The
Silent Genocide from America: The US Crimes Against
Humanity
05 May 2010
By
Mohammed Daud Miraki
When Bush jr. said,
"we will smoke them out…" he lived up to his promise,
making life an unattainable reality for the unborn and
unsustainable reality for the living sentencing the
Afghan people and their future generations to a
predetermined death sentence.
"After the Americans
destroyed our village and killed many of us, we also
lost our houses and have nothing to eat. However, we
would have endured these miseries and even accepted
them, if the Americans had not sentenced us all to
death. When I saw my deformed grandson, I realized
that my hopes of the future have vanished for good,
different from the hopelessness of the Russian
barbarism, even though at that time I lost my older
son Shafiqullah. This time, however, I know we are
part of the invisible genocide brought on us by
America, a silence death from which I know we will not
escape." (Jooma Khan of Laghman province, March 2003)
These words were
uttered by an aggrieved Afghan grandfather, who saw
his own and that of others' familial extinction at the
hands of the United States of America and her allies.
Another Afghan, who also saw his demise, said:
"I realized this slow,
yet certain death, when I saw blood in my urine and
developed severe pain in my kidneys along with
breathing problems I never had before. Many of my
family members started to complain from confusion and
the pregnant women miscarried their babies while
others gave birth to disabled infants" (Akbar Khan
from Paktika province, February 2003)
The perpetuation of
the perpetual death in Afghanistan continues with the
passage of each day. Every day, people see the silent
death striking their families and friends, hopeless
and terrified at the sight of the next funeral in
their minds' eyes. This indiscriminate murder of the
Afghan people continues while those, whose tax money
paid for the monstrous weapons and brought about this
genocide pretend as though all is well. The horrific
pictures of those dying remain in the memories of
those still alive while fearfully waiting for their
turn of disaster. The pregnant women are afraid from
giving birth to babies--horrified to see a deformity
instead of a healthy child. This is the legacy of the
US "liberation", an indiscriminate murder of the weak
and the unarmed that do not have any means of
self-defense. In fact, there is no defensive measure
against such Weapons of Mass Destruction because these
deadly particles of uranium oxide--the dust formed
after uranium pulverizes upon impacting a
target--remain in soil, water and cover the surface of
vegetation for generations to come.
When a US bomb or that
of her allies landed on an Afghan village or town, the
land and its people have become part of the deadly
legacy of silent death. This death sentence is
different from any other type since it condemned the
people, their land, and future generations to an
inescapable genocide. The tragedy that makes this
state of affairs so dreadful is the unavoidably
invisible threat that targets everyone
indiscriminately. Moreover, the threat has become
endemic to the fiber of existence, contaminated the
land, water and its inhabitants. In fact, when Bush
jr. said, "we will smoke them out…" he lived up to his
promise, making life an unattainable reality for the
unborn and unsustainable reality for the living,
hence, sentencing Afghan people and their future
generations to a predetermined death sentence.
The true extent of
this disaster is unfolding as time goes by. In light
of the continuous revelations about the quantity and
types of weapons used in Afghanistan, the worse has
not yet fully materialized. Everyday, US AC 130
gunships, A-10s and B 52s bomb Afghan villages and
towns whenever a unit of US troops encounter
resistance. Consequently, not only, the perpetual
death continues but rather, every round of depleted
uranium is one additional nail in the collective
coffin of the Afghan people.
The usage of great
number of munitions and armaments dropped by US jets
resulted in upsurge of various health problems weeks
into 2002. This pattern is different from that
experienced by the Iraqi after the first Gulf War
where it took years for many of the birth defects,
deformities and other health conditions to surface.
This points to the enormity of uranium weapons used in
Afghanistan, a fact, illustrated by many investigators
world wide, notably Dai Williams in England, and Dr.
Durakovic from the Uranium Medical Research Center in
Canada, and Dr. Marc Herald in the United States among
others. Furthermore, various international newspapers
and media outlets notably Le Monde Diplomatique,
Guardian, Frontier Post, BBC, CBC, Al Jazeera among
others have reported the types of weapon systems used
against Afghan targets--villages, towns--and mountain
cave complexes. According to the BBC (April 10, 2002),
more than 6600 J-dam bombs were dropped on
Afghanistan. On October 2002, Boston Globe also
reported:
"In contrast with
older weapons, the new generation finds its way with
advances such as target-elevation data and satellite
signals. The JDAM already has proven itself in
Afghanistan. By February [2002], commanders had
dropped 6,600 JDAMs, consultants estimate - so many
that stockpiles ran low and officials had to scramble
up more production from a Missouri factory."
By October 2002, the
first anniversary of US invasion of Afghanistan, more
than 10000 tons of bombs dropped on Afghan soil.
(Socialist Worker Online, October 11, 2002) Imagine
the magnitude of carnage and contamination caused by
such barbarism. While another report by Kate Randall
on December 2001, put the number of US bombed dropped
at 12000:
"Since the US launched
the war on Afghanistan October 7, more than 12,000 US
bombs have been dropped on the country. According to
the Pentagon, about 60 percent of these bombs have
been precision-guided by satellite or laser
technology. However, many of these bombs—dropped by
B-52s and other aircraft from tens of thousands of
feet in the air—have strayed off course, hitting
civilian targets." (WSWS, December 29, 2001)
In another report, a
year after September 11, 2001, Matt Kelley of the
Associated Press put the US munitions statistics as
follows:
"U.S. and coalition
airplanes have conducted more than 21,000 flights over
Afghanistan, dropping more than 20,000 munitions.
About 60 percent of the ordnance dropped on
Afghanistan has been precision guided, the highest
percentage in any conflict."
Similarly the Guardian
reported on April 10, 2002:
"More than 22,000
weapons - ranging from cruise missiles to heavy
fuel-air bombs - have been dropped on the country over
the past six months…. US pilots dropped more than
6,600 joint direct attack munitions (J-dams), the
satellite-guided bombs… One in four bombs and missiles
dropped by the US on Afghanistan may have missed its
target"
The new generations of
hard target weapons whose warheads are made of this
dense metal have contributed to the heavy
contamination of land, water and general population.
The following
munitions have been deployed in bombing the poorest
country of the world, Afghanistan:
Smart Bombs
Guided Missiles
Sub-munitions
GBU-15 Y
AGM-86D CALCM Y
BLU-97B cluster bomb Y
GBU-24 Y
AGM-130C Y
GBU-27 Y
AGM-142 Hav Nap Y
GBU-28 B/B Y
AGM-154C JSOW 154
P
GBU-31 JDAM Y
AGM-158 JASSM P
GBU-32 JDAM Y
BGM-109 Tactical Tomahawk P
GBU-37 B/B Y
Storm Shadow / SCALP P
SSB P
Y = reported use P = prototype testing expected
The patent information of
many of these munitions point to the usage of dense
metal--depleted uranium, non-depleted uranium, or
tungsten, the latter is unlikely to be used since it
costs more and is difficult to manufacture. Tungsten
is more expensive than depleted uranium, which is in
abundance. The world uranium industry has over one
million tons of depleted uranium to dispose of.
Tungsten is also difficult to manufacture because it
is
1.75 times harder
than uranium; hence, Tungsten has a much higher
melting point, (U = 1132 Celsius, W = 3422 Celsius).
Moreover, depleted uranium is also effective as
incendiary device since it burns fiercely in air. As
incendiary weapon, it could ignite munitions inside
tanks and burn underground weapon and fuel storage
facilities and would serve effective in destroying
chemical and biological agents in underground
facilities. The suitability of uranium whether
depleted or non-depleted is further reinforced by the
claims of the Uranium Medical Research Center (UMRC):
"By the DOD’s own
admission, the best performing metal that consistently
fits these functional military profiles is uranium and
alloys of uranium. Titanium and tungsten are not
suitable as the prime alloy base for these purposes.
Uranium (whether NDU or DU) offers unique structural
features and the chemistry best suited for the defeat
of deep, bunkerized targets, multiple types of targets
in area denial munitions, and penetrating composite
ceramic and metal armoured [sic] targets."
"Uranium can be
engineered to be “self-sharpening” so that when it
hits a target, it retains its punching point as
material erodes off the warhead (titanium and tungsten
will not do this). Uranium’s molecular structure can
re-formed, using metallurgical and “nano-technologies”
to deliver a selected range of ballistic features,
including kinetic, thermal, pyrophoric, liquid metal
and high-pressure/high-heat, plasma effects. Uranium
is a readily available metal, cheap to produce and is
in abundance in DOE’s, DOD’s and their weapon’s
contractors’ stockpiles."
Based on these favorable
military characteristics including low cost, it is
logical to use uranium than tungsten. With this mind,
the following patent information would further shed
light on the composition of these DU based munitions:
These extracts are from the works of renowned
independent DU researcher Dai Williams http://www.eoslifework.co.uk
"Patent 6389977
(Shrouded Aerial Bomb)
clearly identifies Depleted Uraniumas an intended
design option for the hard target guided bombs most
widely used in Afghanistan - upgraded versions of the
2,000 lb. BLU-109/B hard target warhead with the
AUP-116 advanced penetrator. These include versions of
the GBU-15, 24 and 31 and the AGM-130C."
In light of the
advantages of uranium over tungsten, exploring the
following US patent table should further put to rest
any doubts about the deadly composition of those
weapons that turned Afghanistan into uninhabitable
wasteland.
The extracts in the
following table are presented by Dai Williams and
could be found on the following web-site http://www.eoslifework.co.uk/u23.htm#USpatreport
Table A: US
Patents with direct references to Uranium or Depleted
Uranium DU
US Patent Number
Date
Title and extracts from patent
specifications
4,638,737
June 28, 1985
A missile for
defeating active armor1 of a target as set forth
in
claim 3, wherein said
primary warhead is made of a heavy metal
selected from tungsten carbide and
uranium ore…
… these subcaliber
warheads are preferably kinetic energy warheads
that are referred to as flechettes and are
made of heavy material such as depleted
uranium or tungsten carbide
5,542,354
July 20, 1995
Segmenting warhead
projectile
The warhead of claim
2 wherein said first housing and said second
housing are independently each selected from the
group consisting of iron, steel, tungsten,
tantalum, depleted uranium and alloys
thereof... Other metals useful
for the frangible first housing include
tungsten, tantalum, depleted uranium and
alloys thereof.
5,691,502
June 5, 1995
Low velocity radial
deployment with predetermined pattern
The invention can be
employed in an interceptor missile for the
purpose of increasing the area of potential
impact with a target. Each lethality enhancing
object (28) is preferably fabricated from
a dense metal.
While any suitable dense metal can be
employed, metals having a density of at least 15
gm/cc are presently preferred, e.g., tantalum,
tungsten, rhenium, uranium,
etc.
The higher
densities permit a greater mass in a
given volume or the same mass in a smaller
volume, thereby enhancing the impact force of a
lethality enhancing object….
6,389,977
Dec 11, 1997
Shrouded
Aerial Bomb [BLU-109/B and variants]
This is definitive
patent for the outer casing of the upgraded
GUB-15, 24,27, 31 and AGM-
130C warheads. The
shroud contains the AUP-116 advanced penetrator.
This patent
specifically identifies BOTH Tungsten AND
Depleted Uranium penetrator versions
Claims:
1….
5. The shrouded
aerial bomb as claimed in claim 1, wherein the
penetrating body is formed of depleted uranium.
Since 1997, the US has
been modifying and upgrading its munitions enhancing
their penetrability by using dense metal as the
following quote further confirms:
"Since 1997 the United
States has been modifying and upgrading its missiles
and guided (smart) bombs. Prototypes of these bombs
were tested in the Kosovo mountains in 1999, but a far
greater range has been tested in Afghanistan. The
upgrade involves replacing a conventional warhead by a
heavy, dense metal one. Calculating the volume and the
weight of this mystery metal leads to two possible
conclusions: it is either tungsten or depleted
uranium." Le Monde diplomatique March 2002
"The DU explosive
charges in the guided bomb systems used in Afghanistan
can weigh as much as one and a half metric tons (as in
Raytheon's Bunker Buster - GBU-28)" Le Monde March
2002
The usage of new
generation weapons was also confirmed by the Uranium
Medical Research Center (UMRC):
"Independent research
and publicly available documentation of NATO and US
weapons’ development programs hinted at or noted
directly that non-fissionable (non-thermal nuclear)
uranium weapons (including DU) development programs
are still underway. Sources include: military research
laboratories and sub-contract research & development
programs; the US Science Based Stockpile Stewardship
Program; the Federation of American Scientists;
veterans’ reports; and, the annual reports and
advertising of independent weapons contractors. US
military health warnings to OEF [Operation Enduring
Freedom] personnel indicate the presence of
radiological contaminants; recommending troops take
protection measures. OEF’s forward targeting
personnel, Special Forces and post-bombing, site
inspection teams have been given radiation protection
instructions, radiation detectors and protective
equipment prior to and since entering Afghanistan."
It continues:
"The U.S. DBHT (Deeply
Buried Hard Target) Project, aimed at developing
weapons to destroy biological, nuclear and chemical
weapons storage and manufacturing facilities in rogue
states; and, 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. 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. These weapons, by design, require
heavy ballast and narrow diameter casings that can
drive deeply into the earth or through
super-reinforced military targets, tough enough to
withstand high velocity impacts before they reach
detonation depth."
UMRC articulates the
difference of these weapons with those of the first
Gulf War:
"These new generations
of weapons and the targets for which they are designed
dictate specific features and functions: They are
designed as “self-forging” and capable of punching
through multi-layered, extra-reinforced,
hardened-targets. They must be able to defeat 14 to 20
feet of heavily reinforced concrete. Unlike the Gulf
War DU armour [sic] defeat penetrators, these new
warheads would be used in conjunction with high
explosive charges and or high-pressure, shaped charges
and delayed-action detonators."
In addition to the
bombs and rockets, the US air force relies heavily on
AC-130 flying gunships which are equipped with the 25
mm GAU-12Gatling gun (1,800 rounds
per minute) with DU ammunition further adding to the
contamination of the environment and misery of the
poor people of Afghanistan. Furthermore, US ground
forces also rely heavily on A-10 'tank killer' that
uses 30 mm rounds of depleted uranium ammunitions.
These two weapon systems contribute on daily basis to
the misery of the people there.
This disaster will
haunt Afghan children, women and men for generations
to come. Dr. Michael H. Repacholi of the World Health
Organization reported:
"DU [deleted uranium]
is released from fired weapons in the form of small
particles that may be inhaled, ingested or remain in
the environment."
He added further:
"Children rather than
adults may be considered to be more at risk of DU
exposure when returning to normal activities within a
war zone through contaminated food and water, since
typical hand-to-mouth activity of inquisitive play
could lead to high DU ingestion from contaminated
soil." (The Laissez Faire City Times, Vol 5,
No 44, October 29, 2001}
At the defense
department briefing, Dr. Ross Anthony, from the Rand
Corporation had said the following about depleted
uranium:
"The kidney is the
part that is the most susceptible." (The Laissez
Faire City Times, Vol 5, No 44, October 29, 2001}
Steve Fetter and Frank
von Hippel wrote in the Bulletin of the Atomic
Scientists (1999)
"Radiation doses for
soldiers with embedded fragments of depleted uranium
may be troublesome…The ground the DU-contaminated
plumes passed over would be coated with a thin layer
of DU dust, some of which would be later kicked up by
wind and human activity. ...The munitions could
deposit a layer of [depleted uranium] dust on crops
that could be eaten directly by humans or by animals
later consumed by humans. …However, rough estimates
suggest that the cancer risk from consumption of
contaminated produce would be less than from
inhalation"
What this translates
into is more deformities, diseases and deaths for the
poor Afghans. As I also stated in my previous report
http://www.rense.com/general35/perp.htm, it took on
average 5 years for various deformities to emerge in
Iraq after the first Gulf War, however, in
Afghanistan, people started to complain from various
health problems within weeks of the initial bombing.
This means only one thing, the magnitude of uranium
based weapons used in Afghanistan is much higher than
that in Iraq during the first Gulf War. As I mention
in the previous paragraphs and at the risk of being
redundant, in the first few months of the bombing more
6,600 J-dams/smart bombs have been dropped on
Afghanistan, making the size of the uranium
contamination much higher than in Iraq during the
first Gulf War.
The emergence of
excessive health problems increased curiosity and
concerns among scientists worldwide of the usage of
depleted uranium. The first scientific undertaking was
led by the Uranium Medical Research Center (UMRC)
which consisted of two consecutive trips to JalalAbad
and Kabul. The preliminary findings by the UMRC
research teams concluded:
"Radiological measurements of the uranium
concentrations in Afghan civilians’ urine samples
indicate abnormally high levels of non-depleted
uranium. Radiological measurements of Afghan
civilians’ have high concentrations of uranium in a
range beginning at 4 X’s and reaching to over 20 X’s
normal populations. This is 400% to 2000% higher than
the study controls and normal population baselines of
the concentrations of nanograms of uranium per liter
of urine in a 24-hour sample."
"The
isotopic ratios of the uranium contaminant measured in
Afghan civilians show that it is not Depleted Uranium
(DU). The isotopes of uranium found in the Afghan
civilians’ urine is Non-Depleted Uranium."
"UMRC
investigated the possible origins of this
contamination. The preliminary results of the
radiological urine analysis are corroborated by
radiological measurements of debris and weapons’
fragment samples at OEF (Operation Enduring Freedom)
target sites and bomb-craters."
"UMRC’s
Field Team found several hundred civilians with acute
symptoms and reportedly developing, chronic symptoms
of uranium internal contamination (including
congenital problems in newborns). All subjects’ on-set
of symptoms are reported to coincide with the calendar
dates of the bombing and were not present prior to the
bombing."
"Radiological measurements of any populations’ urine
specimens identify, as a standard practice, the
abundance of each of the 3 naturally occurring
isotopes of uranium (U234, 235, 238). These isotopes’
abundances (quantities) are measured as a fraction of
the uranium released in a 24-hour sample of urine. The
isotopic ratios (proportions) of the uranium in the
urine collected in Afghanistan has the
unmistakable signature of Non-Depleted Uranium. It
does not express the isotopic ratio of DU. Depleted
Uranium and Non-depleted Uranium are both species of
uranium. UMRC is reporting the isotopic signatures of
the uranium found in the Afghan civilians’ urine." (UMRC
Preliminary Findings from Afghanistan & Operation
Enduring Freedom, http://www.umrc.net/AfghanistanOEF.asp)
The staff of UMRC
communicated the following about Non-Depleted Uranium:
"Actually, NDU, if it
is "virgin uranium", is pure uranium extracted from
the feed stock at the pre-enrichment phase of either
the fuel or weapons development cycles and is
significantly less expensive per ton than DU. The
gaseous diffusion and centrifuge processes of
enriching uranium require so much electrical power,
they need dedicated power production sources - some
powered reactors have been constructed simply to power
up the enrichment process. They also are expensive
technologies to operate and capitalize. DU, being the
by-product of enrichment is by definition, much more
expensive per ton since it had to be processed through
the enrichment phase."
After collecting
samples of urine, and soil from blast sites and their
surrounding areas in Kabul and JalaAbad and as well as
other areas, UMRC carried out detailed scientific
analysis of these samples and released their findings
on 21.05.2003, http://www.umrc.net/AfghanistanOEF.asp:
UMRC’s
recent findings, May 2003, reveal a wider scope of
human and environmental contamination in Afghan
civilians, corroborating the November 2002 Jalalabad
findings.
Jalalabad area: New reference levels based on recent
collections of samples and controls have revised the
Jalalabad results upward to uranium values 45 X’s
normal.
New
bioassay studies identify uranium internal
contamination in Spin Gar (Tora Bora) area and the
City of Kabul are up to 200 X’s the Reference
Level of the unexposed population.
Surface
water, rice fields and catch-basins adjacent to and
surrounding the bombsites have high values of
uranium, up to 27 X’s normal.
Low but
as yet inconclusive readings of U236 have
been identified by the laboratory in some urine
samples; further analysis is underway to determine
the metallurgical origins of the uranium with a
consideration of “commercial natural uranium”
containing recycled reactor spent fuel products.
Analyses of soils and
debris collected inside OEF bomb craters and target
sites have uranium values 3 X’s to 6 X’s normal.
Surface soils
surrounding the bombsites and downwind from
ground-zero are elevated close to 3 X’s reference
levels.
Field and laboratory
data show that samples with elevated uranium levels,
civilian health problems, and weapons exposure
histories correspond spatially and chronologically
to ordnance deployed by Operation Enduring Freedom.
Along the lines of the
UMRC findings, I instructed two groups of field
surveyors to comb eastern and southeastern Afghanistan
as well as Kabul for the effects of uranium on local
populations. They have discovered many people
suffering from various dreadful conditions.
The US and her allies
targeted wide areas all over Afghanistan; however, the
depth of the contamination is situated in the Pashtun
dominated areas, east, southeast, south and
southwestern Afghanistan. More than one thousand tons
of non-depleted uranium along with depleted uranium (DU,
mostly from A-10 and AC-130 Gatling guns) has been
used by the US and her allies against the defenseless
people of Afghanistan.
The bulk of the
contamination is in ToraBora, Bagram frontline--north
of Kabul, Shaikoot, Paktia, Paktika, Mazar-i-sharif,
and Kundoz frontline. (Field surveyors)
Data Collected
by field surveyors:
Subsequent to the
contamination, newborn children have physical
deformities and those that do not have physical
deformity are suffering from Mental Retardation. These
cases are reported in Paktia, Nanagrhar, Bagram,
Mazar-e-Sharif and Kundoz.
As I stated in my
previous report, the survey team also reported that in
bombardments of ToraBora, Shaikoot and Bagram
frontline large number of antiaircraft weapons and
rifles had melted.
During the
bombardments of ToraBora, Bagram front lines, Kundoz
and Mazar-e-Sharif, many Taliban soldiers were seen
with blood coming out from their mouths, noses and
ears. Meanwhile, those Taliban soldiers who returned
to their respective villages started to vomit blood
and had bloody stools. Subsequently, many have died
from their conditions.
During bombardment of
Kuram village, Surkhroad district of Nangarhar, the
village was completely destroyed and many peoples were
killed without any physical injuries.
After bombardments in
Khost public health workers have reported some skin
lesions. Those that developed the skin lesions died
after their conditions deteriorated. Moreover, in
Paktia area, children are born deformity in the
genital areas, namely having only one exit.
In Pachir Wa Agam
district near ToraBora targeted area, women started to
suffer from a deadly condition. Several months after
the bombing, women of the area would become angry by
petty things and that anger turns into rage, which
subsequently causes the women to collapse and die.
(Field Surveyors of the Afghan DU & Recovery Fund)
My team also reported
that many children are born with no limbs, no eyes, or
tumors protruding out from their mouths and their
eyes. The following testimonies, which are accompanied
by photos of Iraqi babies used here to illustrate and
exhibit the identical conditions of children in
Afghanistan as those in Iraq. It is worth mentioning
that in Afghanistan due to the absence of medical
facilities and lack of interests in investigating the
horrors of local population, compel people to bury the
dead as soon as possible. That is why, there are no
photos of the Afghan children to be found anywhere.
The father one of the
children in Paktia said this about his child:
"When I saw my little
boy with those monstrous red tumors, I thought to
myself, why is it difficult for Americans to
understand that they are hated in our country. If I do
this to the child of an American family, that family
has the right to pull my eyes out of my eye sockets. I
like to tell the Americans that they love to live
their lives of luxury at the expense of our
extermination" (Assadullah, February 2003)
The father of one of
the victims from Kundoz whose wife had given birth to
a deformed child that hardly resembled an infant said
this to our survey team in Kabul:
"My wife was pregnant
and we were happily waiting for the moment to see our
second child. On the day of the delivery, my wife felt
weird, saying that she did not feel good and had pain
in her abdomen. When the baby was born, it was hardly
a human. It looked as if some one had beaten a baby
and then covered its body with floors. My poor child
looked like someone has rolled it in a basket of
floors. When my wife saw the baby, she went into shock
and died after 5 hours." (Zar Ghoon, December, 2002)
The following picture
exhibits the condition Zar Ghoon baby was born with:
A man from ToraBora
lost controlled of his emotions while chatting with
one of the field volunteers, screamed and posed a
question and continued:
"What else do the
Americans want? They killed us, they turned our
newborns into horrific deformations, and they turned
our farmlands into graveyards and destroyed our homes.
On top of all that their planes fly over and spray us
with bullets. We have nothing to lose; we will fight
against them the same way we fought against the
previous monster [the former Soviet Union]" (Sa'yed
Gharib, April 2003)
Most of the people
that developed various health problems have died;
others suffer from conditions such as kidney
disease/failure, confusion, and loss of immunity and
painful joints.
I wish to conclude
this paper with the following quote from one of the
victims of the US bombing:
"Tell America, we are
not fools. Your words and actions are those of evil.
We do not have airplanes like you do, however, we have
one thing that you do not have principles and morals.
We will never do anything remotely similar to American
children what Americans have done to our children and
families. They might win some fights, but we have
already won the big fight, the moral ground." (Nurullah
Omar-Khail, March, 2003)