:19 AM
To: undisclosed-recipients:
Subject: Did The Government Let Its Veterans Die?
http://www.americandaily.com/article/10611
Absolutely
nothing!
Even more surprising is, mainstream media has paid scant attention to the
ongoing charges by veterans that they were used as test subjects. These same
veterans have been denied official recognition of their participation, medical
treatment and disability compensation because the government keeps all
information related to the tests classified.
It is an open secret that the Veterans Administration routinely denies treatment
to former service personnel because their illnesses cannot be confirmed as being
“service connected”. What is seldom mentioned is another reason for denying any
responsibility to provide medial care. This is lack of confirmation due to
classified records. An Internet search for media coverage of this common
practice will produce few documents on the subject.
NBC Television had a fictional presentation of the problem in the December 7,
2005 program E-Ring. In that episode a retired military officer was dying of
liver failure due to Hepatitis resulting from a tainted blood transfusion given
to him by a government medical team. He was denied VA treatment because his
records were sealed due to his participation in classified missions. Thus the VA
could not document his illness as being “service connected”.
As for mainstream media coverage of the problem, the latest article a Google
search produces appearing in the Chicago Sun-Times on December 3, 2004. Written
by Cheryl Reed. The article is on VA benefits for wounded veterans. It addresses
the difficulty they have obtaining documentation and getting VA claims approved.
One of the horror tales the article recounts concerns James Gates of Chicago. He
joined the Army in 1951 and fought in Korea. He was later a test subject in
secret nuclear tests conducted in Nevada. During one such test he was blown out
of an uncovered foxhole. Later he lost his teeth and developed lung disease that
doctors linked to radiation exposure.
Across the span of years since that time, Gates attempted to get medical
treatment and disability payments from the VA. The government answer was always
that a review of his records showed he couldn’t prove he served in Korea or
participated in the Nevada tests. According the Sun-Times article, “Gates’ fight
with the VA was hampered by the military’s own poor record-keeping. Most of his
records were destroyed in a 1973 fire at a St Louis VA records warehouse.”
Gates died last year without ever receiving a single penny from the government.
CBS News did a report in the spring of 2000 on 113 separate chemical and
biological warfare tests, which were secretly conducted in the 1960s. The
Department of Defense responded to that television report saying everyone was
fully briefed before those tests were conducted and that no personnel had been
exposed to harmful substances.
Veteran’s
organizations disagree, saying a few people may have been briefed, but the vast
number of individuals involved claim they were never told a thing either before
or after the tests. These same veterans also have a variety of illnesses, which
could be related to chemical or biological exposure.
More than 1,000 service personnel were eventually identified as test
participants, but the government verification of these veterans’ claims and
examination of documents to prove they meet VA treatment requirements is still
ongoing.
Many veterans charge the
government is purposely moving at a snails-pace on the matter, knowing these
former military personnel are aging, in poor health and will go to their final
reward before any liability is determined.
Though the government seems to avoid responsibility for the care of many
veterans based upon the “secret” status of their records, some of its most
questionable actions involve the denial of veteran claims based solely on
complete distortion of facts, denial of hazards involved, no record of
participation dates, or non-availability of records.
All of these things seem to be the rule, rather than the exception when it comes
to documenting participation of veterans in the chemical weapons and drug
research by the United States Army and the Central Intelligence Agency from 1955
until 1975 at Edgewood Arsenal, Maryland. During those years, 7120 soldiers
ranging from 17 to about 20 years of age were participants in secret tests that
involved a wide variety of chemicals and other agents ranging from DDT to LSD,
along with the ingredients that make up mustard gas, Saran and other lethal
products.
An Institute of Medicine report published in 2003 by Dr. William Page stated
that the only long term health problems that test veterans showed were higher
rates of brain tumors and sleep disorders. This conflicts with a 1994 report by
the National Institute of Health that shows long term health effects from
exposure to Chemical Warfare agents GA, GB and VX include pulmonary problems,
gastrointestinal ailments and delayed onset cardiac disease.
But, even these two reports to not touch all of the health problems faced by the
Test Veterans.
Georgia veteran Mike G. Bailey volunteered for the Edgewood test project. He was classified a Level A test subject for the use of Psychochemical experiments. On June 13, 1974 he was placed in a padded room at Madigan Army Hospital experiencing a “bad trip” from LSD.
For the past three years
Mike Bailey has been battling the military establishment and the VA in an
attempt to file claims related to his disability. Though he has official records
proving he was in the chemical test program from June 24 until August 22, 1974,
the VA claims he did volunteer for the medical test program, but got sick and
was sent home before it started. All of his claims have been denied.
Like so many programs involving test volunteers, the government continues to
claim records were destroyed, lost, or just cannot be located. The Department of
Defense refuses to release information or the names of test subjects and
veterans continue to claim the VA lies about their case histories or endlessly
delays responding to their requests. In the case of those Edgewood tests, the
government claims more than 3,000 of the volunteers cannot even be located.
The years are adding up as these veterans keep getting older and face more
medical concerns. Everyone knows the government is slow to react to anything,
but to many veterans it seems as if the denials and delays are part of a plan
for them to die before there is any resolution of their claims.
Is our government really as disorganized and bumbling as it
appeared to be during recent disasters?
Or is it
really attempting to purposely stall and let our own veterans die?
Ed: Views are those of individual authors and not necessarily those of
American Daily.
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Contributed,
YNCS Don Harribine, USN(ret)