By JUAN GONZALEZ
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER
Train shed at railway dept in Samawah where members of 442nd slept from June to August last year.
The soldiers of the 442nd Military Police never heard of depleted uranium before they went to Iraq.
They know only that inexplicable ailments have befallen them.
Last year, more than a dozen of the company's soldiers were transferred back to Fort Dix for treatment of a variety of maladies. Frustrated with how the military was handling their concerns, they gave extensive interviews to the Daily News about their experiences, and nine of them eventually volunteered to be tested by a team of experts headed by Dr. Asaf Duracovic.
According to the soldiers, most of them became sick last summer while stationed in Samawah, a town 150 miles south of Baghdad that was the scene of heavy combat in the first weeks of the war.
Their unit entered the town in June, following short stays in Diwaniyah, Karbala and Najaf. They pitched camp at a huge, dusty, vermin-infested train depot on the outskirts of town.
That's where, they claim, their problems began.
"One night, I had 10 or 15 people with temperatures over 103, unexplained night chills, all kinds of things," said Sgt. Juan Vega, the company's principal medic. About a dozen of the 160 soldiers in the company suddenly developed kidney stones, he said.
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http://www.nydailynews.com/news/local/story/180340p-156689c.html U.S. soldiers could be contaminated with uranium
WASHINGTON (PL).—Around 20 soldiers from the New York National Guard have undergone medical checks on their return from Iraq to see if they have been contaminated with depleted uranium, a substance used by the Pentagon in its missiles.
According to the New York paper The Daily News, the decision to run the tests was made due to pressure from the newspaper after four soldiers from the 442nd Military Police Company tested positive in tests carried out at the end of their mission in occupied Iraq.
In recent months those troops have suffered from symptoms ranging from nausea to blood in their urine, very similar to those presented by the contaminated men; however the State Department has done nothing about it.
The daily affirmed that soldiers from the 442nd Company contacted by The News expressed their frustration at the way the Army had responded to their illnesses.
http://www.granma.cu/ingles/2004/abril/mar6/15uran-i.html Returning GIs tested for exposure to depleted uranium in Iraq
The Associated Press
FORT DIX, N.J. (April 5, 2:39 pm ADT) - The U.S. Army is conducting medical tests on a handful of GIs who complained of illnesses after reported exposure to depleted uranium in Iraq.
Up to six soldiers from a National Guard unit based in Orangeburg, N.Y., have undergone exams at Fort Dix, and three of them remain there under observation, Fort Dix spokeswoman Carolee Nisbet said Monday.
"We are following up on this. We are on top of it. It's not something that has fallen by the wayside," she said.
Of nine members of the unit examined by a doctor at the request of the New York Daily News, four had "almost certainly" inhaled radioactive dust from spent U.S. artillery shells containing depleted uranium, the newspaper reported Monday.
Depleted uranium, which is left over from the process of enriching uranium for use as nuclear fuel, is an extremely dense material that the U.S. and British militaries use for tank armor and armor-piercing weapons. It is far less radioactive than natural uranium.
According to a Depleted Uranium Information Web page posted by the Army, depleted uranium recently provided to the Pentagon by the U.S. Department of Energy contained trace amounts of contaminants like neptunium, plutonium, americium, technitium-99 and uranium-236.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uslatest/story/0,1282,-3944801,00.html