Authorities do not acknowledge the horror of depleted uranium’s effects on soldiers
It has been two decades since the United States and its allies pushed Saddam Hussien’s forces out of neighbouring Kuwait, pursuing them into Iraq. Canada joined the fight, being deployed into combat overseas for the first time since Korea. While the battle was short, the fallout of chemicals and elements that wafted into fighters’ clothing and vehicles and blew on desert winds has plagued modern war vets…
Canadian Gulf War vets say they get next to no response from the feds in Ottawa. Pascal Lacoste, 38, a Bosnian vet, ended a hunger strike in Quebec after Veterans Affairs Minister Steve Blaney promised to ask a panel of experts to study the affects of depleted uranium on troops. “I find it despicable, criminal, that a veteran who put his life on the line for this country has to resort to threatening to end his life for attention,” said Richard. “We have been crying for help since we went on these missions.” http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Politics/2011/11/09/18947436.html
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