AP/ August 8, 2012, 9:38 AM

First Agent Orange cleanup to start in Vietnam

Ho Thi Lang, left, combs Ngo Diep Uyen's hair after her nap at a rehabilitation center in Danang, Vietnam, Aug. 7, 2012. The children were born with physical and mental disabilities that the center's director said were caused by their parents' exposure to the chemical dioxin in the defoliant Agent Orange.

Ho Thi Lang, left, combs Ngo Diep Uyen's hair after her nap at a rehabilitation center in Danang, Vietnam, Aug. 7, 2012. The children were born with physical and mental disabilities that the center's director said were caused by their parents' exposure to the chemical dioxin in the defoliant Agent Orange. / AP Photo

(AP) DANANG, Vietnam - Vo Duoc fights back tears while sharing the news that broke his heart: A few days ago he received test results confirming he and 11 family members have elevated levels of dioxin lingering in their blood.

The family lives in a two-story house near a former U.S. military base in Danang where the defoliant Agent Orange was stored during the Vietnam War, which ended nearly four decades ago. Duoc, 58, sells steel for a living and has diabetes, while his wife battles breast cancer and their daughter has remained childless after suffering repeated miscarriages. For years, Duoc thought the ailments were unrelated, but after seeing the blood tests he now suspects his family unwittingly ingested dioxin from Agent Orange-contaminated fish, vegetables and well water.

Dioxin, a persistent chemical linked to cancer, birth defects and other disabilities, has seeped into Vietnam's soils and watersheds, creating a lasting war legacy that remains a thorny issue between the former foes. Washington has been slow to respond, but on Thursday the U.S. for the first time will begin cleaning up dioxin from Agent Orange that was stored at the former military base, now part of Danang's airport.

"It's better late than never that the U.S. government is cleaning up the environment for our children," Duoc said in Danang, surrounded by family members sitting on plastic stools. "They have to do as much as possible and as quickly as possible."

The $43 million project begins as Vietnam and the U.S. forge closer ties to boost trade and counter China's rising influence in the disputed South China Sea.

Although the countries' economic and military ties are blossoming, progress on addressing the dioxin legacy has been slow. Washington still disputes a claim by Hanoi that between 3 million to 4 million Vietnamese were affected by toxic chemicals sprayed by U.S. planes during the war to eliminate jungle cover for guerrilla fighters, arguing that the actual number is far lower and other environmental factors are to blame for the health issues.

That position irks Vietnamese, who say the United States maintains a double standard in acknowledging the consequences of Agent Orange.

The U.S. has given billions of dollars in disability payments to American servicemen who developed illnesses associated with dioxin after exposure to the defoliant during the Vietnam War.

In 2004, a group of Vietnamese citizens filed suit in a U.S. court against companies that produced the chemical, but the case was dismissed and the Supreme Court declined to take it up.

Until a few years ago, Washington took a defensive position whenever Agent Orange was raised because no one had determined how much dioxin remained in Vietnam's soil and watersheds, and the U.S. worried about potential liabilities, said Susan Hammond, director of the War Legacies Project, a U.S. nonprofit organization that mainly focuses on the Agent Orange legacy from the Vietnam War.

"There was a lot of the blame game going on, and it led nowhere," Hammond said by telephone from Vermont. "But now at least progress is being made."

Over the past five years, Congress has appropriated about $49 million for environmental remediation and about $11 million to help people living with disabilities in Vietnam regardless of cause. Experts have identified three former U.S. air bases — in Danang in central Vietnam and the southern locations of Bien Hoa and Phu Cat — as hotspots where Agent Orange was mixed, stored and loaded onto planes.

The U.S. military dumped some 20 million gallons of Agent Orange and other herbicides on about a quarter of former South Vietnam between 1962 and 1971.

The defoliant decimated about 5 million acres of forest — roughly the size of Massachusetts — and another 500,000 acres of crops.

The war ended on April 30, 1975, when northern Communist forces seized control of Saigon, the U.S.-backed former capital of South Vietnam. The country was then reunified under a one-party Communist government. Following years of poverty and isolation, Vietnam shook hands with the U.S. in 1995 and normalized diplomatic relations.

Since then, the relationship has flourished and the two countries have become important trading partners. Military ties have also strengthened, with Vietnam looking to the U.S. amid rising tensions with China in the disputed South China Sea, which is believed to be rich in oil and gas reserves and is crossed by vital shipping lanes.

Although Washington remains a vocal critic of Vietnam's human rights record, it also views the country as a key ally in its push to re-engage militarily in the Asia-Pacific region. The U.S. says maintaining peace and freedom of navigation in the sea is in its national interest.

The Agent Orange issue has continued to blight the U.S.-Vietnam relationship because dioxin can linger in soils and at the bottom of lakes and rivers for generations, entering the food supply through the fat of fish and other animals.

1/2

© 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
12 Comments Add a Comment
linkicon reporticon emailicon
sweetcakesmaria says:
Dad was a scrappy young athlete with no medical issues when he was drafted into the Army in 1969. He was sent to Vietnam in 1970 and after one year in Vietnam, he was released from the military in 1971. In 1974, Dad experienced chest pains, rapid heart beats and shortness of breath on a daily basis. He underwent open heart surgery in 1977 that saved his life. Over the years he developed a weird skin rash, high blood pressure and continued difficulty with his heart. It has since been discovered that other Vietnam veterans have experienced similar medical issues which has been traced to chemicals the Dow Industries developed for the U.S. military to clear brush and other defoilage in Vietnam. To this day, many Vietnam Veterans suffer from the damage done to their health by these chemicals that was sprayed on them in Vietnam. Our Government sent these people to Vietnam and sprayed agent orange in areas where these soldiers ingested it. Now our Government delay and deny claims to these Vietnam Veterans as if they played no role in the crippling illnesses these Vets are experiencing. To think that our Government is going to readily admit that the agent orange they sprayed all over the country side in Vietnam that are now affecting the health of the Vietnamese people is a fallacy.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Dukme says:
War is never good for any reason. The US government should be responsible to help clean up agent orange. Unfortunately $43 million won't be enough. How many billions did BP dish out to pay for the oil spill even though the oil spill isn't even close to the poisonous agent orange? Vietnam was probably used as a lab to test the weapons of mass destruction.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
karek40 says:
They won anyone heard about them helping vietnam vets with problems, hmmm thought not.
reply
woozybarnes replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Vietnam did not dump 20 million gallons of poisonous chemicals on the United States. Nor was a single American (civilian or military) ever killed or injured on US soil by invading Vietnamese troops. And ya, I was there, '70-'71.
linkicon reporticon emailicon
sweetcakesmaria says:
U.S. Govt doesn't even want to help Vietnam war vets that suffer from agent orange related illness so they surely aren't going to take responsibility for the damage they,ve done to the people of Vietnam.
reply
karek40 replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
They won let them clean up their own war mess, stop using my tax dollars for people in other countries.
linkicon reporticon emailicon
TuuTuuTango says:
The comment by steeler254 is so revolting. The lives of precious and innocent children are ruined because a group of chemist and a greedy chemical company failed to do enough research when they developed this compound... I served in Vietnam as a volunteer soldier, I wasn't drafted and I arrived in Vietnam when I was 19. After my discharge, I was old enough to vote in my first presidential election and voted for Nixon, and I last voted for a Vietnam hero, Senator McCain... I am so discouraged when tightwads in my own party (I suspect steeler254 is a TEA Party member, I am not) and they only look at their wallet and not our responsibility as the greatest nation on earth, to set the bar high and do a much better job at protecting our soldiers and innocent people like those who weren't even born when we were at war in Vietnam.

In the last 24 months, I have had cancer and surgery and MS... and hell yes I was sprayed by our own airplanes with this dioxin... three times and I have my 8mm movies to prove it. I'd like steeler254 to go and stand under an Air Force cargo plane when it is dropping Agent Orange from 300 feet... then wonder why (when he is older) has cancers and his children are deformed and retarded...
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
John_Merritt says:
Good grief what is the biological half life of those agents? That is absolute craziness.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
waynenipper says:
Hatfield Consultants, a Canadian environmental consulting firm, were the ones who identified the dioxin problem on former US bases in Viet Nam. They will be at the ground-breaking ceremonies tomorrow in Da Nang, initiating the cleanup. More credit should be given to this Canadian firm which has lead the research on Agent Orange in Viet Nam for over 18 years.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
lillyhorton says:
The US will never take responsibility for the bad things they have done to humanity. Never. US government is above the law. They do what they want.How does that song go about a guy who got caught getting it on on the bathroom floor? "WASN'T ME". Change the lyrics except for Clinton and you have our national anthum. Wasn't me!
reply
Mays2011 replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Haha! very true and sad, they talk about corruption in other countries but always find a way to cover their own, what a shame.
taxed01 replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Hey lilly - they kicked us out, we didn't kick them out. Have you heard anything about them paying our soldiers for damages? Have you????
See all 12 Comments