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Agent Orange Causes Blindness
Agent Orange, the herbicide used as a weapon by US military forces in Vietnam for nearly a decade to defoliate vast stretches of inhabited forest and jungle in an effort to deprive the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese forces of both cover and a supportive populace, has long been known to have caused a large number of serious and debilitating diseases, many of them passed on to children of those exposed. But now it also appears to cause a peculiar blindness among American journalists.
This is demonstrably the case at the New York Times, where a report in Saturday's edition on new Agent Orange links being found to Parkinson's Disease and ischemic heart disease noted that it could lead to many more Vietnam War Era veterans being eligible for disability benefits and treatment, but completely failed to mention the significance of the discovery for the millions of Vietnamese who were also exposed to the chemical-and for their descendants.
The new link was announced in a report by a 14-member committee of the Institute of Medicine, which had been asked to determine what conditions might be traced to exposure to the chemical that had been "used to clear stretches of the jungle" in Vietnam. As the article noted, since 1994, the Institute of Medicine has to date found 17 medical conditions that can be traced to exposure to Agent Orange, "13 of which qualify veterans for service-connected disability benefits."
There's a lot wrong with this article, as written by Times, reporter Janie Lorber (though admittedly we can't know what is her responsibility and what is the handiwork of the newspaper's editors).
For starters, the benign-sounding description of how Agent Orange was used-"to clear stretches of the jungle"-makes it sound like the kind of thing President George W. Bush used to do when he was down at his "ranch" in Crawford, TX "clearing brush," or like grounds-keeping work at the local golf course. In fact, what the US military was doing was defoliating vast tracts of inhabited forest in South Vietnam, in an effort both to make it hard for enemy troops to hide, and to drive peasants into strategic hamlets where they could be controlled, and prevented from providing assistance to Vietnamese fighters. There was no effort made to keep the defoliant away from people-civilians or enemy fighters-indeed, people were, at least indirectly, the targets. It would, indeed, have made no sense to defoliate areas where there were no people.
It is certainly true that the Defense Department showed absolutely no concern about sending American troops out into the sprayed areas, where hundreds of thousands or soldiers and marines were exposed to the residue of the spraying, and it is true that the Defense Department and the US government spent millions of dollars after the war battling efforts by desperately ill veterans in a futile effort to deny legal responsibility for their ailments, and to deny any link between those ailments and Agent Orange. (A friend, the late Dorothy Thompson, was one of the lead attorneys in the successful fight to win compensation from the government for veterans who suffered from Agent Orange-related disease.)
But how can any honest journalist or news organization write about this sordid chapter in America's criminal use of chemical weapons without even mentioning its impact on the enemy, or on huge numbers of wholly innocent civilians?
To this day, the US has refused to accept any responsibility for the victims in Vietnam of its chemical warfare in that country, despite the fact that millions have suffered and continue to suffer from the results, including innocent children born long after the war was over, and of course many older people who have long since died of their diseases.
It is no surprise, of course, that the US government would decline to accept responsibility for its actions, or even to discuss the issue. The Vietnam War was the first war in which the US clearly was defeated, and there is no desire to even think about it, much less about the evils which were done by America in the fighting of it. And as a federal agency, it's perhaps understandable, though still inexcusable, that the Institute of Medicine panel examining Agent Orange's impacts would fail to note its impact on the people of Vietnam, and focus instead only on veterans.
But the media, and particularly the New York Times, have no excuse whatsoever -even if the Institute of Medicine report is incomplete--for failing to mention the obvious point that, as bad as Agent Orange was for the troops who dispensed it, and who had to fight in areas where it had been used, it was far, far worse for the people upon whom it was actually dispensed.
Unless, of course, the problem is that the Times and its reporters and editors are also victims of the chemical, and it is also causing journalistic blind spots.
- Posted in


29 Comments so far
Show AllMr. Sirota has this one exactly correct.
Sure... But what does Sirota have to do with Lindorff's article...?
Damn! Its a senior moment!!
My comment is the same.
Sioux Rose
Three thoughts come to me after reading this piece. First, that were the U.S. military to admit--both to its own troops and those harmed in Vietnam--its guilt in this matter would set a precedent which could then more easily apply to current programs (War on drugs, BS) underway in Columbia (where another dangerous air campaign is flagrantly using another chemical exfoliant). It could also set a legal precedent given the sinister use of depleted uranium in Iraq. Can you imagine the costs in lawsuits if the U.S. military begins to countenance the very IDEA of accountability for its considerable wrong-doing?
My second point is that the miltary is, by and large, an organization of cowards. For the most part they land on turf that is often undeveloped, generally impoverished, and arguably less technologically-advanced than those imposing the latest form of conquest and/or colonization. To bludgeon the locals, poison their waters and crops, then shy away from the remotest accountability for these acts of lasting aggression is in my view the DEFINITION of cowardice. Military may have the upper hand on macho rites of violence, but they are in a league all their own when it comes to spiritual impoverishment, the basis for an eventual karmic reckoning.
It's interesting that the health care issue is now front and center in American politics and discourse. A number of interesting parallels can be drawn between this subject and the karmic legacy our nation has incurred from its actions in Iraq, Vietnam, and Afghanistan. That our people are being denied health CARE because far too many funds are devoted to militarism, added to newly published statistics stating that HALF of those who served in "Operation Iraqi Freedom" remain injured, takes the stupidity of war to a whole new level! Adding THESE costs (that span the spectrum) should compel a deep national reckoning that questions the very meaning of the word "defense." If half your soldiers are broken, and your nation's people increasingly falling ill (cancer) from exposure to a great many hostile chemicals, ones Mother nature and eons of biological adaptation never had cause to adapt to, then the very notion of impossible sums being wasted on warfare under the rubric of national defense falls as empty as the uniform that holds up the persons devoid of conscience or ownership for their actions. Some role model, and at a cost our nation certainly (on multiple levels) can no longer afford!
Well said...
I was going to bring up depleted uranium and RoundUp Ready (made by monsanto)...
But you beat me to it...!
"My second point is that the miltary is, by and large, an organization of cowards."
I'm very sorry SR, but thats simply false. No need to comment on any of your anti-military comment, you are welcome to your opinion. But that I could not let the "coward" bit pass as any kind of truth. It insults me and most of the men I know and is simply not true.
Henry,
While I agree to some extent that facing down bullets, tanks, planes, and "enemies" takes a certain amount of courage, it pales in comparison to peace and refusing to fight. Refusing superiors. Refusing to kill another human being. Refusing to be a part of the all-pervasive juggernaut of the violent military mindset that has this world in a destructive stranglehold.
I believe it takes far more courage to see our connectedness with all beings. It takes far more courage to see yourself in another. It takes far more courage to understand we are all One Consciousness and that killing another is killing yourself. It takes far more courage for an American soldier to stand face-to-face with an Iraqi insurgent or a Afghan Taliban or a North Korean border soldier, lay down their weapon, and shake the other's hand or give them a hug (gasp!) . . . and walk away from it all. (And this is exactly why it doesn't happen much - most humans don't HAVE that kind of courage. Instead, it is far easier to fall into that Us vs. Them mindset trap.) It is FEAR that drives the human need to fight. And fear is the source of all cowardliness, is it not?
Why must "courage" always be defined by violent acts of so-called "heroism"? Why can't courage be defined as peace?
If you will excuse my cinematic analogy here, it took FAR more courage for Luke Skywalker to lay down his lightsaber and refuse to fight and kill his father, Darth Vader, than all the previous acts done by him OR his fallen father. And you'll notice that this is exactly when Luke "won" the "battle" and also became the true Jedi Master he was destined to be, saving the soul of his father in the process.
Therefore, I tend to agree with Sioux Rose and see warfare/fighting/etc. as the easy and - at the risk of offending you further - the cowardly way out.
As John Greenleaf Whittier once said, "Peace hath higher tests of manhood than battle ever knew."
Peace.
Sioux Rose
SEVENTH SON: Your elaboration on the theme I introduced was marvelous. Bravo!
One more point Sir Thomas, blinded by the military "light," can you really link military "adventures" today with the remotest protection of the citizenry (i.e. those who via taxes pay their salaries)? It's become such a naked endorsement of every sordid thing related by John Perkins and Smedley Butler. Or as Thomas (or was it Milton?) Friedman put it, "There could be no McDonalds without MacDonnell-Douglas." U.S. predatory capitalism, the model on pumped up steroids, goes about the globe forcing deals the way Mafia extorts money from shopowners. The military = the deals made at bayonet point. Honor has long since left the equation. And as I stated, where is the courage (its absence being cowardice) in attacking persons who are hungry, poor, unarmed or poorly armed, who are merely defending their own home turf and way of life? Where is the courage in drone attacks? Or in banging down the doors of women and children? Mars is out of control, mister, and while he ONCE had a place, he has so over-extended his welcome, and taken such brutal advantage of his hosts (the inhabitants of the Divine circle, which symbolically includes the 11 more peaceful paths and their archetypal potentials for human expression) that it is time to give him the BOOT.
Sorry Henry, but S.R. is correct. COWARDLY... No matter what risk you take, how wildly dangerous your actions, it means NOTHING unless you are the author of your actions. Soldiery, This is not bravery, it is becoming the instrument of anothers will.
This may make you a martyr, or even an effective servant. But to be the tool of a Psychopathic corporation, is NOT BRAVERY, it is dangerous stupidity. And to not spit in their face and disobey is cowardice. Toughguy..
Sioux Rose
XZO: I cannot for the life of me understand that type of blindness that defends the military as a psychological knee-JERK reaction. Its legacy is so awful, and the wounds so deep; nor do these wounds cut only into humanity. The military's footprint is the greatest ecological disaster the earth/MOTHER has ever born witness to, short of an asteroid strike. A great many places are dead zones, littered in chemical wastes that will take generations to become neutralized. And then there are the places that could grow crops or present safe havens for children to learn to play, or learn about nature, instead covered with bomblets or unexploded ordnance, like land mines. The toll taken under the rubric of defending or protecting life is so astronomical, that I should really pity those who defend this stance. They will have much explaining to do when they cross over and meet their Maker, and are reminded by ALL the masters that the one central spiritual teaching sacrosanct to every religious body (at least at its inception, before the message got polluted as it passed on down the power-line) is that persons learn to get along, work on tolerance, recognize the greater good. The military is the antithesis of that recognition and an ENEMY to the greater good, AND mankind!
It is my earnest belief that this is the grand finale for Mars and Mars rules. That the majority of sentient, aware persons, seeing the composite wealth squandered on increasingly deadly weapon systems, destroying so much habitable land and populations will finally reach the collective moment that could be compared with an overweight individual who finally gets disgusted enough to summon the self-discipline to go on a serious diet. It's near the point where either militarism and the trafficking in arms (America's favored basis for transactions) are transcended, or M.A.D and its insane clock ticks to the place of symbolic midnight. Too late then for any summoning alarms...
SR, I'd suggest talking to some seniors. The ones who served in the Japanese Empire's forces could easily explain how they were manipulated into worshiping the military. The usa suffers from the same disease that has - in the past - struck many other nations; militarism. The ones who suffer the most from the disease are those who've never served in the military, or served in the rear guard, they have a bad habit of getting into leadership positions and starting wars. The ones who suffer less, but still suffer, are those who've lost loved ones - or served in a defeated army - in a war and are fired by a sense of getting revenge, they too will act as cheerleaders sending more youth off to kill and die in the name of the already dead.
The idea is that it's disrespectful, or that we're not 'honouring' our fallen dead should we refuse to keep on fighting for a cause that is barely understood. They're delusional, those who fought in wars and survived with their reasoning skills intact would say that the best way to honour the fallen is not to fight more wars in their name.
Sioux Rose
SATURNALIA: We had (albeit distant) cousins who died in the Holocaust, so that as a child my father sat us down whenever there was a documentary on the subject. I was (and remain) greatly moved; and remember one emaciated man who survived by eating part of his shoe, and another drinking his own urine.
In any society that exalts militarism, one group or another will be targeted or scapegoated to bear the "projected shadow." In order to offset the evil of the aggressor's action, he must be utterly convinced the target deserves it; and is thus taught to demonize the other, deconstruct his or her humanity. Today a pervasive media campaign works 24/7 to establish "enemy" in other lands.
I see these EXACT mechanisms underway towards today's target group: Muslims and/or those segments of the Arab world that (we know well in this forum) are being casitgated mostly because they reside upon the oil fields the western world's industrial engines require.
I am against militarism because I have open portals to empathy and can feel others' suffering. Nor do I think suffering (to the extent it's now occuring) represents an inevitability of human life. The issue of death, when it comes naturally, forces us to all wrestle with the poignant concept and experience of loss; but life can and should be beautiful, and societies can be built around values that support life and the creative (as opposed to destructive) urges of persons. Some see this duality in terms of dominator society, or economic elites and the misuse of power. I see it through the rubric of the astro-logos, with value systems and archetypal energies attributable to Venus (society) and Mars (the rabid self-interest of the barbaric self).The key centers upon BALANCE. Laws that reflect a balance between self-interest and the greater good. Enforced policies that curb the excesses of big business or rabid no-holes-barred global corporate capitalism on steroids. And also balance in terms of gender representation.
In any case, these discussions are at times cathartic in a world gone M.A.D. under Mars rules.
Henry8, I am sorry but as a wife of a retired US Marine who went through years of severe pain and suffering struggling to pull my husband out of cowardice that his being in the military has brought him back in the days of Vietnam, I strongly agree with Ms. Rose. I would also like to remind you that every day, even for soldiers who come back and make it alive and are not as seriously wounded as my husband, nearly all of them suffer from PTSD. PTSD causes soldiers, men and women alike, to cowardly deny that nothing is wrong with them and in some cases misbehave. There are so many cases reported where soldiers return from the army and engaging in more domestic abuse and in some cases murder. My husband was foolish enough to fall for joining the military thinking that it would make him better and ever since he returned home severely wounded, I have never been able to forgive myself for having a mixed feeling about his choosing to serve in some false hopes that he would come out stronger and better in life. I cannot completely speak for him and I will let him have his say on this once he's ready to return here but I do know one thing about courage. Courage comes from deep down in the heart and it took me, my family and his family plenty of years to pull him out of his wanting to commit suicide mentality just because he lost some limbs and didn't get to finish what some stupid military leaders ordered him to finish. As a matter of fact, I already discussed his return of nearly wanting to commit suicide not too long ago and I cannot feel comfortable that he has completely shaken off all that PTSD in him even after I thought he did. The military has become an even bigger bastion of cowards and military contractors are even bigger cowards since all they care about is money and fanatic patriotism to kill. Some people may call me anti-military or unpatriotic for this but having gone through the trouble of putting my love towards saving my husband's life even at my expense and later his discussions with me on life on the battlefield along with friends of his and/or mine who are now serving in Iraq, Afghanistan, or wherever as well as remembering one of our nephews who refused to listen but joined the US Marines and died in Afghanistan in 2003, I have even less faith in the military than I did before my husband joined a long time ago. To make matters worse, the military has been undergoing privatization ever since Vietnam War so this means poor accountability and poor reporting of who's dead and injured which means that the military will remain even more open to cowards who want to showoff like some big shots that they think they are. It's time to either shut down the US military or bring about a major reform and limit that devil of a monster !
Sioux Rose
Mrs. VEREZ: Moving saga. In all fairness I want to say that I truly do recognize that young men (and some females) are given tremendous peer pressure to prove their manhood. That the military is very well-funded in slick ad campaigns that seduce the young with slogans like, "Be all that you can be." And as a woman, I will admit that many men looked damned handsome in uniforms! Still, the basic purpose of the military today is one of unapologetic death to those who stand in the way of U.S. corporations' interests. When I read that 50% of soldiers returning have a sustained injury, and many within those ranks, PTSD, the net impact on society, not to mention the ruination of their lives, is beyond what any metric for a sane society should tolerate, no less peddle or finance.
I think lots of young persons start out with ideals and courage, but those feelings are manipulated by forces that are dark indeed. When a president uses the nation's military for a war based on FIXED evidence, that is treasonous. Few are demanding the type of accountability that such an action warrants, but that does not make its viability any less real.
And currently with NAFTA and similar policies sending good jobs off-shore, the financial choices for many young persons are limited. A few have the initiative to start up their own small companies, or grow a living by using their dominant skills. Most prefer direction through an established organization, and with the military/beast fed at all costs, there are no shortage of employment opportunities within the tentacles of this profitable (for a few) nemesis, one that too many persons attach patriotism to. Patriotism is better reserved for the Constitution, the rights of the American people as a whole, and calling leaders to the carpet who impeach their oath of office and think themselves endowed with the false right to see themselves as above the law, and the law of the land at that. Like many in this forum, I am waiting to see accountability and a greater preservation of the BALANCE of powers. And on my wish list, I'd also add far more sane and caring priorities insofar as the national expense account is concerned. We are learning as a nation that investments in war & militarism are making us weaker as a people, bankrupt as a nation, likely hated (with just cause) around the world. Obama's capacity to play charming master of ceremonies only goes so far when drone attacks continue our nation's license to kill, when Iraqi casualties remain on record, evidence of a calamity of epoch proportions.
Ms. Rose, I used to adore people in uniforms but after all these years and decades, when I look at them, I can only cry because to me, all these uniforms symbolize are lives to be lost or seriously impaired. I have had enough to grieve about my husband nearly losing his life but 2003 brought me even more grief when one of my nephews died as a US Marine in Afghanistan. He was so brainwashed by both his surroundings and I still believe that the military has brainwashed him even more. Before he joined, he argued against his parents and not even my husband was able to get him to understand the follies of joining ill-prepared. My nephew was a military gung-ho similar to Henry8 but even worse. He had the nerve to tell my husband and I to be nice to Raygun for spending big on the military because he thought it would make more superheros like him ! I don't know how much worse the military has gotten but it appears to be deteriorating even faster or else why would they resort to privzatization?
When I look back to the days my husband and I met in high school. I saved him from school bullies just by screaming. At first he'd wished I had let him try to get them himself but later he'd thank me for it. On another occasion, he saved my life just when I was about to get raped by a racist man. From that time on, he and I considered getting together and understanding each other and becoming best friends. Unfortunately, things weren't going well in his family and his racist neighbors convinced his parents that sending my husband to Vietnam would eventually help him out. One day, he was talking so much about wanting to be a hero and how he loved the idea of saving innocent people from evil people. I wasn't sure what to make of it but he had a charm in sounding like a fighter that I couldn't resist as a young girl. It was right after he graduated from high school that I found out everything that was going on. His family going nearly broke and his neighbors were getting more racist with him and his family. He later confessed years after I helped him heal that he thought that joining the military would help him stand tall against racists and make him strong enough to be rich.
Speaking of NAFTA, what you said is only half the story. Today, a growing percentage of the poor in Mexico are surprisingly obese just like the ones in the US ! Before NAFTA, there was poverty but it was not as severe plus we had a wider variety of healthy crops but going back and visiting Mexico two years ago, the younger Mexican kids don't even know what our grandparents used to eat that is rarely available today. To make matters worse, I came across an obese Mexican-American teenager one month after returning and he kept bragging so much about how his heavyweight status would make him a war hero. My husband could not tolerate his big talk himself but no matter how much he tried to tell that young man the dangers of entering the military and going into combat ill-prepared (and training is worse than the 1960s), he kept playing with his feelings and almost provoked him into hitting him with his cane. I can see where NAFTA, CAFTA, and other similar trade scams have made it indirectly easier to brainwash our youth into greed and wars.
Don't get me started on Obama. My husband, when he finishes recovering and finds out everything that has been going on with this administration is going to be just as angry as myself that we two voted for him. There was no 3rd party candidate in TX other than that gasbrain Bob Barr on the ballot. I think we'll try write-ins next time because this state votes Republican on presidential elections anyway.
JWVerez,
Thank you for sharing this moving story. My heart goes to you and your husband.
Thank you Seventhson. God bless you.
One point I thought I should make regarding Agent Orange and similar chemicals that were used in and near Vietnam (and other areas including the US), is that it is thought the main destructive agent in these products was contamination by dioxin.
Is Agent Orange why Mr. David Lindorff made that obscene and condescending remark to me the other day? So how do we overcome Agent Orange and similar? Again, this article is just another example of misdirecting our anger away from the corrupt establishment and pitting us against each other. I await the author's next obscene reply. In the meantime, BeForKids has an excellent party worth looking into that could get us away from Agent Orange. It's called the Main Street Party and even a couple of rightwing hicks liked it once I shared the platform. Would this author perhaps mind taking the Main Street Party and introducing it to others? After all, he's the one with more money and power while I don't share his luxuries and I still am back to struggling with helping my wife recover just when I thought she was on her way.
Bennett Miller
Shreveport, LA
Agent Orange Causes Blindness
So does masturbation, diabetes, investing on Wall Street and voting for Republicans and Democrats.
MS, exactly. But don't tell this author. He's just trying to pit us against each other and misdirect our anger away from the corrupt establishment that he has admitted to supporting.
Bennett Miller
Shreveport, LA
I have come to understand that being born in America also causes serious blindness. Luckily, some of us have been able to find the corrective lenses in time.
We need a million man march to converge on DC and shut down congress until our demands are met... We need to hold their feet to the fire...! This is why we elected Obama... To endlessly lobby and protest his administration to do the things he campaigned about... For he won't do it on his own...
That's the problem with irresponsible journalism promoting the Goldman Sachs candidate...
They are blind to all of the citizens that had their savings stolen by the Bankster toxic assets...
Then citizens were poisoned with $trillions of debt with the bailout money going to the Banksters...
I guess the Dem Party Hope/Change koolAid has made Lindorff blind to the effects that the Obama bailouts have for the people who are currently being harmed in the class war here at home...
The point is about Agent Orange and the need to help the people affected by it is the only important thing to discuss. The rest of it is noise.
Why would anyone care if anything was admitted or anything deflected if something was done to help those in trouble because of the Chemical.
Forrest for the trees at times here.
That noise is an old debate about what weapons are 'legal' or 'moral' to use in times of war. The idea is that a weapon that's used on a battlefield ought not to be killing or injuring people decades after the war is over. It's also the idea that any weapon used ought to kill quickly or at least not deliberately cause pain and suffering.
The fact is Henry8, Chemical weapons have been very much frowned upon since the Germans first unleashed poison Chlorine gas against the Canadians at the second battle of Ypres on 22 April 1915. The thing is, when a war is over the killing should stop. The tanks and guns be put back in storage and the ammunition built should be destroyed or used on a range. But when you use long term - or delayed action weapons - like mines and chemicals people will still be killed by those weapons decades after the war is over. To this day farmers in France and Belgium still must take care when plowing or harvesting crops on fields where the first world war was fought. The exploding shells have mostly lost their potency after lying in the ground for 90 years, but the poison gas shells still can be lethal.
By denying any responsibility for what Agent Orange is doing - and has done - to people in Vietnam and the vets who fought that war, the us gov't is preventing help from getting to the victims of their war. The chemical companies who made the poison are shielded from civil tort action.
But the Dutch businessman who sold the Chemicals to Iraq that Saddam used on the kurds...was
TRIED and imprisoned for WAR CRIMES.
Henry8/thomas more has ever been an spologist for the war crimes committed by the United States. In his world of the red white and blue it not a wrong because it Americans using such weapons and by NATURE in his myopic view the reasons are GOOD.
How many Vietnamese are suffering and dying from this poison? More than Bhopal I'll bet.
Are we still spraying this toxic crap on South American civilians? Absolutely!
There is courage in a death that gives another life
There is no courage in anothers death so that I may live.
It took me a long time to see this.Tony
Jeevee
ABSOLUTELY RIGHT, "mustbefree"!