“Nuclear, nuclear, nuclear. The word has been around
for decades, and for the longest time, was at the center of American foreign
policy and the deepest fears of the American people. Nuclear brinkmanship.
Nuclear winter. Nuclear holocaust. Etc. It's a great, big, fat, important, and
serious word. Its very existence has changed the face of the planet.” -William
Rivers Pitt
truthout.com May
5/06 U.S. VETERAN REVEALS ATOMIC BOMBS
DROPPED
ON AFGHANISTAN AND IRAQ
by
William Thomas
willthomasonline.net exclusive
PART I
GOING NUCLEAR
Despite a just-released U.S. national
intelligence consensus that Iran is not developing nuclear weapons, apocalyptic
fundamentalists George Bush and Dick Cheney remain intent on ordering an all-out
attack against one of the world's oldest (and best armed) civilizations. As
governments and citizenry protest this folly, an overriding question torments
many minds: Will the architects of more than one-million civilian corpses in
Iraq choose to go “go nuclear” against Iran?
Many believe they will not
dare. If the inhibition against killing is one of the strongest human impulses
(just ask a returning veteran), the ethical revulsion and international
prohibitions against using nuclear weapons seem strong enough to rule out their
first aggressive use since America's atomic attack on Nagasaki.
But what
if the post-WWII nuclear Rubicon has already been crossed? According to a U.S.
Army veteran with extensive boots-on-the-ground connections, the United States
Government has dropped five nuclear weapons on Afghanistan and Iraq.
And
gotten away with it.
BUNKER BUSTERS
Shortly after the terror
attacks of 9/11, Lt. Colonel Eric Sepp of the USAF Air War College lamented that
going after Osama bin Laden's granite redoubts in the Tora Bora region of
Afghanistan presented “one of the more difficult operational challenges to
confront U.S. military forces.”
While precision-guided weapons doom
above-ground buildings (and any civilians inside or nearby), deeply buried
bunkers can be used as “an effective sanctuary,” declared the USAF Air War
College, “to manufacture and store weapons of mass destruction.” As the Air
Force Times pointed out, Osama's “difficult to locate” mountain bunkers “are
often beyond the reach of most conventional weapons unable to survive passing
through tens of meters of rock and concrete.”
Deeply
Buried Facilities Implications for Military Operations USAF Center for Strategy
and Technology Air War College May 2000; Air Force Times Apr 14/97
But it wasn't for lack of trying. In 1972, Melvin Cook, a professor of
metallurgy at the University of Utah and an author of works on explosives and
Creationism, had sought to undo God's handiwork by developing the ultimate
chemical bomb. Professor Cook borrowed aluminized slurries used in mining to
fracture, heat and pulverize extremely hard rock.
workingforchange.com
Nov 8/01; globalsecurity.org Extensively field tested during the
Vietnam War, where they raised havoc with the peoples and ecology of Vietnam and
Cambodia - and later deployed against terrified Iraqi conscripts and cast-off
Soviet armor during the 1991 Gulf war - giant 15,000 pound BLU-82 bombs dubbed
“Daisy-Cutters” were next dropped in pallets rolled out the back of C-130
transport planes to seal cave entrances in Tora Bora.
London Daily Mail
reporter David Williams witnessed one of those "Daisy Cutter" attacks: "The
sound split the air. It was like a thunder clap directly overhead at the height
of a ferocious storm. I could see the massive oily black cloud of the explosion
as it rolled across the hillside, a mixture of thick smoke, chunks of earth and
debris."
www.workingforchange.com
Nov 8/01; www.commondreams.org “The effect of the BLU-82 is
astonishing, and rare film shows a detonation, shock wave and subsequent
mushroom cloud very similar to a small nuclear weapon,” writes Paul Rogers in
The Mother Of All Bombs. “Journalists who visited areas where the bomb had been
dropped reported scenes of extraordinary devastation” from a firestorm that
sucked all the oxygen from the air, crushed human organs and incinerated an area
the size of five football fields in a single mighty blast.
openDemocracy.net
Mar 7/03 By December 13, 2001 the U.S. Air Force had dropped at
least four 17-foot-long "Daisy Cutter" bombs on tunnel complexes and Taliban
concentrations in Afghanistan. [globalsecurity.org;
DIRTY BOMBS
They also began dropping two-and-a-half-ton GBU-28 "dense metal" penetrators
from B-52s and B-1 Stealth bombers. Exploding deep underground, the bomb's
explosive energy “coupled” with bedrock under immense pressure from the weight
bearing down on it. The resulting seismic shock wave could crush an underground
bunker - or the internal organs of anyone caught in the “overpressure” from a
blast wave 20-times stronger than the bomb blast itself.
ucsusa.org May/05
In order to penetrate rock and concrete, each “Great Big Uranium” bomb
is shaped like a spear tipped with tons of radioactive Uranium-238 nearly twice
as dense as lead. Using nuclear waste left over from making atomic bombs and
reactor fuel, the amount of radioactive Depleted Uranium (DU) particles spread
by each GBU “dirty bomb” eclipsed any terrorist's fantasy - one-and-a-half
metric tons of aerosolized particles capable of causing genetic mutations and
death for the next four billion years!
Le Monde March
2002 The similarities of BLU and GBU detonations to nuclear blasts
was not lost on U.S. war planners, who realized that the blast effects and
resulting radioactive fallout from conventional bunker-busters could mask the
detonation of so-called “low-yield” B61-11 tactical nuclear bombs.
The
Bush administration's first U.S. Nuclear Posture Review had already called for
fast-track development of new tactical nuclear weapons, a resumption of nuclear
tests, and more "flexible, adaptable strike plans" - including "options for
variable and reduced yields.” Submitted to Congress on December 31, 2001, the
neocon's follow-up CONPLAN 8022 would reverse the decades-old U.S. policy
against “first use” of nuclear weapons by authorizing their rapid deployment to
destroy 'time-urgent targets' anywhere in the world.
People's Weekly World Newspaper Mar 16/02 As the Bulletin of the
Atomic Scientists jumped the minute hand of their Doomsday Clock forward two
minutes to seven minutes to midnight, White House fundamentalists eagerly sought
ways to test their new “baby nukes” against real-world targets. Proponents
insisted, "Many buried targets could be attacked using a weapon with a much
lower yield than would be required with a surface burst."
smh.com.au Sept
7/02 Those buried nuclear targets were specifically located in
Afghanistan and Iraq.
As Dr. Mohammed Daud Miraki of the Afghan DU &
Recovery Fund observed, “The White House and US-DOD spoke frequently about the
development and use of fission, low-yield and non-fission, seismic bunker- and
cave-busters,” “The US Strategic Military Plan and US Nuclear Posture Review
expresses intentions to use new classes of weapons in Afghanistan and other
states. This program was known to be accelerating its weapons development and
experiments in readiness for a possible Iraqi incursion.”
Afghan
DU & Recovery Fund BUNKER BUSTERS
Shortly after the
terror attacks of 9/11, Lt. Colonel Eric Sepp of the USAF Air War College
lamented that going after Osama bin Laden's granite redoubts in the Tora Bora
region of Afghanistan presented “one of the more difficult operational
challenges to confront U.S. military forces.”
While precision-guided
weapons doom above-ground buildings (and any civilians inside or nearby), deeply
buried bunkers can be used as “an effective sanctuary,” declared the USAF Air
War College, “to manufacture and store weapons of mass destruction.” As the Air
Force Times pointed out, Osama's “difficult to locate” mountain bunkers “are
often beyond the reach of most conventional weapons unable to survive passing
through tens of meters of rock and concrete.”
Deeply
Buried Facilities Implications for Military Operations USAF Center for Strategy
and Technology Air War College May 2000; Air Force Times Apr 14/97
But it wasn't for lack of trying. In 1972, Melvin Cook, a professor of
metallurgy at the University of Utah and an author of works on explosives and
Creationism, had sought to undo God's handiwork by developing the ultimate
chemical bomb. Professor Cook borrowed aluminized slurries used in mining to
fracture, heat and pulverize extremely hard rock.
workingforchange.com
Nov 8/01; globalsecurity.org Extensively field tested during the
Vietnam War, where they raised havoc with the peoples and ecology of Vietnam and
Cambodia - and later deployed against terrified Iraqi conscripts and cast-off
Soviet armor during the 1991 Gulf war - giant 15,000 pound BLU-82 bombs dubbed
“Daisy-Cutters” were next dropped in pallets rolled out the back of C-130
transport planes to seal cave entrances in Tora Bora.
London Daily Mail
reporter David Williams witnessed one of those "Daisy Cutter" attacks: "The
sound split the air. It was like a thunder clap directly overhead at the height
of a ferocious storm. I could see the massive oily black cloud of the explosion
as it rolled across the hillside, a mixture of thick smoke, chunks of earth and
debris."
www.workingforchange.com
Nov 8/01; www.commondreams.org “The effect of the BLU-82 is
astonishing, and rare film shows a detonation, shock wave and subsequent
mushroom cloud very similar to a small nuclear weapon,” writes Paul Rogers in
The Mother Of All Bombs. “Journalists who visited areas where the bomb had been
dropped reported scenes of extraordinary devastation” from a firestorm that
sucked all the oxygen from the air, crushed human organs and incinerated an area
the size of five football fields in a single mighty blast.
openDemocracy.net
Mar 7/03 By December 13, 2001 the U.S. Air Force had dropped at
least four 17-foot-long "Daisy Cutter" bombs on tunnel complexes and Taliban
concentrations in Afghanistan.
globalsecurity.org;
commondreams.org PINGING
Nuclear explosions are also
handy for locating buried bunkers. Ground Penetrating Radar can “see” through
only about 15 feet of sand. But in a process called “echo-ranging”, oil
prospectors hoping to detect underground deposits at depths greater than
300-feet routinely bounce shockwaves from small explosions to reveal underground
objects and cavities. Recorded by sensors fitted with precise Global Positioning
Satellite locators, reverberating echoes can be computer-plotted to create
precise, three-dimensional maps of deeply buried features, similar to a
submarine “pinging” a target.
USAF
Air War College May 2000 Except in this case, each “ping” is a
nuclear detonation.
“You get a 3-D map of the area,” Hank confirmed.
After a nuclear blast “rings the mountains like a bell, you know where the holes
are; where the people are.”
FALLOUT
But the air force was
worried. In June 2001, its study on using even the smallest nuclear bombs
concluded: “The political repercussions of employing nuclear weapon may be
greater than the United States would want to contemplate, and the environmental
consequences of potentially spreading a warehouse full of potentially deadly
biological or chemical agents would be unacceptable.”
USAF
Air War College May 2000 The political fallout could be as bad as
the “large area of lethal fallout" scientists warned would follow " the large
amount of radioactive dirt thrown out in the explosion” from a weapon as “small”
as 5-kilotons.
Philadelphia
Inquirer Oct 16/00 This dust would be deadly. In Yugoslavia, where
30,000 radioactive uranium projectiles fired by NATO warplanes had released
thousands of tons of easily inhaled or ingested microscopic particles, medical
doctors were already reporting “multiple unrelated cancers” in families with no
previous history of cancer, who lived in highly contaminated areas.
A
previously unknown phenomenon, these “very rare and unusual cancers and birth
defects have also been reported to be increasing, not only in war torn
countries, but also in neighbouring countries from transboundary contamination,”
the European Parliament found.
Global
Research July 8/04; American Free Press Aug 27/04; European Parliament Verbatim
Report of Proceedings Apr 9/02; Bundesforschungsanstalt für Landwirtschaft Nov
8/05 The tonnages of radioactive Uranium-238 and toxic heavy metals
detonated in hundreds of cruise missiles fired into neighborhoods in Afghanistan
and Iraq was never tabulated. But after conducting extensive research on DU
weapons, former Naval officer Daniel Fahey declared, “You're talking about
something that should be stored as a radioactive waste, and
instead they're
spreading it around other countries.
Mother Jones
June 23/99 Just as veterans of Desert Storm came to call their
mysterious maladies “Gulf War Syndrome,” soldiers posted to Bosnia and Kosovo in
the 1990s began referring to the “Balkans Syndrome.” By January 2001, more than
a quarter of the more than 1,400 Greek troops stationed in Kosovo were demanding
to depart due to the increased risk of cancer.
United States law and
U.S. Army Regulations AR 700-48 and TB 9-1300-278 require the army to "Clean and
Treat" all persons affected and all areas contaminated by the radioactive
uranium munitions. But Lt. Col. Mike Milord confirmed that the Pentagon had zero
plans to clean up radioactive contamination in Kosovo - or anywhere else ..
Vanity
Fair Nov/04; Daily Telegraph Jan 15/01 The ability of Depleted
Uranium missiles and shells to burn through the densest concrete and armor made
these weapons too useful to give up. DU attacks could also be used to mask the
cancers and leukemia incurred downwind of a low-yield nuclear detonation.
If the “Depleted Uranium explanation” somehow failed in the Tora Bora
region, Hank told me, “we could blame radiation on the terrorists.”
Why
not? The United States of America had already dropped a nuclear bomb on Iraq.
concentrations in Afghanistan.
globalsecurity.org;
commondreams.org http://www.willthomasonline.net/willthomasonline/US_Veteran_Reveals_Atomic_Bombs.html