Saturday, December 15, 2012

Is This The Cause Of Gulf War Syndrome?

A U.S. servicemember dons his gas mask for a chemical environment training at Camp Atterbury, Ind., on April 6, 2011. Defense Department

Study: Wind Blew Deadly Gas To US Troops In Gulf War -- USA Today

WASHINGTON -- U.S. bombings of Iraqi munitions factories in January 1991 released a plume of sarin gas that traveled more than 300 miles to affect American troops in Saudi Arabia, although military officials claimed at the time that chemical alarms triggered by the gas were false, a study released today shows.

The Jan. 18, 1991, bombings of the munitions plants in Nasiriyah and Khamisiya blew a plume of sarin gas high above a layer of cold, still air -- also called the boundary level -- and into a swift wind stream that carried the gas to Saudi Arabia, said the study conducted by researchers Robert Haley and James Tuite and published in the journal Neuroepidemiology.

The gas plumes, the researchers said, can be blamed for symptoms of Gulf War illness, the mysterious ailment that has affected more than 250,000 veterans of the war.

Read more ....

My Comment: 20 years later .... we are now finally getting some answers.

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