Contaiminated ammunition found
by KATHERINE RIZZO
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - The Pentagon has tracked traces of plutonium
found in U.S. ammunition to contaminated equipment at plants in Ohio,
Kentucky and Tennessee.
While plutonium is one of the deadliest substances known, so little
of it tainted the depleted uranium used to make armor-piercing bullets
that officials are not worried about extra health or environmental concerns.
"We have seen nothing in our studies that would indicate that this
has more than an insignificant amount of impact on either personal health
or the environment," said Rear Admiral Craig Quigley, a Pentagon spokesman.
Physicist Marvin Resnikoff, an expert who has studied plutonium contamination
in the government's gaseous diffusion plants, said yesterday that if any
plutonium is in the ammunition, "it has to be the merest trace" because
of the way plutonium reacts during processing.
"I can understand why there's concern," Resnikoff said. "Plutonium
is an extremely toxic material. But I wouldn't necessarily dispute their
finding that it's not a serious hazard.
"There is not going to be much in there."
The real danger, he said, was to workers unknowingly exposed from
the 1950s to the 1970s, when plutonium contamination was kept secret by
plant operators.
The government revealed in 1999 that plants in Piketon, Ohio, Paducah,
Ky., and Oak Ridge, Tenn., had handled recycled uranium containing plutonium,
neptunium and technetium-99, all of which are highly toxic.
"In those plants, we found trace elements in the equipment," Quigley
said. "The source of the (munitions) contamination, as best we understand
it now, were the plants themselves."
Countries that sent peacekeepers to Bosnia and Kosovo have recently
been looking for links between the depleted uranium ammunition fired by
U.S. warplanes and illnesses later contracted by veterans.
Germany, Italy, Switzerland and the European Parliament all have
called for a moratorium on using the ammunition
Australia is testing its soldiers for radioactive exposure. Italy
is studying the illnesses of 30 Balkans veterans, seven of whom died of
cancer, including five cases of leukemia.
Germany sent troops to a former military compound in Bosnia to measure
radiation, and reported finding no indications that plutonium was present
in the ammunition found there.
NATO said Wednesday that its special committee on depleted uranium
has found no link between the armor-piercing ammunition and cancer among
peacekeeping troops.
The committee was informed about the plutonium traces, Quigley said.
Depleted uranium munitions were employed during NATO's 78-day air
campaign against Yugoslavia in 1999, and in Bosnia during 1994 and 1995.
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