(WASHINGTON,
D.C.) – “Vietnam Veterans of America applauds the
conclusions and recommendations of a Ford Foundation-funded report
issued today by the National Organization on Disabilities on
the effects of Agent Orange in Vietnam,” said John Rowan,
VVA National President. “While VVA feels compassion for
the many adults and children injured and made ill by exposure
to Agent Orange and the many other toxins used in Vietnam during
the war there, it is now time to fully deal with the same effects
on Americans who served in Vietnam and other areas that were
also contaminated. The effects of these toxins on the children,
grandchildren, and even great-grandchildren must similarly
be addressed.”
The U.S. government currently is not studying the possible intergenerational
effects of exposure to Agent Orange, nor are they doing any morbidity
studies at the Department of Veterans Affairs, the National Institutes
of Health, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or
anywhere else.
Rowan called for “the immediate de-classification of all
Department of Defense information that pertains to exposure of
U.S. military servicemembers to any toxin at any time, to include
the Vietnam Era” and to take immediate steps to begin
epidemiological studies, birth defects registries, and outreach
necessary to scientifically document the problems suffered
by our veterans and their offspring.
“Dow Chemical is not going to fund these studies,” Rowan
said. “Only the U.S. government can reasonably be expected
to fund this vital research, and they have not been doing their
job. In fact, it would appear that for the last decade that
our government has been doing everything possible to prevent
such studies from being done.
“That the Administration is adding another $3 million to
the $3 million already pledged from the Ford Foundation for work
to help those suffering in Vietnam is fine and good,” Rowan
said. “However, there needs to be at least a commensurate
commitment by the U.S. government and the Ford Foundation to
American veterans and their families. Under a new President,
now is the time for a dramatic change of direction for our
country. Similarly, now is the time for a new direction from
the Ford Foundation.”
-- 30 --
http://www.motherjones.com/mojo/2009/06/agent-orange-diagnosis-and-treatment-badly-lagging-says-report