Page Contents
- S. Korea probes allegations of buried chemicals at ex-U.S.
base
- Whistleblowers have unearthed the use of Agent Orange in
Korea
- Judge’s Surprise Ruling On Veteran’s Exposure to Toxic
Chemicals Called “Turning Point”
S. Korea probes allegations of buried chemicals
at ex-U.S. base
by Ashley Rowland & Yoo Kyong Chang
Stars & Stripes
Published May 25, 2011 SEOUL — Sparked by a posting made seven
years ago on a veterans’ website, South Korea on Wednesday began
investigating the possible burial of chemicals at a former U.S. base
nearly five decades ago, according to an official from the prime
minister’s office. A former soldier stationed at Camp Mercer
posted a comment in May 2004 on the Korean War Project website that
said the U.S. buried hundreds of gallons of chemicals at Camp Mercer
— a small installation in Bucheon that was turned over to South
Korea in the 1990s — while he was stationed there in 1963 and 1964.
“We dug a pit with a bulldozer, donned rubber suits and gas masks
and dump every imaginable chemical — hundreds of gallons if not more
— into the ground on a knoll behind the second storage warehouse on
the right,” retired Master Sgt. Ray Bows wrote. Bows’ comments
attracted widespread attention in South Korean media this week
following recent allegations that the U.S. buried the defoliant
Agent Orange at another base, Camp Carroll, in 1978. Three
U.S. veterans told a Phoenix television station that they helped
bury large amounts of the chemical in a ditch there and continue to
suffer health problems from their exposure to it. The 8th Army
said this week that a large number of drums containing pesticides,
herbicides and solvents were buried at Carroll in 1978 but were
removed the following two years, along with 40 to 60 tons of soil.
Officials say they do not know if Agent Orange was among those
chemicals. The military found trace amounts of dioxin, a
component of Agent Orange, in 2004 in one of 13 test holes bored at
the site, but determined that the amount was too small to be a
health threat. Officials had not answered a query from Stars and
Stripes as of Wednesday night asking what had prompted that testing.
Whistleblowers have unearthed the widespread use
of Agent Orange
by the U.S. military in Korea
Issues Regions Publications About Donate Foreign
Policy In Focus
Agent Orange in Korea
by Gwyn Kirk and Christine Ahn
July 7, 2011 Christine AhnIn May, three former U.S. soldiers
admitted to dumping hundreds of barrels of chemical substances,
including Agent Orange, at Camp Carroll in South Korea in 1978. This
explosive news was a harsh reminder to South Koreans of the high
costs and lethal trail left behind by the ongoing U.S. military
presence. “We basically buried our garbage in their backyards,”
U.S. veteran Steve House told a local news station in Phoenix,
Arizona. A heavy equipment operator in the Army, House said he was
ordered to dig a ditch the length of a city block to bury 55-gallon
drums marked with bright yellow and orange labels: “Province of
Vietnam, Compound Orange.” House said that the military buried 250
drums of defoliants stored on the base, which served then as the
U.S. Army Material Support Center in Korea. Later they buried
chemicals transported from other places on as many as 20 occasions,
totaling up to 600 barrels. “This stuff was just seeping through
the barrels,” said Robert Travis, another veteran now living in West
Virginia. “There was a smell, I couldn’t describe it, just sickly
sweet.” Immediately after wheeling the barrels from a warehouse at
Camp Carroll, Travis developed a severe rash; other health problems
emerged later. He said there were “approximately 250 drums, all OD
(olive drab) green… with a stripe around the barrel dated 1967 for
the Republic of Vietnam.” A third soldier, Richard Cramer of
Illinois, said that his feet went numb as he buried barrels of Agent
Orange at Camp Carroll. He spent two months in a military hospital
and now has swollen ankles and toes, chronic arthritis, eye
infections, and impaired hearing. “If we prove what they did was
wrong,’ says Cramer, “they should ‘fess up and clean it up and take
care of the people involved.” The three veterans are now seriously
ill. Steve House suffers from diabetes and neuropathy, two out of 15
diseases officially linked to Agent Orange. “This is a burden I’ve
carried around for 35 years,” House, aged 54, told Associated Press
reporters. “I just recently found out that I have to have some major
surgery… If I’m going to check out, I want to do it with a clean
slate.” The Missing Barrels
A deadly herbicide, Agent Orange is widely known for its use
during the Vietnam War when the U.S. military sprayed an estimated
10 million gallons on forests and rice fields. In Korea, the U.S.
military used Agent Orange along the de-militarized zone to
defoliate the forests and prevent North Koreans from crossing the
border. “The United States Army has acknowledged that pesticides,
herbicides and other toxic compounds were buried at Camp Carroll,”
writes New York Times reporter Mark MacDonald. Although the
chemicals and about 60 tons of contaminated soil were purportedly
dug up and removed, “the Army is still searching its records to
discover what became of the excavated chemicals and soil.”
According to a February 25, 2011 report by the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers Far East Command, the U.S. military has discovered
evidence of a burial site within Camp Carroll measuring 83 feet
long, 46 feet wide, and 20 feet deep. It confirmed contamination on
the base with high concentrations of highly carcinogenic
perchloroethylene (PCE), pesticides, heavy metals, and components of
dioxin. According to Hankyoreh, the report also cites testimony from
a Korean employee, Gu Ja-yeong, who worked at Camp Carroll and
participated in burying drums, cans, and bottles containing
chemicals in 1974 and 1975. The report recommends monitoring once or
twice a year and removing the soil from the burial site because
ground-water chloroform levels were 24 times the South Korean
standard for drinkable water. Chloroform is a carcinogen that can
cause liver, kidney, and nervous system problems. Two earlier
environmental studies of Camp Carroll, commissioned by U.S. Forces
in Korea (USFK), were not shared with the South Korean government
until the recent whistle-blowing by the U.S. vets. In 1992, a
Woodward-Clyde report confirmed the burial of toxic chemicals. “Many
potential sources of soil and groundwater contamination still exist
at the base and the presence of contaminated groundwater has been
documented,” the report stated. “From 1979 to 1980, approximately
6,100 cubic feet (40 to 60 tons) of soil were reportedly excavated
from this area and disposed offsite.” Samsung C&T reported on a
second survey in 2004. This also found soil samples from the base
contained pesticides and dioxins: “Hazardous materials and waste,
including solvents, petroleum oils and lubricants, pesticides,
herbicides and other industrial chemicals have been used and stored
onsite for over 40 years.” The Korea Herald reported, “more than 100
kinds of harmful chemicals including pesticides and herbicides were
buried.” Hankyoreh reported that the Samsung survey found
“quantities of highly carcinogenic trichloroethylene (TCE) and
perchloroethylene (PCE) at 31 and 33 times the standard levels of
potable water, respectively.” The 2004 report estimated that it
would cost $98.3 million to remove all the contaminated soil from
Camp Carroll. Both the 1992 and 2004 reports state that a
significant amount of soil had been excavated, but they differ as to
when this actually happened. According to the Korea Times, the 2004
report concluded, “The fate of the excavated drums is unknown”. So
what happened to the buried chemicals? Camp Carroll is located in
Waegwan, about 20 miles north of Daegu. “If Agent Orange was dumped
in 1978, the drums may have already eroded. And the toxic substance
could have contaminated the soil and underground water near the
area,” said Chung In-cheol of Green Korea United. “The U.S. camp is
situated just 630 meters away from the Nakdong River,” says Chung,
“which is the water source for major cities like Daegu and Busan.”
Cancer rates in the Chilgok area near Camp Carroll were up to 18.3
percent higher than the national average between 2005 and 2009,
according to Statistics Korea’s website, and mortality rates for
nervous system diseases were above the national average. Soil and
Water Contamination
Environmental contamination on U.S. bases in South Korea has been
a source of contention between Washington and Seoul. Since 2001,
South Korea has spent $3.4 million to clean up 2,000 tons of
oil-contaminated ground water near Yongsan Army Garrison and Camp
Kim. The South Korean military is now conducting environmental tests
at 85 former U.S. bases that were returned to South Korean control
between 1990 and 2003. With the latest revelations, the South
Korean public is calling for a full-scale assessment of the
environmental damage of all U.S. military facilities in Korea. Under
the Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA) between the two nations, the
United States has no responsibility to clean up the land it uses for
bases. Some advocates are seeking a revision of the SOFA to hold
Washington responsible for the contamination it causes. After
House spoke out, the USFK and the South Korean government assured
the public that they would research his claims, though they
disagreed about the method of investigation. The USFK preferred to
use ground-penetrating radar (GPR) while the South Korean government
insisted on sampling the soil and underground water. According to
Hankyoreh, GPR can test for foreign matter such as canisters
containing harmful materials, but it cannot verify soil or water
contamination. “The South Korean government has repeatedly stated
that this kind of investigation is incapable of resolving the
questions harbored by the population,” said a Ministry of the
Environment official. The joint ROK-U.S. team is using
ground-penetrating radar and electrical resistivity devices at 41
sites since the news broke in late May. According to a team
official, the USFK is not just worried about dioxin, but other toxic
and carcinogenic materials, which soil and water tests can detect.
Indeed, investigation of an underground stream and groundwater near
Camp Carroll has shown traces of PCE, a known carcinogen that
attacks the nervous system and can cause reproduction problems. The
Chilgok regional government sealed the well upon learning from the
joint Korea-U.S. team that the amount of PCE exceeded the level for
acceptable drinking water. Lessons from Vietnam Agent Orange
contains the deadly chemical dioxin, a byproduct of industrial
processes involving chlorine or bromine. Decades after its use in
Vietnam, there is still great controversy about its effects on human
and environmental health, despite the fact grandchildren of
Vietnamese soldiers and civilians have been born with abnormalities
attributable to their ancestors’ exposure. In 1995, Arnold
Schecter and Le Cao Dai of the Vietnam Red Cross published research
findings showing “that high levels of dioxin contamination persist
in the blood, tissue, and breast milk of Vietnamese living in
sprayed areas.” Schecter tested soil and human tissue samples from
people living near the former Bien Hoa U.S. military base where
7,500 gallons of Agent Orange were spilled in 1970. In 1998,
Hatfield Consultants published the results of a four-year study of
soil and water samples in the A Luoi valley near the Ho Chi Minh
trail and the site of three former U.S. Special Forces bases where
Agent Orange was stored and sprayed. Working with Vietnamese
scientists, Hatfield found “a consistent pattern of food chain
contamination by Agent Orange dioxin… which included soil, fishpond
sediment, cultured fish, ducks and humans.” They found dioxin levels
in some breast milk samples to be dozens of times higher than
maximum levels recommended by the World Health Organization.
Although Vietnamese officials and scientists believe that many
thousands of people are victims of Agent Orange, “remarkably little
has been proved with scientific certainty,” Robert Dreyfuss wrote in
2000. The Institute of Medicine reports “strong evidence that
exposures to herbicides is associated with five serious diseases,
including Hodgkin’s disease and a form of leukemia… and ‘suggestive’
evidence that herbicides might cause birth defects and cancer.” A
major factor limiting serious research into dioxin contamination is
the high costs. According to Dreyfuss, it cost $600 to $1000 to test
one single soil or tissue sample for tiny traces of Agent Orange
dioxin. Since 1981, U.S. veterans of the Vietnam War who were
exposed to dioxin have been entitled to register with the Veteran
Administration’s Agent Orange Registry. Of the nearly 3 million U.S.
soldiers who served in Vietnam, approximately 300,000 veterans are
on the list and entitled to free annual health exams. In a 2003
article in the San Francisco Chronicle, David Perlman wrote that
more than 22,000 vets have successfully claimed disability and are
entitled to “free long-term treatment for a variety of disorders
that are ‘presumptively’ caused by exposure to dioxin.” Compensation
has ranged from $104 to $2,193 a month. U.S. veterans have
attempted to sue the manufacturers of Agent Orange for compensation.
In 1984, seven U.S. chemical companies agreed to settle a suit
brought by U.S. veterans in 1979. In making this settlement, the
companies refused to accept liability, claiming that the scientific
evidence did not prove Agent Orange was responsible for the medical
conditions alleged. By 1997, 291,000 U.S. veterans had received a
total of $180 million dollars over a period of 12 years. “My brother
was given $362, and me, I was given $60,” recalls U.S. veteran
George Johnson. “My brother has never been able to have kids.”
South Korean veterans who served in the Vietnam War also attempted
to sue Agent Orange manufacturers. In 2006, the Korea Times reported
that the “Seoul High Court ruled that Dow Chemical and Monsanto
should pay $63 billion won ($62 million) to a group of 6,700 Korean
veterans… who first filed lawsuits against the company in 1999.”
However, this ruling is largely symbolic since the Korean
authorities cannot force the companies to comply. Why Act Now?
When asked why he came forward now, Steve House said, “I’ve
wanted the government to take care of this nightmare I’ve had to
live with for the last 30 years. I don’t want to poison kids or
anything, and I don’t want to hurt GIs.” For House and other vets,
also at issue is the question of medical compensation. According to
the U.S. Veterans Affairs website, “Veterans who served … in or near
the Korean Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) anytime between April 1, 1968
and August 31, 1971 and who have a disease VA recognizes as
associated with Agent Orange exposure are presumed to have been
exposed to herbicides. These Veterans do not have to show they were
exposed to Agent Orange to get disability compensation for these
diseases.” Veterans like House, however, who were exposed to Agent
Orange after this time period, or in other parts of Korea outside of
the DMZ, are not considered eligible for disability compensation.
Although more information is likely to emerge from the joint U.S.-R.O.K.
investigation in the coming weeks, both the U.S. and Korean public
must ask and demand answers to many urgent questions. What happened
to the barrels of Agent Orange and contaminated soil at Camp
Carroll? How much dioxin and other contaminants have leached into
the soils surrounding Camp Carroll and other U.S. military bases?
Will the U.S. government provide medical assistance and financial
compensation to the veterans who handled a substance that was known
to be toxic in 1978? Who will compensate the Korean people who may
have been exposed to these contaminants – that the U.S. military
knew of as far back as 1992, but never told the South Korean
government. Based on the experience of thousands of U.S. vets and
civilians who live around U.S. bases — in this country and overseas
— even routine military operations can have serious long-term costs
to human health and the environment. Without adequately addressing
its toxic legacy in South Korea, the U.S. military continues to take
fertile land to expand and create new bases, as it did in seizing
rice paddies from farmers in Pyongtaek. The ROK-U.S. naval base now
under construction on Jeju Island will have a devastating impact on
the island’s marine ecology, affecting fishermen and women sea
divers who depend on the clean sea for their livelihood, and the
Korean people who rely on the ocean for seafood. The blind rhetoric
of national security must no longer trump human security, certainly
not when the U.S. military isn’t even willing to provide adequate
medical care to its own veterans and protection to the Korean people
they are purportedly in Korea to defend. About the Authors
Christine Ahn is the executive director of the Korea Policy
Institute and a columnist for Foreign Policy In Focus, and Gwyn Kirk
is a member of Women for Genuine Security and a contributor to FPIF.
Judge’s Surprise Ruling On Veteran’s Exposure to
Toxic Chemicals On U.S. Military Base Called “Turning Point”
by Jamie Reno
International Business Times
April 09, 2014 For the past decade, U.S. Army
veteran Steve House has been on a mission. Riding the highways of
America from Oregon to Virginia on his Harley, he has visited dozens
of fellow vets and medical and military experts to hear their
stories and collect information to bolster his claim that he is
entitled to disability payments after being exposed to toxic
chemicals during his service in the late 1970s.
House, 56, a burly, deep-voiced man with a long
beard and ponytail who was stationed at Camp Carroll in South Korea,
suffers from diabetes, liver disease, glaucoma, neuropathy and other
illnesses. He has been locked in a bitter, protracted battle with
the Department of Veterans Affairs over his claim that his illnesses
are linked to his work burying 250 barrels of Agent Orange, the
toxic defoliant, in 1978 -- three years after the last Marines left
Vietnam.
House has doggedly pursued any information that
might help get his claim approved and prove to VA that he’s not
fabricating his exposure. His claim was repeatedly denied by the VA
until last week, when a judge with VA’s Board of Veterans’ Appeals (BVA)
acknowledged that House’s suffering resulted from chemical exposure
at Camp Carroll, though it stopped short of naming Agent Orange.
“I was determined to show that I was telling the
truth about why I’m so sick,” House said. “I gave up countless hours
of my life, including years of my vacation time that I should have
spent with my family, digging for facts. I have a very understanding
wife. I had to do what I had to do.” The VA portrayed
the ruling as a single administrative finding that applies to this
one man. But House and others who have long alleged a government
cover-up regarding Agent Orange and other toxic chemicals say it is
an acknowledgement of the malevolent consequences of veterans’
exposure to those chemicals, even if, at this stage, it is unclear
how the ruling will affect cases that are specifically about Agent
Orange. Rick Weidman, executive director of
government affairs for Vietnam Veterans of America (VVA), called the
judge’s decision on House’s claim historic. “It’s a precedent, a
real turning point that we haven’t had before,” Weidman said.
“Despite the fact that VA is still not saying that Agent Orange was
buried there, virtually no one to date has gotten recognition for
exposure to toxic chemicals, Agent Orange or otherwise, outside of
the war zone. VA finally admits they sprayed Agent Orange along the
DMZ [in Korea], but as far as toxins harming veterans at any other
location, they very rarely admit it.” “I won,” House
said flatly. “It’s good news and I’m grateful. But I have mixed
emotions about it. I feel kind of numb. My fight isn’t over. There
are a lot of my buddies out there who were also at Camp Carroll who
are sick now and that I hope to help.” In a bluntly
worded, 18-page court document, BVA Judge K.J. Alibrando
acknowledged that Camp Carroll was contaminated with pesticides,
PCBs, TCEs and heavy metals, and that these chemicals harmed House.
The ruling did not cover Agent Orange, but Alibrando granted House
“service connection” for most of his variety of serious health
issues, pending some routine physical exams. “They
granted me pretty much everything down the line. It’s very rare,”
said House, who can’t work but currently has only a 30 percent
disability rating. “Of course I wish VA would acknowledge that we
buried that Agent Orange. We know what we were ordered to do on that
base. But at least VA now admits there were toxic chemicals there
that harmed me. This is a victory.” Weidman said
House had “the best-documented case of toxic chemical exposure
outside of Vietnam of anyone I have ever seen, by far. He’s an
extremely bright guy. He just had too much documentation; the facts
were on his side. His case shows that the Department of Defense and
VA’s story about toxic exposures to troops on U.S. military bases is
starting to unravel.” By contrast, a VA spokesperson
told IBTimes that House’s disability case will have no influence on
other cases. “Pursuant to regulation, decisions
issued by the Board of Veterans’ Appeals [Board] are nonprecedential
in nature,” said the spokesperson, Meagan Lutz. “This means that
decisions by the board are considered binding only with regard to
the specific case decided. Each case presented to the board is
decided on the basis of the individual facts of the case, with
consideration given to all evidence of record, in light of
applicable procedure and substantive law.” Lutz added that the
percentage House receives for his disability rating “will be
determined based on the nature and severity of his service."
Agent Orange, which was used by the DOD during the Vietnam War, had
devastating effects on U.S. troops as well as Vietnamese civilians.
The herbicide has been scientifically linked to several types of
cancer as well as Parkinson’s disease, diabetes, skin problems and
other diseases and conditions, many of which House now suffers with.
To date, disability claims from veterans like House
who said they were exposed to Agent Orange and other chemicals have
mostly been limited to those who served in Vietnam and in a few
select places, including the Korean DMZ – not other military bases.
While the judge's ruling does not directly affect Agent Orange
cases, House and Weidman believe that it sets a precedent, and will
help focus renewed attention on veterans’ exposure to toxic
chemicals, including Agent Orange.
The Marine Corps Times reported last week that Maine
Gov. Paul LePage is expected to sign into law a bill calling on the
federal government to recognize disabilities suffered by Maine
soldiers who were exposed to Agent Orange at a military base in
Canada. The bill, sponsored by Democratic Sen. John Tuttle, focuses
on potential exposure by Maine Army National Guard members at
Canadian Forces Base Gagetown in New Brunswick. Fields at the base
were sprayed with chemical herbicides, including a small amount of
Agent Orange, according the the Marine Corps Times.
There is growing evidence that Agent Orange was used
before, during and after the war on U.S. military bases across the
globe, and that it contaminated troops after the war in Air Force
planes that had been used in Vietnam to spray the defoliant.
House, whose father served in the Korean War, said
he hopes his case will lead to more awareness of toxic dumps on U.S.
military bases, and in particular, that Camp Carroll is “just
another Camp Lejeune," referring to the North Carolina Marine base
where service members and their families were exposed to
solvent-contaminated drinking water from 1953 to 1987. "It’s toxic
and people who were stationed there have been harmed, as have the
civilians who live near the base. Our bases are toxic and are
hurting veterans, and the public needs to know this. I hope this
decision by the judge will lead to more decisions for other veterans
who were stationed there and are now suffering.” |