Chemical Weapons and Homicidal Mania:
Coincidence or Cause?
by William Hughes
On Oct. 28, 2002, Robert Flores Jr., flunking out at the U. of Arizona
Nursing School, shot and killed three of his professors, then killed
himself. He had also threatened to blow up a school building. He had no
prior criminal record. His fellow students had described him as acting
“very rude and obnoxious.” He was a Gulf War veteran.
During a two week period in October, 2002, John Allen Williams, a/k/a
John Allen Muhammad, allegedly went on a wild killing spree that left
ten innocent victims dead, while terrorizing the nation’s capital and
its environs. A former intimate friend, who had known him in the 90s
back in Washington state, said “John, to me, was a regular guy.” Before
leaving that state for the East coast, associates had noticed, however,
a sharp change for the worse in his personality. He had become more
“belligerent.” Like Flores, he had no prior criminal record. Muhammad,
too, had served honorably in the Gulf War theater.
Timothy McVeigh admitted setting the bomb in the Oklahoma federal
building, that killed 168, including 19 children, and injured 500
others, on April 19, 1995. He was executed for that mad, cowardly
crime. Like Flores and Muhammad, he had a clean criminal record before
going off the proverbial deep end. In fact, he had been described as a
“very shy guy, who liked to drive old beat up cars.” He was a
registered Republican, too. McVeigh had also served his country in the
Gulf War. In fact, he’d held the rank of sergeant and had received the
Bronze Star decoration.
When McVeigh was executed, on June 11, 2001, President George W. Bush
Jr. said, “ [He] met the fate that he chose for himself six years ago.”
Really? Did McVeigh, alone, willingly choose his fate, or did someone
else, more powerful and knowledgeable of the perils that he faced, and,
in breach of the public trust, help influence his choices by exposing
him to harmful chemicals?
It was George W. Bush Sr., who, in 1991, sent McVeigh, Flores and
Muhammad into harm’s way in the first Gulf War. This was a war from
which “an estimated 50,000 to 60,000” U.S. troops returned home
suffering from the harmful physical and psychological effects of the
“Gulf War Syndrome” (Sources, ‘Chemical Reaction;” “Depleted Uranium:
Education Projection;” and “Gulf Link” Web Sites).
Soldiers in that conflict, like the cited three, were potentially
exposed to enormous levels of toxicity, biological agents, and poisons
that included, among other harmful ingredients, “oil smoke, nerve gas,
vaccines, depleted uranium, fuel, insecticides, and anti-nerve-gas
medicines” (CR site).
Verified adverse health effects from depleted uranium (DU) exposure
alone include a medical condition known as “neuro-pyschological
disorders,” according to a study by Dr. Doug Rokke, presented to the
British House of Commons on Dec. 16, 1999. Some of the possible hazards
of the use of DU were known to the administration of Bush Sr., prior to
the Gulf War, according to a published U.S. Defense Nuclear Agency memo
(DU:EP site).
DU is an extremely dense material that makes a shell that can easily
penetrate steel. The problem, according to the medical experts, is that
people can inhale the tiny particles of burning DU and that this heavy
metal is both poisonous and radioactive. Now, Bush Jr. is hell bent on
placing yet another generation of idealistic American warriors into
that same kind of deadly environment, along with thousands of innocent
Iraqis.
Based on the record that we now have before us, could Flores, Muhammad
and McVeigh, have been suffering from a “neuro-psychological disorder,”
or some debilitating medical condition like it, still unnamed, at the
time they went on their criminal rampages? What other rational
explanation is there to show how these three men (and probably many
more like them) abruptly went from being model patriots, to accused
raving homicidal maniacs?
During the Gulf War alone, the U.S. left 600,000 pounds of radioactive
waste containing DU from its use of these “dirty bombs.” The same kind
of weapon is being used as a “bunker bomb” in the conflict in
Afghanistan, and was used, too, in the Balkan War. Iraqi children
exposed to DU have experienced a “12 fold increase in leukemia and
lymphoma.” European veterans of the 1995 Yugoslavian conflict, from
nine NATO member countries, have also suffered from DU’s effects.
Serious medical complaints are presently pouring in to authorities from
soldiers, and civilians, too, who served there and/or who were
residents of the impacted areas (DU:EP site).
Israel, too, is suspected of using DU weapons against the
Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza (See, John Catalinotto and Sara
Flounders’ investigatory report, International Action Center, Nov. 27,
2000). The authors believe that Israel is “DU-armed and capable and
that shielding on Israeli tanks is DU-enforced” (DU:EP site).
Closer to home, there is another shocking development, which is
causing the War Party to shake in its collective boots. A month ago,
Marylanders supported Bush’s proposal to take military action in Iraq
by a 44 percent to 37 percent margin. A poll, dated October 30, reveals
that, despite all the warmongering from the likes of: Rep. Tom Lantos
(D-CA), Rep. Tom DeLay (R-TX), Sen. Trent Lott (R-MI), and the
insufferably pompous Sen. Joseph Lieberman (D-CT), “only 37 percent now
support military action, while 44 percent are opposed” (Baltimore Sun,
10/30/02.)
What kind of support would the Bush-Cheney Gang have, if the American
people also knew what chemically toxic dangers its sons and daughters
in the military would be facing in Gulf War No. 2? And, even more
importantly, if they knew, too, that the chicken hawk politicians, who
would be recklessly ordering them into that arena of death, would be
doing so, knowing beforehand, of those documented dangers?
William Hughes is a Baltimore attorney and the author of
"Andrew Jackson
vs. New World Order" (Authors Choice Press), which is available online.
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by courtesy & © 2002 William Hughes