
Vietnam. Defoliation Mission. A UH-1D helicopter from the
336th Aviation Company sprays a defoliation agent on a dense jungle area in the
Mekong delta.,
July 26 1969
'Agent Orange' and "'Super Orange'" were the nicknames given to a
herbicide and
defoliant used by the
U.S. military in its
Herbicidal Warfare program during the
Vietnam War.
Agent Orange was used from 1961 to 1971 and was by far the most used of the so-called "
rainbow herbicides" utilized during the program. Degradation of Agent Orange (as well as
Agents Purple,
Pink, and
Green) released
dioxins, which have caused health problems for those exposed during the Vietnam War. Agents
Blue and
White were part of the same program but did not contain dioxins.
Studies of populations highly exposed to dioxin, though not necessarily Agent Orange, indicate increased risk of various types of cancer and genetic defects; the effect of long-term low-level exposure has not been established.
Since the 1980s, several lawsuits have been filed against the companies who produced Agent Orange, among them
Dow Chemical,
Monsanto and
Diamond Shamrock (which produced 5%
[1]). U.S. veterans obtained a $180 million settlement in 1984, with most affected veterans receiving a one-time lump sum payment of $1,200. American veterans of the Vietnam War were seeking recognition of Agent Orange, compensation and treatment for maladies that they and their children suffered from; many Vietnam veterans exposed to Agent Orange have not been able to receive promised medical care through the
Veterans Administration medical system, and only with rare exception have their affected children received healthcare assistance from the government. Vietnam veterans and their families who brought the original Agent Orange lawsuit stated 25 years ago that the government "is just waiting for us all to die". They alleged that most of those still alive will succumb to the effects of toxic exposure over the next several years, before age 65. Elsewhere,
Australian,
Canadian and
New Zealand veterans obtained compensation in settlements that same year. In 1999,
South Korean veterans filed a lawsuit in Korea; in January 2006, the Korean Appeal Court ordered Monsanto and Dow to pay US$62 million in compensation. However, no Vietnamese have obtained compensation, and on
March 10,
2005 Judge Jack Weinstein of
Brooklyn Federal Court dismissed the lawsuit filed by the Vietnamese victims of Agent Orange against the chemical companies that produced the defoliants/herbicides.
Description
Agent Orange, given its name from the 55 U.S. gallon orange-striped barrels it was shipped in, is a roughly 1:1 mixture of two
phenoxy herbicides in
ester form,
2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D) and
2,4,5-trichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4,5-T). These herbicides were developed during the 1940s by independent teams in
England and the United States for use in controlling broad-leaf plants. Phenoxy agents work by mimicking a plant
growth hormone,
indoleacetic acid (IAA). When sprayed on broad-leaf plants they induce rapid, uncontrolled growth, eventually defoliating them. When sprayed on crops such as
wheat or
corn, it selectively kills just the broad-leaf plants in the field - the weeds - leaving the crop relatively unaffected. First introduced in 1946, these herbicides were in widespread use in
agriculture by the middle of the 1950s and were first introduced in the agricultural farms of
Aguadilla,
Puerto Rico.
At the time Agent Orange was sold to the U.S. government for use in Vietnam, internal memos of its manufacturers reveal it was known that a dioxin,
2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-para-dioxin (TCDD), is produced as a byproduct of the manufacture of 2,4,5-T, and was thus present in any of the herbicides that used it. The National Toxicology Program has classified TCDD to be a human
carcinogen, frequently associated with
soft-tissue sarcoma,
Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma,
Hodgkin's disease and
chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). 2,4,5-T has since been banned for use in the U.S. and many other countries.
Although the herbicide 2,4-D does not contain dioxin, its impact on health and environment has not been thoroughly studied, and it remains one of the most-used herbicides in the world today.
Diseases associated with dioxin exposure are
chloracne, soft tissue sarcomas, Hodgkin's lymphoma, and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. A link has also been found to
diabetes, in a study by the
Institute of Medicine.
[2] Diseases with limited evidence of an association with Agent Orange are respiratory cancers,
prostate cancer,
multiple myeloma,
Porphyria cutanea tarda (a type of skin disease), acute and subacute transient
peripheral neuropathy,
spina bifida,
Type 2 diabetes, and
acute myelogenous leukemia found only in the second or third generation. Diseases with inadequate or insufficient evidence of an association are hepatobiliary cancers, nasal or
nasopharyngeal cancers, bone cancer, female reproductive cancers,
renal cancer,
testicular cancer,
leukemia, spontaneous abortion,
birth defects such as neonatal or infant death and
stillbirths, low birth weight, childhood cancers, abnormal sperm parameters, cognitive neuropsychiatric disorders,
ataxia, peripheral nervous system disorders, circulatory disorders, respiratory disorders, skin cancers, urinary and bladder cancer. Diseases with limited or suggestive evidence of no association are gastrointestinal tumors such as stomach cancer, pancreatic cancer,
colon cancer, and rectal cancer, and
brain tumors.
[3]
Use outside of Vietnam
In September 2000, the Veteran Adminitration (VA) recognized that Agent Orange was used in Korea in the late 1960s.
[1] Republic of Korea troops are reported to have done the spraying, which occurred along the demilitarized zone with
North Korea. The VA has also acknowledged that Agent Orange was used domestically by U.S. forces, as well as in Canada during the same time period
[2].
Globe, Arizona
Billlee Shoecraft died in 1977 of cancer. She began suffering from cancer after a helicopter sprayed her with the defoliant Kuron. Before her death, Shoecraft wrote a book about her experience in which she said that after she was sprayed her eyes were nearly swollen shut, her arms and legs were swollen twice normal size and her hair was coming out in patches. Kuron, an herbicide related to Agent Orange, was sprayed by the U.S. Forest Service to thin foliage and increase water runoff in the Pinal Mountains of the Tonto National Forest near
Globe, Arizona, in 1968 and 1969. Dow Chemical Company and the U.S.Forest Service payed an undisclosed sum to five families. Shoecraft wrote a book entitled, ''Sue the Bastards!'', about her incident in 1971.
Effects of the program
New Jersey Agent Orange Commission
In 1980,
New Jersey created the New Jersey Agent Orange Commission, the first state commission created to study its effects. The commission's research project in association with
Rutgers University was called "The Pointman Project". It was disbanded by Governor
Christine Todd Whitman in 1996.
[4]
During Pointman I, commission researchers devised ways to determine small dioxin levels in blood. Prior to this, such levels could only be found in the
adipose (fat) tissue. The project compared dioxin levels in a small group of Vietnam veterans who had been exposed to Agent Orange with a group of matched veterans who had not served in Vietnam. The results of this project were published in the Journal of the American Medical Association in 1988.
[5]
The second phase of the project continued to examine and compare dioxin levels in various groups of Vietnam veterans including
Army,
Marines and
brown water riverboat Navy personnel.
Lawsuits
In 1984, Agent Orange manufacturers paid Australian, Canadian and New Zealand veterans in an out-of-court settlement.
[ Korea orders Agent Orange payments ]
U.S. Vietnamese victims class action lawsuit
On
January 31,
2004, a
victim's rights group, the Vietnam Association for Victims of Agent Orange/Dioxin (VAVA), filed a lawsuit in a US Federal
District Court in
Brooklyn, New York, against several U.S. companies for liability in causing personal injury, by developing and producing the chemical. Dow Chemical and Monsanto were the two largest producers of Agent Orange for the U.S. military and were named in the suit along with the dozens of other companies (Diamond Shamrock, Uniroyal, Thompson Chemicals, Hercules, etc.). A number of lawsuits by American
GIs were settled out of court - without admission of liability by the chemical companies - in the years since the Vietnam War. In 1984, some chemical companies that manufactured Agent Orange paid $180 million into a fund for United States veterans following a lawsuit.
On
March 10,
2005, District Court Judge Jack Weinstein - who had defended the U.S. veterans victims of Agent Orange - dismissed the suit, ruling that there was no legal basis for the
plaintiffs' claims. The judge concluded that Agent Orange was not considered a poison under
international law at the time of its use by the U.S.; that the U.S. was not prohibited from using it as a herbicide; and that the companies which produced the substance were not liable for the method of its use by the government. The U.S. government is not a party in the lawsuit, claiming
sovereign immunity.
In order to assist those who have been impacted by Agent Orange/Dioxin, the Vietnamese have established "Peace villages", which each host between 50 to 100 victims, giving them medical and psychological help. As of 2006, there were 11 such villages, thus granting some social protection to fewer than a thousand victims. U.S. veterans of the war in Vietnam and individuals who are aware and sympathetic to the impacts of Agent Orange have also supported these programs in Vietnam. An international group of Veterans from the U.S. and its allies during the Vietnam war working together with their former enemy - veterans from the Vietnam Veterans Association - established the Vietnam Friendship Village
[3] located outside of Hanoi. The center provides medical care, rehabilitation and vocational training for children and veterans from Vietnam who have been impacted by Agent Orange.
The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs has listed prostate cancer, respiratory cancers, multiple myeloma, type II diabetes, Hodgkin’s disease, non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, soft tissue sarcoma, chloracne, porphyria cutanea tarda, peripheral neuropathy, and
spina bifida in children of veterans exposed to Agent Orange as side effects of the herbicide.
South Korean lawsuit
In 1999, about 20,000 South Koreans filed two separated lawsuits against U.S. companies, seeking more than $5 billion in damages. After losing a decision in 2002, they filed an appeal.
In January 2006, the South Korean Appeals Court ordered Dow Chemical and Monsanto to pay $62 million in compensation to about 6,800 people. The ruling acknowledged that "the
defendants failed to ensure safety as the defoliants manufactured by the defendants had higher levels of dioxins than standard", and, quoting the U. S. National Academy of Science report, declared that there was a "causal relationship" between Agent Orange and 11 diseases, including cancers of the lung, larynx and prostate. However, the judges failed to acknowledge "the relationship between the chemical and
peripheral neuropathy, the disease most widespread among Agent Orange victims" according to the ''
Mercury News''.
Miscellaneous
★ The
Union Carbide company produced the constituents of Agent Orange at
Homebush Bay in
Sydney,
Australia, where the
2000 Summer Olympics were staged.
[4]
★ The Uniroyal plant in
Elmira,
Ontario was one of seven suppliers producing Agent Orange for the U. S. military's use in Vietnam.
★ An international committee
[6] in support of Vietnamese victims of Agent Orange, has published a report on the impact of Agent Orange in Vietnam.
[7][7]
★ A Canadian company that researched Agent Orange contamination on behalf of the Vietnamese government has expressed 'shock' that in some areas of Vietnam, dioxin contamination is 300 to 400 times higher than the standard accepted levels.
[9]
See also
★
Teratogen
★
Dow Chemical
★
Monsanto
★
Vietnam War
★
Depleted uranium
★
Thalidomide
★
Herbicide
Notes
1. Answers.com - Ultramar Diamond Shamrock Corporation. Retrieved on 19 April 2007
2. Institute of Medicine - ''Veterans and Agent Orange: Herbicide/Dioxin Exposure and Type 2 Diabetes''. Retrieved on 19 April 2007.
3. MSNBC - "Agent Orange study ends, no cancer link found" by the Associated Press. Originally published 7 September 2006. Retrieved on 19 April 2007.
4. New York Times, 3 July 1996
5. Vol. 259 No. 11, 18 March 1988
6. Int'l committee for Agent Orange victims launched
7.
8.
9. Researchers 'shocked' at Agent Orange contamination in Vietnam
Further reading
★ Weisman, Joan Murray. ''The Effects of Exposure to Agent Orange on the Intellectual Functioning, Academic Achievement, Visual Motor Skill, and Activity Level of the Offspring of Vietnam War Veterans.'' Doctoral thesis. Hofstra University. 1986.
★ Klein, Robert. ''Wounded Men, Broken Promises.'' New York: Macmillan Publishing, 1981.
★ Uhl, Michael, and Tod Ensign. ''GI Guinea Pigs.'' 1st Ed. New York: Playboy Press, 1981.
★ Linedecker, Clifford, Michael Ryan, and Maureen Ryan. ''Kerry: Agent Orange and an American Family.'' New York: St. Martins Press, 1982.
★ Wilcox, Fred A. ''Waiting for an Army to Die.'' 1st ed. New York: Random House, 1983.
External links
★
Operation Ranch Hand: Herbicides In Southeast Asia History of Operation Ranch Hand
★
NIEHS dioxin fact sheet
★
Agent Orange legal case dismissed - report of the US Federal court ruling on the VAVA suit.
★
www.vietnam-dioxin.org, an information website on the consequences of Agent Orange and dioxin in Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos.
★ http://www.ffrd.org/agentorange.htm Information about the long term health and environmental effects of Agent Orange in Southeast Asia and the US. Court documents from the Vietnamese AO lawsuit are also found on this site.
★
Assessment of the health risk of dioxins 1998 by the
WHO and the
IPCS (pdf).
★
Children and the Vietnam War 30-40 years after the use of Agent Orange, article with pictures (warning: uncensored, may be found shocking)
★
Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting Vietnam: War's Lasting Legacy. Video reports from the field on the lingering effects of Agent Orange.