Common Ground - CANADA'S ROLE IN DU WEAPONS WORLDWIDE
Canada’s role in depleted uranium weapons worldwide
Alfred Lambremont Webre, JD, MEd
The Government of Canada is in non-compliance with the statutes and regulations of the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission (CNSC), prohibiting the use of Canadian uranium in depleted uranium (DU) weapons. Moreover, Canada has a bilateral nuclear co-operation agreement with the US, under which uranium exports to the US may only be used for peaceful purposes, and not in weapons. This includes “control over the high enrichment of Canadian uranium and subsequent storage and use of the highly enriched uranium,” a Foreign Affairs document states. The same rules that apply to uranium apply to depleted uranium, according to the CNSC.
DU weapons are considered weapons of mass destruction under international law. Thus Canada may be complicit in the US use of weapons of mass destruction in the 1991 Iraq war I, the 1998 Balkans war, the 2001 war in Afghanistan, and the 2003 Iraq war II, where the British medical journal Lancet estimates that one million civilians have died. In each of these wars, it is likely that depleted uranium in the DU weapons used by the U.S. and the UK comes from Canadian uranium exported to the US and processed in US enrichment plants into depleted uranium and subsequently manufactured into DU weapons.
Depleted uranium is the uranium by-product that remains after the removal of the isotope U-235 during the enrichment process. For every ton of enriched U-235 uranium for the nuclear weapons and nuclear power industries, seven tons of depleted uranium containing the U-238 isotope are made for the munitions, DU weapons, and military armor industries. “Depleted uranium” is a marketing term of the nuclear industry. U-238 depleted uranium was originally discovered as a poison gas weapon of mass destruction during World War II by the Manhattan Project, at the same time as the atomic bomb and Agent Orange. Because DU is pyrophoric, it bursts into high-temperature decomposition upon impact with military armour, releasing nanoparticles of ionizing radiation that contaminate all living things and the environment with deadly radiation with a half-life of 4.5 billion years. The public military excuse for the use of DU munitions, bombs and kinetic penetrators is that DU is heavy and easily penetrates military armour and other targets. The covert strategic military use of DU munitions, smart bombs, and cruise missiles is radiation contamination of terrain, and low level nuclear war against enemy troops, civilian populations, and all unprotected military troops, for purposes of depopulation.
DU weapons & war crimes
After 3 years of investigation by 60
expert witnesses and jurists at a cost of $1 million raised by Japanese
citizens, the International Criminal Tribunal For Afghanistan at Tokyo
on March 10, 2004 found President George W. Bush guilty of the war
crimes of genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes for the use
of depleted uranium (DU) weapons by US forces in the 2001 war against
Afghanistan.
Experts agree that a substantial portion of the depleted uranium in the DU weapons used by the US in Afghanistan came from Canadian uranium. Had the Tokyo Tribunal been diligent, it could have found Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chrétien, who resigned as Prime Minister on December 12, 2003, guilty as an accessory to genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes, for failing to enforce Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission regulations, and the Canada-US Nuclear Cooperation Agreement, both of which prohibit Canadian uranium from being used in DU weapons.
Dr. Gordon Edwards, president of the Montreal-based Canadian Coalition for Nuclear Responsibility (CCNR) says, “Canada may have the policy, but it’s not enforced. The Canadian government is taking directions and orders from the nuclear industry… “The uranium industry has a vested interest in ensuring its depleted uranium waste makes a profit and is not just left in storage. That’s why some of Canada’s depleted uranium is ending up in weapons, Edwards says. “The Canadian government can’t even think for themselves.”
Depleted uranium in Hawaii
The depleted uranium that has
contaminated the Hawaiian Islands with deadly radiation most probably
has a Canadian uranium source. It is highly probably that the depleted
uranium in DU munitions fired at bases on the Big Island and at
military bases on Oahu, and in the nuclear weapons stored at Pearl
Harbour is derived from Canadian uranium, exported to the US and
processed into enriched uranium and DU.
Public health effects of DU weapons
The public health and
environmental effects of the use of depleted uranium (DU) weapons can
be considered per se violations of the war crime of genocide, crimes
against humanity, and war crimes under the Statute of the International
Criminal Court. The demonstrated public health effects of depleted
uranium (DU) weapons include: diabetes, cancer, birth defects, chronic
diseases caused by neurological and neuromuscular radiation damage,
mitochondrial diseases (chronic fatigue syndrome, Lou Gehrig’s,
Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s disease, heart and brain disorders), global
DNA damage in men’s sperm, infertility in women, learning disabilities
(such as autism and dyslexia), mental illness, infant mortality and low
birth weights, increase in death rates and decrease in birth rates.
The Prime Minister stonewalls
So far, the Conservative government
and the Liberal opposition have failed to take a public position on
Canada’s failure to stop the illegal use of its uranium in DU weapons.
Stephen Harper refused to allow any Conservative MPs to appear on a
June 13, 2007 North American radio special programme on the Canadian DU
issue. Despite repeated conversations with Stephane Dion’s personal
press attaché and attempts to reach Liberal MP and Foreign Affairs
critic Ujjal Dosanjh, the Liberal Party chose not to send a
representative to the Canadian DU radio programme. Liberal MP Dr. Keith
Martin, MD, a physician and former Parliamentary Secretary for the
Minister of Defence in the Paul Martin Government, appeared on a radio
programme on the Canadian DU issue and stated that in his opinion,
there were no adverse public health consequences to the use of DU
weapons.
By contrast, at a May 12, 2007 Uranium-free BC Forum at the Brilliant Centre in Castlegar, BC, NDP MP Alex Atamanenko (Southern Interior) publicly stated he was opposed to the use of Canadian uranium in DU weapons. Atamanenko seeks Canadian legislation banning DU weapons, as Belgium has passed. On the June 13, 2007 Canadian DU radio programme, Atamanenko publicly committed to question the Prime Minister in the House of Commons on why Canada was not enforcing its regulations and treaty obligations against the use of its uranium in DU weapons. Connie Fogal, Leader of the Canadian Action Party, which passed a resolution in support of Canadian legislation outlawing DU weapons, committed to work against the use of Canadian DU in American weapons. Adriane Carr, Deputy Leader of the Green Party of Canada likewise committed to demand enforcement of Canada’s prohibitions against use of its uranium in DU weapons.
What path is Canada taking?
Unbeknownst to the public, the
Government of Canada seems to have strayed into aiding and abetting the
serious war crimes of DU-induced genocide and crimes against humanity.
By contrast, British Columbia has maintained a moratorium on uranium
mining since the 1970s. There is substantial community support for a
permanent ban on uranium exploration and mining in BC, as the recent
Uranium-free BC Forum in Castlegar suggested. The detrimental impacts
of uranium exploration and mining on public health and the environment
is the driving force behind the ban.
Under the guise of combating climate change, the nuclear industry, led by the Bush Administration, is now promoting nuclear power plants to the tiger economies of India, China, Japan, and South Korea. Because of ionizing radiation and the nuclear waste issue, this amounts to a low level nuclear war against these populations. NASA recently reported vast uranium deposits in Khazakhstan and Afghanistan. Khazakhstan is expected to out-produce Canada (now the world’s top producer) in uranium production within 12 years.
One might rationally ask: Why not ban uranium exploration and mining
in BC, and organize collectively to secure a uranium exploration and
mining ban in Saskatchewan, Ontario and Quebec? The public policy
reasons for the ban on uranium exploration and mining in the rest of
Canada – public heath and environment – are equally valid throughout
Canada, as they are in BC.
Let’s sunset our Canadian uranium
industry. That is a practical way to save the health of Canadians, the
environment, and innocent victims worldwide.
Alfred Lambremont Webre, JD, MEd is the International Director of the
Institute for Cooperation in Space (ICIS), and a Judge on the Kuala
Lumpur International War Crimes Tribunal. Alfred can be reached at [email protected]
Website at www.peaceinspace.org
For nuclear info visit www.ccnr.org
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