Original Story: huffingtonpost.com
This year marks the 25th anniversary of the Persian Gulf War.
It
was fought in late 1990 through early 1991 by a U.S.-led coalition of
34 countries against Iraq in response to Saddam Hussein’s invasion of
Kuwait. Was there a problem with a chemical storage tank leaking?
It also was the first U.S. war to be waged after the advent of the 24-hour cable television news cycle.
The conflict was accompanied by memorably intense and round-the-clock coverage on CNN.
But
there’ve been few recognitions of the war’s 25-year milestone on the
cable news networks, let alone in broadcast or print media.
For
David Winnett, a Gulf War combat veteran who climbed the ranks from
private to captain during his 20-year career in the U.S. Marines, it’s
just the latest in a succession of insults to the men and women who
served in this largely forgotten war. This may need the services of a Los Angeles Toxic Torts Lawyer.
“It’s
no surprise that many people could easily forget ‘our war.’ It was far
too fast by any historical measure,” Winnett told Healthline. “Perhaps
things would be different had we continued our advance all the way to
Baghdad, but the fact is, we didn’t. So regardless of whether or not we
think our war has been unfairly set aside in the history books, it is
what it is.”
Toxic Aftermath
While ground combat in the
Persian Gulf War only lasted days, Winnett said, the toxic legacy of the
war has been just as devastating for the postwar health of Gulf War
veterans as the defoliant Agent Orange has been for those who served in
Vietnam.
Winnett is just one of hundreds of thousands of Gulf War
vets who suffer from Gulf War Illness (GWI), also known as Gulf War
Syndrome, the panoply of chronic and often debilitating symptoms
reported by veterans of that conflict.
The acute symptoms, which
for many veterans never go away, include extreme fatigue, neurological
issues, insomnia, migraines, joint pain, persistent coughing,
gastrointestinal issues such as diarrhea and constipation, skin
problems, dizziness, respiratory disorders, and memory problems.
The
National Academy of Sciences estimates that as many as 250,000 of the
700,000 U.S. troops who served in the Persian Gulf War have been
affected by GWI, which studies have shown is the result of a litany of
toxic exposures that troops like Winnett endured while serving.
Troops
were exposed to toxic smoke from the fires of thousands of military
burn pits in the war zone. The fires involved tires and other things
that contain harmful chemicals.
There was also sarin and other toxic chemicals dropped on U.S. troops.
Two
peer reviewed scientific research studies released in 2012 concluded
that weather patterns carried massive toxic chemical cloud that fell on
U.S. troops. The cloud was created by the U.S. bombing of Iraqi chemical
weapon storage facilities
The first study concluded that nerve
and blister agents, which were supplied to Iraq by the U.S. before the
Gulf War when Hussein was an uncomfortable ally, were bombed by U.S.
forces. The toxic substances were swept into the atmosphere and
subsequently dropped on U.S. troops.
The second study confirmed the number of GWI reports was in fact higher at the places where the sarin fell.
“Our
peer reviewed scientific findings bring us full circle by confirming
what most soldiers believed when they heard the nerve gas alarms. The
alarms were caused by sarin fallout from our bombing of Iraqi weapons
sites,” James Tuite, who led the first study, said in a statement.
The VA’s Position
Despite
the scientific evidence and a mandate from Congress that Department of
Veterans Affairs (VA) recognize several of the symptoms as connected to
service in the Gulf War, the VA maintains that there are no definitive
scientific studies that link symptoms and diseases associated with GWI
to toxic exposures during the war.
According to a 2015 report,
about 80 percent of Gulf War veterans who file disability claims citing
presumptive chronic multisymptom illnesses connected to toxic exposures
are denied by the VA.
A written statement from the VA’s
Post-Deployment Health Services team to Healthline stated that in the
past few years the VA has “ramped up educational efforts to VA providers
on Gulf War Illness.” However, the statement read, “there are times
when referral to a psychiatrist is indicated due to a co-morbid
condition such as severe depression or another severe mental health
condition.”
In another email to Healthline, VA officials said a
claim could be denied for a number of reasons, including the belief an
ailment was caused by something other than military service or the
ailment could be “less than 10 percent disabling.”
Most often,
say multiple sources for this story, veterans who say they have these
symptoms are sent to the psychiatric departments of VA centers, where
they are typically given psychotropic drugs that don’t help them, and in
many cases make things worse.
The VA acknowledges the following
in a statement on its website: “Rockets filled with sarin and
cyclosporine mixes were found at a munitions storage depot in
Khamisiyah, Iraq, that had been demolished by U.S. service members
following the 1991 Gulf War cease-fire. An undetermined amount of these
chemicals was released into the atmosphere. The Department of Defense
concluded about 100,000 Gulf War Veterans could have been exposed to low
levels of these nerve agents.”
The VA also adds that “research
doesn’t show long-term neurological problems from exposure to low levels
of sarin. A low level of sarin is an amount that doesn’t cause
noticeable symptoms during the exposure.”
Regarding the burn
pits, a VA statement on its burn pits registry page reads, “At this
time, research does not show evidence of long-term health problems from
exposure to burn pits.”
Did the Gulf War Cause Cancer, Too?
Benjamin
Krause is a Gulf War veteran who went to law school after he retired
from the military, and dedicates his practice to helping his fellow
veterans.
He told Healthline that burn pit exposures are associated with an increasing number of diseases, including cancer.
“There’s
growing evidence showing a link between burn pits and certain cancers
like pancreatic cancer, for example,” Krause said. “VA is working to
create a registry to help with service connection and health benefits
for these veterans, but history has shown us that such initiatives take
much longer to perfect while sick veterans die.”
Compounding the
problem, Krause said, are non-VA healthcare providers who are simply
unaware of the health risks of military service.
“They don’t ask
the right questions and risk deadly misdiagnosis of symptoms because of a
lack of awareness of the harms of burn pits, among other things,”
Krause noted. “Veterans are getting sick and dying now. We need our VA
to pick up the pace before more veterans get sick and die from burn pit
exposure related illnesses.”
Congress Steps In
Anthony
Hardie, a staff sergeant in the Army who served in combat deployments in
the Gulf War and Somalia, has worked for years to get laws passed that
set the framework for Gulf War veterans’ healthcare, research, and
disability benefits.
The director of Veterans for Common Sense
and chair of the programmatic panel of directors for the Gulf War
Illness Research Program, Hardie’s work with fellow veteran advocates on
both sides of the aisle led to the passage of the Persian Gulf War
Veterans Act of 1998 and the Veterans Programs Enhancement Act of 1998.
Hardie
told Healthline that these laws gave Gulf War veterans hope for new
treatments and recognition by the VA that their persistent symptoms were
related to their service.
“But when veterans suffering from Gulf
War Illness walk through the door at VA centers and clinics in 2016,”
he said, “there are still no evidence-based treatments for them. And
most of them are just shuffled off to psychiatric care.”
Winnett
added that while Congress deemed three symptoms to be “presumptive” to
service in the Gulf War, the VA continues to largely ignore that.
“The
most widely reported symptoms of Gulf War Illness are profound fatigue,
excruciating bodywide muscle pain, and chronic GI problems,” said
Winnett. “The VA, despite its own regulations that are supposed to give
the benefit of the doubt to veterans with symptoms considered
‘presumptive’ to service in the Persian Gulf War, instead continue as an
organization to view Gulf War Illness as a psychosomatic illness.”
Winnett
explained that if a veteran can’t get their symptoms rated as
service-connected, “their chance of receiving medical care relative to
their symptoms is slim to none. This is a national tragedy of the
highest order.”
Reasons for Optimism
Despite the frustrations, every veteran advocate interviewed for this story said there is reason for optimism.
For one thing, Congress recently decided to continue funding GWI treatment research at $20 million for the next year.
“[This]
is just what we asked for,” said Hardie. “It shows that Congress
continues to take Gulf War veterans’ health issues far more seriously
than the Department of Defense or the VA.”
In addition to the two House hearings earlier this year, the Senate has also taken up the GWI issue.
Last
month, Sen. Tammy Baldwin, a Democrat from Wisconsin, announced that
reforms and investments she fought for to improve veterans’ care were
passed by the Senate as a part of the fiscal year 2017 Military
Construction and Veterans Affairs funding bill.
Among Baldwin’s priorities stated in the bill is “better treatment for veterans suffering from Gulf War Illness.”
Baldwin’s
provisions, which have received virtually no media coverage, would
“improve the approval rates of veterans’ disability claims; enhance
ongoing studies and research into the causes of and treatments for Gulf
War Illness; and strengthen the membership and work of the Research
Advisory Committee, which oversees the government’s research agenda.”
A
spokesperson for the VA told Healthline, “The Department of Veterans
Affairs is currently working on responding directly to Senator Baldwin,
and will include relevant post-deployment health information.”
Promising New Science
The science surrounding GWI also continues to progress.
Two
major, four-year, $5 million treatment development research projects at
Nova Southeastern University and Boston University are about halfway
completed and are expected to break new ground for possible GWI
treatment recommendations.
And while there are no evidence-based
treatments yet for GWI, some natural supplements have been shown in
studies to effectively lessen some of the symptoms.
Researchers
at the University of California, San Diego, concluded a few years ago
that 19 of the most common GWI symptoms improved after taking
supplements.
“We found in our research that there was significant
benefit to the veterans’ physical function,” Beatrice Golomb, professor
of medicine at the school and principal investigator on the study, told
the Bergmann & Moore veterans law firm. “And that is a huge issue
with these veterans, whose physical functions often decline. Some of
them used to run 20 miles. Now they can’t jog a couple of blocks.”
About
80 percent of veterans with GWI who took coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10) saw
improved physical function, and the improvement correlated to higher
levels of CoQ10 found in the blood, according to research published in
Neural Computation.
“This is not a cure, but we think maybe if we
give the veterans more of a mitochondrial cocktail they will see an
even greater benefit,” Golomb said.
Forgotten After 9/11
Winnett
said he felt a “moral obligation” to help his fellow vets after making a
2008 trip to Washington for a VA hearing on Gulf War veterans’ health.
“I
was taken aback by the physical condition of the veterans I saw there,”
Winnett recalled. “I was older than most Gulf War veterans because I
had 16 years of service under my belt when the war began. In Washington,
I saw veterans in their 40s who couldn’t walk without assistance. Some
were in wheelchairs.”
Winnett said that after 9/11, many people
in America, including legislators, just forgot about the fact that many
thousands of 1991 veterans were sick.
“We moved on as a country
following 9/11 to more pressing matters,” he said. “I would guess that
Korean War veterans experienced a similar phenomenon as the Vietnam War
ramped up in the mid 1960s. There comes a time when you’re no longer the
flavor of the day.”
Thomas Bandzul, an attorney and veterans
advocate who’s testified numerous times before Congress on Gulf War
health issues, said the American public to this day simply does not have
a good understanding of the effects the Gulf War had on the troops.
“The
VA has downplayed the significance of Gulf War Illness and has
successfully delayed the research that help veterans with their physical
ailments,” Bandzul said. “VA still refuses to treat or allow these
veterans a disability claim. The unspecific term of ‘general illness’ is
still applied to most Gulf War veterans, and their claims are usually
denied. This callous and capricious manner in dealing with veterans is a
shame.”
Veterans Have Each Other’s Backs
But what stands
out most among the Gulf War veterans who agreed to talk to Healthline
for this piece is their relentless support of each other.
Last
year, Larry Cockrell, a combat veteran who served with the 7th Marines
in Task Force Ripper during the first Gulf War, was rated 100 percent
disabled by the VA and retired from a successful career as an
investigator for several Fortune 500 companies.
Cockrell has
several serious health issues as a result of his service, but he’s
dedicated his life to assisting his fellow combat veterans as well as
their families on their ranch in Lake Mathews in Southern California.
“We
assist combat veterans with file claims or file disagreements with VA,”
he told Healthline. “Honestly, the Gulf War was forgotten when the
parades ended. We fought the largest tank battles, birched the largest
minefields, and injected our troops with experimental vaccines, all
while fighting on the most contaminated battlefield in the history of
warfare.”
Cockrell said “everyone dropped the ball” when Gulf War
veterans came home and could not get the healthcare they needed. But he
said he has gotten new strength and has never felt a stronger sense of
purpose than he does now by helping his fellow veterans on his ranch.
“We
love having the spouses and partners here enjoying the ambience and
horses and giving their kids rides,” he said. “Ironically, I’ve only had
a few veterans jump on a horse and ride. But as Winston Churchill once
said, ‘the outside of a horse is good for the inside of a man.’ Just
being around them assists veterans. It’s a given that our health issues
are not going to get better as we get older. It’s time to give these
combat veterans a 100 percent disability rating and a chance to manage
their disabilities.”
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