Birth Defects Tied to GWS
The man in the street may have
heard about the deformed Iraqi children, born following the first Persian Gulf
war. But Americans remain largely un aware about the shocking number of
children with horrifying birth defects born to U.S. vets who returned home
after the war ended in 1991.
Exclusive
to American Free Press
By
Christopher J. Petherick
American
veterans of the 1991 war in Iraq, who reported suffering a wide array of
debilitating illnesses now known as Gulf War Syndrome (GWS), have had an alarming
number of children born with severe birth defects, according to several
independent researchers. The Pentagon and the Department of Veterans Affairs
(VA), however, have refused to acknowledge a direct relationship between those
who served in or around Iraq during the war and the increase in birth defects
among their offspring.
On Jan. 17, 1991, the United States attacked Iraq
to expel the country’s forces from Kuwait after it was invaded in 1990. Some
697,000 U.S. soldiers and sailors participated in the war, which barely lasted
a month-and-a-half.
At first, U.S. war planners were applauded for
keeping U.S. casualties to a minimum. But after the war officially came to
close on Feb. 28, 1991, veterans began reporting illnesses doctors were at a
loss to explain.
Veterans reported suffering a wide range of symptoms,
including chronic fatigue, muscle and joint pain, headaches, memory loss,
depression, un explained rashes and sleep disturbances. This wide array of
ailments came to be known collectively as GWS.
Despite the evidence, the government still refuses
to link the war with illnesses suffered by vets.
The VA disputes reports on GWS, saying it “is a
non-scientific label that has frequently been used to describe those veterans
with unexplained illnesses.”
VA officials argue that veterans are actually
suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, “an anxiety disorder commonly
diagnosed in individuals exposed to extraordinary stress or trauma, such as
that associated with military combat.”
But, 12 years after the war has ended, more and
more veterans have reported their illnesses getting worse. According to some
independent researchers, thousands of Gulf War I vets have died from illnesses
related to GWS.
It’s not just veterans who are suffering from GWS.
Another tragic result of the war, according to independent researchers, is the
shocking number of children with severe birth defects born to Gulf War vets.
“Sixty-seven percent of babies born to the 400,000
vets who suffer from Gulf War Syndrome have birth defects,” said Joyce Riley, a
former nurse who flew in Iraq and the founder and spokesperson of the American
Gulf War Veterans Association. “But the Department of Defense and Veterans
Affairs do not want America to know the number of sick, dead and deformed kids
that vets are having. It’s another cover-up.”
Mrs. Riley served in the Gulf War as a captain in
the Air Force Reserve and flew C-130 missions with a medical team in support of
the war.
“A lot of the babies are being born with organs
out of place—kidneys in the wrong place, hearts out of the body,” Riley told
AFP. “The most [common birth defect] is failure to thrive, where they could not
keep weight on and just didn’t make it.”
Though the government refuses to acknowledge that
many children of vets are suffering, Mrs. Riley says the evidence linking the
ghastly birth defects to Iraq is overwhelming.
“One nurse who served over there—all three of her
children were born autistic,” she said. “We’ve also seen a lot of what is known
as ‘Goldenhar Syndrome,’ that is where there is a missing left eye and left
ear. It’s very strange. A lot of people believe this has something to do with
the radiological problem related to the use of depleted uranium.”
“Goldenhar Syndrome is a congenital birth defect
which involves deformities of the face,” reports the National Craniofacial
Association (NCA), a non-profit organization based in Tennessee that assists
families of children born with facial deformities. “It usually affects one side
of the face only. Characteristics include: a partially formed or totally absent
ear; the chin may be closer to the affected ear; one corner of the mouth may be
higher than the other; or a missing eye.”
According to NCA, the causes of Goldenhar Syndrome
are a bit of a mystery. It is not caused by anything the mother does while
pregnant. However, certain factors, such as the environment, play a part.
The group is specifically looking into a link
between the Gulf War and an increase in this type of birth defect.
“[T]here does seem to be an increased incidence of
Goldenhar among the children of Gulf War veterans,” reports NCA.
The NCA, along with the University of Texas South
western Medical Center at Dallas and the Association of Birth Defect Children,
Inc., have initiated a study into the relationship between Gulf War vets and
Goldenhar. The groups are trying to locate all children with Goldenhar syndrome
who were born subsequent to July 1, 1991, and who had a parent who served in
the U.S. military between 1990 and 1991.
The reasons remain puzzling as to why so many
children with birth defects have been born to veterans.
Some believe it is due to the vast number of
highly toxic depleted uranium rounds fired into Iraq by U.S. forces. Others
contend that it is due to the many vaccines given to troops working in the
area. Still others argue that it is the result of the demolition of Iraq’s
stockpiles of chemical and biological weapons.
As more veterans come forward, researchers are
confident that a link will be established and GWS sufferers and their children
will finally get the justice they deserve.