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Title: Health Consequences of War and Militarism


1
Health Consequences of War and Militarism
  • Martin Donohoe, MD, FACP

2
Outline
  • The history and epidemiology of war
  • Nuclear weapons
  • Chemical weapons
  • Biological weapons

3
Outline
  • Economic and environmental consequences of
    militarism and war
  • Health consequences of militarism and war
  • Contemporary conflicts
  • Afghanistan, War on terror, Middle East
  • Solutions

4
History of War
  • Violent conflict ubiquitous in the animal
    kingdom
  • Interspecies conflict food, territory
  • Intraspecies conflict food, territory, mates
    (usually not directly fatal)
  • Violence among non-human primates
  • Gorilla infanticide
  • Chimpanzee killing bands

5
History of war
  • 10,000 yrs ago agriculture
  • Stable populations, division of labor, warrior
    class
  • 3500 yrs ago bronze weapons and armor
  • 2200 yrs ago iron
  • 1900 yrs ago - horses

6
History of war
  • Ninth Century China - bombs developed
  • Thirteenth Century China rockets
  • Forgotten until the 19th Century
  • 1783 Balloon
  • Montgolfier brothers
  • Prussian general JCG Heyne used for bombing

7
History of War
  • 1903 Wright brothers/Kitty Hawk airplane
  • 20th Century nuclear submarines, predator
    drones, weaponization of space

8
History of War
  • Belief that each new invention would eliminate
    warfare
  • Instead, increased casualties, killing at a
    distance

9
Epidemiology of Warfare
  • Deaths in war
  • 17th Century 19/million population
  • 18th Century 19/million population
  • 19th Century 11/million population
  • 20th Century 183/million population
  • Increasing casualties to civilians
  • 85-90 in 20th Century (vs. 10 late 19th Century)

10
Legacies of Colonial Exploitation
  • Christopher Columbus log entry upon meeting the
    Arawaks of the Bahamas
  • Theybrought usmanythingsThey willingly
    traded everything they ownedThey do not bear
    armsThey would make fine servantsWith fifty men
    we could subjugate them all and make them do
    whatever we want.

11
Legacies of Colonial Exploitation
  • Winston Churchill (speaking in favor of RAFs
    experimental bombing of Iraqis in 1920s, which
    killed 9,000 people with 97 tons of bombs)
  • I am strongly in favor of using poisoned gas
    against uncivilized tribes to spread a lively
    terroragainst recalcitrant Arabs as an
    experiment

12
Legacies of Colonial Exploitation
  • Cecil Rhodes (Rhodesia, Rhodes Scholarship,
    DeBeers Mining Company)
  • We must find new lands from which we can easily
    obtain raw materials and at the same time exploit
    the cheap slave labour that is available from the
    natives of the colonies. The colonies would also
    provide a dumping ground for the surplus goods
    produced in our factories.

13
Contemporary Wars
  • 250 wars in the 20th Century
  • Incidence of war rising since 1950
  • Most conflicts within poor states
  • 25 separate civil wars currently underway

14
Contemporary Wars
  • 72 million lives lost in 20th Century wars,
    another 52 million through genocides
  • US dropped the equivalent of one 500 lb. bomb on
    every person in Vietnam
  • Vietnam War 11.5 to 3 million Vietnamese
    casualties 58,000 American
  • More US soldiers died of suicide after Vietnam
    than died in combat during the war.

15
Contemporary Wars
  • Gulf War I US planted one land mine for every
    Iraqi citizen
  • 310,000 direct war-related deaths in 2000 (0.5
    of worldwide mortality) indirect deaths much
    larger

16
Consequences of War
  • Deaths, injuries, psychological sequelae
  • Collapse of health care system affecting those
    with acute and chronic illnesses
  • Famine
  • Environmental degradation
  • Increasing poverty and debt
  • All lead to recurrent cycles of violence

17
Consequences of War
  • Contributes, along with persecution, poverty, and
    environmental degradation, to the 240 million
    people on the move
  • International migrants 168 million
  • Refugees, including Palestinians 16 million
  • Internally displaced due to conflict or
    persecution (25 million) or natural disasters and
    other causes (30 million)
  • Asylum seekers 940,000

18
Atomic Weapons - History
  • Hiroshima, August 6, 1945
  • The day that humanity started taking its final
    exam Buckminster Fuller
  • 15 kiloton bomb, 140,000 deaths
  • Nagasaki, August 9, 1945
  • 22 kiloton bomb, 70,000 casualties

19
The Hiroshima Bomb
20
Atomic Explosion
21
Atomic Weapons Other Victims
  • Hundreds of thousands of hibakusha atomic bomb
    survivors
  • 80,000 cancers (15,000 fatal) in US citizens as a
    result of fallout from atmospheric testing
  • NCI/CDC

22
Atomic Weapons Other Victims
  • Thousands of illnesses and deaths, higher CA risk
    in 600,000 former employees
  • - DOE
  • Bush administration trying to limit payments
    mandated by Congress in 2001 (150,000 plus
    lifetime medical benefits)

23
Atomic Weapons Today
  • 20,000 nuclear weapons
  • Several thousand megatons (100,000 Hiroshimas)
  • GW Bush - Nuclear Posture Review
  • Possible targets Russia, China, Iran, Iraq,
    Libya, North Korea, and Syria
  • First strike

24
Atomic Weapons Today
  • US and Russia have 13,000 actively deployed
    warheads
  • 2500 (US) and 2000 (Russia) on high alert
  • Fired within 15 minutes, reach targets in 30
    minutes
  • Vastly redundant arsenal
  • 150-200 weapons adequate to destroy all major
    urban centers in Russia

25
Atomic Weapons Today
  • Accidental intermediate-sized launch of weapons
    from a single Russian submarine would immediately
    kill 6.8 million Americans in 8 cities

26
Nuclear Weapons Oops!
  • Pentagon 32 nuclear weapons accidents since 1950
  • GAO 233
  • Since 1950, 10 nuclear weapons lost and never
    recovered
  • All laying on seabed, potentially leaking
    radioactivity

27
Effects of a Nuclear Explosion
  • Immediate
  • Vaporized by thermal radiation
  • Crushed by blast wave
  • Burned and suffocated by firestorm

28
Effects of a Nuclear Explosion
  • Intermediate
  • Suffering, painful deaths
  • Health care personnel/resources overwhelmed
  • Famine
  • Refugees
  • Devastated transportation infrastructure

29
Effects of a Nuclear Explosion
  • Late effects
  • Cancer
  • Psychological trauma (PTSD, anxiety, depression)
  • nuclear winter (mass starvation due to disruption
    of agricultural, transportation, industrial and
    health care systems)

30
Effects of a 20 megaton nuclear explosion
  • Ground zero - 2 miles
  • Within 1/100 second fireball hotter than sun
    everything vaporized
  • 2 - 4 miles
  • 25 psi pressures 650 mph winds
  • Buildings ripped apart and leveled

31
Effects of a 20 megaton nuclear explosion
  • 4 - 10 miles
  • 7 10 psi 200 mph winds
  • Sheet metal melts concrete buildings heavily
    damaged (all others leveled)
  • 16 miles
  • 100 mph winds, firestorm, T 1400 C
  • 100 mortality

32
Effects of a 20 megaton nuclear explosion
  • 21 miles
  • 2 psi 100 mph winds
  • Shattered glass, flying debri
  • 29 miles
  • 3 burns over all exposed skin
  • 40 miles
  • Retinal burns blind all who witness explosion

33
Effects of a 20 megaton nuclear explosion over
Boston
  • Death toll
  • 1,000,000 within minutes
  • 1,800,000 survivors
  • 1,100,000 fatally injured
  • 500,000 with major injuries
  • 200,000 without injuries

34
Types of Injuries
  • Burns
  • Blindings
  • Deafenings
  • PTX
  • Fxs
  • Shrapnel wounds

35
Radiation Sickness
  • Very high dose cerebral edema, N/V/D, speech
    and gait difficulties, convulsions, coma, death
    within 1-2 days
  • Medium doses N/V/D ? resolves ? recurrent
    hematemesis, bloody D ? majority die
  • Low doses BM failure, infections, bleeding,
    sores, death

36
Effects on health professionals
  • 70 killed or fatally wounded
  • 15 injured
  • lt 1000 survive

37
Effects on health care system
  • Most major hospitals destroyed
  • EMS system debilitated
  • No X-ray machines, electricity, water,
    antibiotics or other meds, blood/plasma, bandages
  • 2000 burn unit beds in US (100 per major city)
    essentially destroyed

38
Effects on Health Care System
  • 1500 patients/doctor
  • 10 min/pt
  • 4 hours sleep/noc
  • 2 weeks to see all injured

39
Ultimate Outcomes
  • Boston (pop. 2.8 million in 1998)
  • gt 2.5 million dead after one month
  • More than 6x as many Americans as died in WW II

40
Health hazards of the Nuclear Cycle
  • Ecosystem degradation e.g., Bikini Island
  • Uranium mining 5-fold increase in lung cancer
  • Depleted uranium
  • increased stillbirths, birth defects, childhood
    leukemias, other cancers in Southern Iraq
  • Possible increase in lung CA in U.S. soldiers
    (data sparse)

41
Nuclear Waste Disposal
  • On-site storage
  • 118 commercial reactors
  • 10 weapons plants
  • 37 research reactors

42
Nuclear Waste Disposal
  • Skull Valley, Goshute Indian Reservation, Utah
  • Private fuel storage consortium
  • Temporary storage of 44,000 tons of high-level
    nuclear waste
  • Bribes to tribes environmental injustice
  • Waste Isolation Pilot Plant, New Mexico
  • Defense Dept. waste

43
Nuclear Waste Disposal Yucca Mountain
  • On DOE land claimed by Western Shoshone Nation
    under the Ruby Valley Treaty of 1863
  • 100 miles from Las Vegas
  • Near aquifer and earthquake fault

44
Nuclear Waste Disposal Yucca Mountain
  • Est. 100,000 shipments of 70,000 120,000 tons
    of waste over 25 yrs
  • Coming within ½ mile of 50 million Americans
  • Est. 200-350 accidents
  • Nuclear roulette

45
Nuclear Power Plants
  • 103 plants in US
  • Aging, equipment failures (8 from 3/00-4/01 ?
    shutdowns)
  • 440 plants worldwide (generate 16 of planets
    electricity)
  • 60 plants in Russia
  • ? Condition, safety

46
Nuclear Power
  • Supply of uranium for fission to run out by 2050
  • Alternate sources
  • MOX (mixed oxide) fuel (reprocessed spent fuel
    plutonium and uranium)
  • Breeder reactors make more fuel (plutonium)
    than they consume
  • Fission currently impractical

47
Nuclear Power Plants
  • For every US plant that has its license renewed,
    12 additional cancer deaths (NRC)
  • Plus any deaths from accidents, non-routine
    releases, high level waste and spent fuel
  • Chernobyl
  • 50 deaths (among highly exposed emergency
    workers)
  • 4000 thyroid cancers (most have survived)
  • Expected 3940 deaths from radiation-induced
    cancers
  • Greatest problem anxiety

48
Nuclear Power Plants
  • Nuclear power industry receives 10 billion/yr in
    taxpayer subsidies
  • Precautionary principle

49
Nuclear Power Plants
50
Nuclear Terrorism
  • Attack on nuclear power plant or other nuclear
    installation
  • 47 of nuclear plants failed to repel mock
    terrorist attacks conducted by the NRC in the
    1990s
  • Dirty bomb
  • Potential tens to hundreds of thousands of
    deaths, billions of dollars of damage, chaos
  • Numerous radiation sources left over from Cold
    War in post-Soviet countries

51
Nuclear Terrorism
  • Collapse of Soviet Union 15,000 nuclear warheads
    and enough highly-enriched uranium and plutonium
    to make 60,000 more
  • More than 90 of Russias fissile materials are
    located in 171 buildings, only 11 of which have
    been fully secured
  • 175 cases of nuclear trafficking from 1993 2001
    (NRC)

52
Nuclear Terrorism
  • Reports of weapons missing from Soviet arsenal
  • Non-proliferation efforts, including the DOEs
    Nuclear Cities Initiative, get a fraction of 1
    of the defense budget, further cuts planned
  • The Nth Country experiment (1964) 3 science
    post-docs with no nuclear know-how designed a
    working atom bomb

53
Chemical Weapons
  • 428 BC Athenians and Spartans burned wax, pitch
    and sulfur
  • Davinci arsenic and sulfur shells
  • WW I
  • Italians vs. Ethiopians
  • Japanese vs. Chinese
  • Germans vs. Allies
  • Franz Haber chlorine gas
  • 91,000 deaths and 1.3 million injuries

54
Chemical Weapons
  • Egypt vs. South Yemen (1963-7)
  • Iran/Iraq War (1980s)
  • Gulf War (versus Kurds, ? Others)
  • 1995 Tokyo subway attack by Aum Shrinko cult
    using sarin
  • 12 dead, 5000 injured or incapacitated

55
Types of Chemical Weapons
  • Nerve gasses / paralytics
  • E.g., sarin, VX
  • S/S paralysis (incl. resp. muscles), headache,
    dizziness, N/V
  • Rx gas masks, pretreatment with
    pyridostigmine, decontamination, antidotes
    (atropine, pralidoxime, diazepam, tropicamide)

56
Types of Chemical Weapons
  • Blistering agents
  • E.g., sulphur mustard
  • S/S burns, blindness, pulmonary toxicity, BM
    suppression, N/V/D
  • Rx decontamination, analgesia, pulmonary and eye
    care

57
Types of Chemical Weapons
  • Pulmonary toxicants
  • E.g., chlorine, phosgene
  • S/S pneumonitis, laryngeal spasm, pulmonary
    edema, ARDS
  • Rx O2, bronchodilators, corticosteroids,
    ?ibuprofen, ?acetylcysteine

58
Chemical WeaponsVietnam and Napalm
59
Chemical WeaponsVietnam and Napalm
60
Chemical WeaponsVietnam and Napalm
61
Chemical Weapons
  • 1972 Biological and Toxic Weapons Convention
    prohibits development, production, and
    stockpiling
  • 1989 stockpiles
  • US 36,000 tons
  • Russia 270,000 tons (1/2 nerve gas)

62
Other Chemical WeaponsTear gas
  • Use in civil and political unrest
  • Causes eye, skin and pulmonary toxicity, N/V,
    photophobia and headache, trauma due to blast
  • Rx wash skin, flush eyes, IVF, humidified O2,
    bronchodilators prn, prophylactic antibiotics

63
Other Chemical WeaponsPepper Spray
  • Derived from cayenne peppers (contains 10-15
    oleoresin capsicum)
  • 1.5-2 million Scoville unit heat rating
  • Jalapeño pepper 2500-5000 Scoville units
  • Habañero pepper (worlds hottest) 300,000
    Scoville units
  • Use in civil and political unrest

64
Other Chemical Weapons
  • Calmatives mind-altering or sleep-inducing
    weapons (benzo-, SSRI-, and anesthetic
    derivatives)
  • Cramp-inducing agents
  • Stink bombs (?Race specific?)
  • Colored smoke as an obscurant
  • Crowd control vs use in warfare
  • US pilot amphetamine use

65
Biological Weapons - History
  • Sixth Century BC Assyrians poison wells with rye
    ergot
  • 300 BC Greeks pollute wells
  • Later Romans and Persians, Classical, Medieval
    and Renaissance periods, US Civil War (General
    Johnson at Vicksburg)
  • 14th Century Tatars catapulting plague-infested
    corpses

66
Biological Weapons - History
  • Kochs postulates anthrax first linkage of a
    specific disease with a specific pathogen
  • Louis Pasteur anthrax and cholera vaccines

67
Biological Weapons - History
  • Sir Jeffrey Amherst (French and Indian Wars -
    smallpox) You would do well to try to inoculate
    the Indians, by means of blankets, to extirpate
    this execrable race
  • WW I Cholera, plague, glanders, anthrax

68
Biological Weapons WW II
  • Unit 731, Manchuria, Shiro Ishii
  • British Operation Vegetarian (anthrax cakes /
    Germany)
  • US military personnel received typhoid, smallpox,
    yellow fever and tetanus vaccines
  • Those who refused subject to court martial
  • c.f., Gulf War pyridostigmine, botulism vaccine

69
Biological Weapons WW II
  • Unlicensed yellow fever vaccine contaminated with
    hepatitis B
  • 330,000 infections
  • 51,000 cases of symptomatic hep B
  • Long term outcomes good

70
Biological Weapons Post WWII
  • Swerdlosk
  • Zimbabwe
  • False alarms

71
Biological Weapons Today
  • 17 countries possess ( Al Qaeda?)
  • US role in supplying other nations
  • e.g., 1985-1989 US companies sold to Iraq
  • Bacillus anthracis, Clostridium botulinum,
    Histoplasma capsulatum, Brucella melitensis,
    Clostsridium perfringens, Clostridium tetani, and
    E. coli
  • Despite evidence of use of chemical weapons
    against Kurds

72
Biological Weapons Today
  • 1972 Biological Weapons Protocol signed by 158
    nations
  • Lacks adequate enforcement mechanisms
  • US has rejected enforcement (wary of foreign
    inspectors discovering military secrets and/or
    trade secrets of biotechnology and pharmaceutical
    companies)

73
Biological Weapons - Agents
  • Anthrax Brucellosis Cholera
  • Glanders Pneumonic plague
  • Tularemia Q Fever Smallpox
  • Venezuelan Equine Encephalitis
  • Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers (e.g., Ebola)
  • Botulism Staph enterotoxin B
  • Ricin Mycxotoxins

74
Biological Weapons Today
  • Genetic weapons targeted at specific ethnic
    groups
  • 1999 FBI at least once a day a politician,
    school, abortion clinic, or other controversial
    person or institution receives an envelope from a
    dissident containing a powder and a note
    announcing a lethal dose of anthrax

75
Biological Weapons Today
  • Use, along with chemical weapons, in The Drug
    War
  • Fusarium oxysporum fungus to eradicate coca pants
    in Columbia Fusarium oxysporum and Pleaspora
    papaveracea fungus to eradicate opium poppies in
    Central Asia
  • ? Marijuana
  • Food crops also destroyed
  • US, UN Drug Control Program, others

76
Biological Weapons Today
  • Quarantine Issues
  • Quarantine versus Isolation
  • National versus foreign outbreaks / border
    control
  • Adverse consequences increased risk of disease
    transmission in quarantined population, violence,
    mistrust of government, ethnic bias

77
Smallpox
  • DNA virus decimated native American populations
    eradicated by WHO vaccination campaign in 1972
    genome sequenced
  • ?Only remaining viral stocks at CDCP and in
    Siberia?
  • WHO Executive Board recommended retaining stores

78
Smallpox
  • Incubation period 7-17 days (avg. 12)
  • Spread by droplet infection highly contagious
  • Symptoms abrupt onset of F/HA/myalgias ?
    non-specific erythematous rash (most prominent on
    face and extremities, simultaneous varicella
    most prominent on trunk, successive waves) ? MSOF
    ? death

79
Smallpox
  • Dx clinical, EM of vesicular fluid
  • Rx isolation, post-exposure vaccination,
    supportive care, ?antivirals
  • 30 fatality rate

80
Smallpox
81
Smallpox Vaccination
  • Vaccinia
  • US ended in 1972
  • Waning (?negligible) immunity
  • Effects local reaction. Lymphadenopathy
  • Side effects postvaccinial encephalitis
    (1/300,000), progressive vaccinia eczema
    vaccinatum, generalized vaccinia
  • Vaccinia immune globulin may modulate

82
Smallpox Vaccination
  • Acambis and subcontractor Baxter Intl. - 428
    million contract to produce 155 million doses of
    smallpox vaccine by the end of 2002
  • Would bring total to 286 million (enough for
    every American)
  • Fed govt has ordered 209 million doses from a
    British company

83
Smallpox Vaccination
  • Current recommendation isolation and vaccination
    / VIG for close contacts
  • Vaccination of all US citizens not feasible
  • Inadequate supplies
  • Several hundred deaths
  • ? Diversion of resources from usual childhood
    vaccines
  • ? vaccinate health professionals, public servants
  • Infectivity, disability, workmans comp issues

84
Anthrax
  • Bacillus anthracis, aerobic, G, spore-forming
    rod
  • Zoonosis
  • Invisible and odorless when aerosolized

85
Anthrax
  • 1979 accidental release at Swerdlosk (USSR) 250
    cases, 100 deaths, town abandoned due to
    contamination
  • Aum Shrinko cult attempted aerosol dispersal
    unsuccessful

86
Anthrax
  • Est. 50kg release over urban center of 5 million
    people would sicken 250K and kill 100K
  • 100 kg release would have the same of
    casualties as a hydrogen bomb explosion

87
Cutaneous Anthrax
  • 2000 cases/yr worldwide
  • Due to exposure to infected animals / animal
    products
  • Epidemic in Zimbabwe, 1989-1995 10,000 cases

88
Cutaneous Anthrax
  • Incubation period 1-10 days (avg. 5)
  • Pruritic macule or papule day 1
  • Round ulcer day 2
  • Black eschar follows resolves over 1-2 weeks
  • Painful lymphadenopathy

89
Cutaneous Anthrax
  • Antibiotic Rx (doxy, cipro, pcn) decreases
    likelihood of systemic disease
  • Fatality rate 20 without antibiotics rare with
    antibiotics
  • Following 9/11 11 cases

90
Cutaneous Anthrax - Ulcer
91
Cutaneous Anthrax - Eschar
92
Gastrointestinal Anthrax
  • From ingestion of poorly cooked, infected meat
  • Oropharyngeal ulcers LAN edema sepsis
  • Terminal ileal / cecal lesion - N/V/bloody
    D/acute abdomen/ascites/sepsis
  • Rx Abx (doxy, cipro, pcn), supportive care

93
Inhalational Anthrax
  • Stage I
  • begins 2-43 days post-exposure
  • F/dyspnea/cough/HA/V/Ch/weakness/AP/CP
  • Lasts a few hours to a few days

94
Inhalational Anthrax
  • Stage II
  • F/dyspnea/diaphoresis/shock
  • CXR with widened mediastinum due to
    lymphadenopathy
  • pleural effusions
  • 50 develop hemorrhagic meningitis meningismus,
    delirium and obtundation
  • Rapid progression to cyanosis, hypotension and
    death

95
Inhalational AnthraxWidened Mediastinum
96
Inhalational Anthrax
97
Inhalational Anthrax
  • Dx blood cultures, XR/CT, post-mortem serology
    not helpful
  • Case fatality rate approx. 50
  • Rx
  • post-exposure antibiotics (doxycycline,
    ciprofloxacin, penicillin)
  • Supportive care

98
Anthrax Vaccine
  • 6 dose series
  • US armed service members approx 450K vaccinated
    to date
  • Side effects HA 0.4, local rxn 3.6, mild
    systemic SEs in 1
  • Manufacturer Bioport
  • Contract to produce 4.6 million doses for the DOD

99
Anthrax Vaccine
  • Pre/post exposure vaccination
  • Improved vaccine under development
  • ?Groups to vaccinate?

100
Anthrax The Band
101
Non-lethal weapons
  • High-power microwaves (crammed into cruise
    missiles, discharge a huge energy pulse to damage
    electronics)
  • Soft bombs
  • E.g., carbon fiber showers to short circuit
    electrical power grids (used in former Yugoslavia
    and in Gulf War I)

102
Non-lethal Weapons Proposed and Under
Development
  • Acoustic
  • Acoustic bullets
  • Curdler unit shrieks, clangs
  • Infrasound penetrates most buildings and
    vehicles, causes nausea, diarrhea,
    disorientation, internal organ damage and even
    death
  • Squawk box intolerable ultrasound pulses

103
Non-lethal Weapons Proposed and Under
Development
  • Acoustic and optical weapons
  • Photic driver ultrasound plus stroboscopic
    infrared flasher to penetrate closed eyelids and
    cause seizures
  • Psycho-correction devices send subliminal
    visual and aural messages

104
Non-lethal Weapons Proposed and Under
Development
  • Barrier Weapons
  • Slick coatings slippery like ice
  • Sticky foam (used by US in Somalia)
  • Obscurants
  • Colored smoke felt to cause more psychological
    panic than white smoke
  • Markers
  • Fluorescent powder visible under UV light
  • Sponge grenades impregnated with infrared dye
  • To mark targets

105
Non-lethal Weapons Proposed and Under
Development
  • Riot Control
  • Invisible tear gas
  • Electrical
  • Police or soldiers jacket which jolts anyone who
    touches it
  • Cattle prods (malicious and accidental use by
    civilians)

106
Non-lethal Weapons Proposed and Under
Development
  • Biotechnical
  • Biodegrading microbes (to destroy fuel)
  • Genetic code alterations (to create
    less-than-lethal but long-term disablements,
    perhaps for generations, thereby creating a
    societal burden)
  • Neuro-implants for behavior modification
  • Project Agile (1996) race-specific stink bombs
  • Pheromones (to impair human and animal
    reproduction mark individuals for assaults by
    killer bees, other animals or pests)

107
Non-lethal Weapons Proposed and Under
Development
  • Holograms
  • God/gods/other religious figures or symbols
  • Soldier forces
  • Death, dead comrades
  • Others

108
Health Care System Preparedness for Weapons of
Mass Destruction
  • ¾ of US ERs not fully prepared for treating mass
    casualties
  • Only 12 of US hospitals have bioterrorism
    response measures developed and in place

109
Health Care System Preparedness for Weapons of
Mass Destruction
  • US public health / emergency care system already
    in disarray
  • 80 of states facing budget cuts or holdbacks
  • Medicaid over budget in 23 states

110
Costs of Militarization
  • US ½ of discretionary tax dollars spent on the
    military
  • US military budget represents 34 of total world
    military budget (1.035 trillion in 2004)
  • Expected 400 billion defense budget for 2003
    (excluding costs of war in Iraq)
  • 4.6 increase in spending on nuclear weapons
  • 11.5 decrease in spending to prevent the spread
    of chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons
    (773 million)

111
Missile Defense ShieldThe Militarization of Space
  • Star Wars program proceeding, despite
  • Astronomical cost est. 100 billion
  • Strong opposition by scientific community
  • Spectacular failures in 2/4 tests, despite highly
    structured conditions
  • Abandonment of ABM Treaty by Bush administration

112
Missile Defense ShieldThe Militarization of Space
  • Shield or very porous umbrella
  • Easily overwhelmed and fooled by inexpensive
    decoys
  • No protection against internal accidents or
    terrorists bringing weapon onto US soil or dirty
    bomb
  • Proposed use of moon for spy observatories and
    weapons

113
Dwight Eisenhower
  • The problem in defense spending is to figure out
    how far you should go without destroying from
    within that which you are trying to protect from
    without

114
Meanwhile...Social Injustices Abound
  • 46 million Americans lack health insurance
  • 20-25 of US children live in poverty
  • Homelessness, public educational system a
    shambles, increasing jail populations, etc.
  • 2.5 billion people worldwide live in abject
    poverty (earn less than 500 per year, lack
    access to clean drinking water)

115
Meanwhile...Social Injustices Abound
  • Worldwide
  • poverty increasing
  • maldistribution of wealth
  • corporatization
  • global debt crisis
  • environmental destruction and global warming
  • AIDS epidemic in sub-Saharan Africa

116
Environmental Consequences of Militarization
  • Worlds single largest polluter
  • 8 of global air pollution
  • 2-11 of raw material use
  • Almost all high and low level radioactive waste

117
The US Military
  • Owns an amount of land equal to North Korea or
    Kentucky (25 million acres)
  • Much of it polluted
  • Cleanup cost estimates in the hundreds of
    billions
  • 2000 abandoned firing ranges
  • E.g., Kahoolawe
  • 60 people killed by unexploded ordnance since WWII

118
Societal Costs of Militarization
  • An 8.5 cut in the Pentagons 2003 budget could
  • rebuild Americas public schools over the next 10
    years - 12 billion
  • Feed and provide basic health care to all the
    worlds poor - 12 billion
  • Buy health insurance for every uninsured American
    child - 6 billion
  • Military experts agree that a cut double this
    size would not affect our war-making powers

119
Health Costs of Militarization
  • 3 hours of world arms spending annual WHO
    budget
  • ½ day of world arms spending immunization for
    all the worlds children
  • 3 days of US arms spending amount spent on
    health, education and welfare programs for US
    children in one year

120
Health Costs of Militarization
  • 3 weeks of world arms spending primary health
    care for all in poor countries, including safe
    drinking water and full immunizations
  • Brain drain 2/3 of US scientists work in
    military-industrial complex

121
Skewed Priorities
  • The world spends 780 billion/year on military
    goods and services
  • For 30 of this, we could
  • Eliminate starvation and malnutrition
  • Provide shelter for all
  • Eliminate illiteracy
  • Provide clean and safe water
  • Prevent soil erosion

122
Skewed Priorities
  • Prevent global warming
  • Stop deforestation
  • Aid all refugees
  • Retire developing nations debt
  • Provide clean, safe energy (through efficiency
    and renewables)

123
Skewed Priorities
  • Prevent acid rain
  • Fix the ozone hole
  • Stabilize world population
  • Provide basic universal health care and AIDS
    control
  • Eliminate nuclear weapons and land mines

124
Dwight Eisenhower
  • Every gun that is made, every rocket fired,
    signifies in the final sense a theft from those
    who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold
    and not clothed

125
Dwight Eisenhower
  • This world is not spending money alone. It is
    spending the sweat of its laborers, the genius of
    its scientists, the hopes of its children. This
    is not a way of life at all, in any true sense.
    Under the cloud of threatening war, it is
    humanity hanging from a cross of iron.

126
Martin Luther King
  • A nation that continues year after year to
    spend more money on military defense than on
    programs of social uplift is approaching
    spiritual death.

127
US Foreign Aid
  • US ranks 21st in the world in foreign aid as a
    percentage of GDP (0.7, versus UN recommended
    0.15)
  • Foreign Aid
  • 1/3 military
  • 1/3 economic
  • 1/3 food and development
  • US worlds second largest arms exporter

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Top Pentagon Prime Contractors Fiscal Year 2001
  • General Dynamics
  • United Technologies
  • TRW
  • SAIC
  • General Electric
  • Owns NBC Westinghouse used to own CBS
  • Effect on news reporting?

133
Top Pentagon Prime Contractors Fiscal Year 2001
  • Lockeed
  • Boeing
  • Newport News Shipbuilding
  • Raytheon
  • Northrup Gruman

134
September 11, 2001
135
World Trade Center Bombing
  • 3300 fatalities - foreign nationals outnumbered
    Americans
  • Environmental health consequences unknown
  • 300-400 tons asbestos
  • 130,000 gallons of transformer oil contaminated
    with PCBS
  • Lead, sulfuric acid, silicon
  • Fine dust particles

136
September 11, 2001
  • Pentagon 286 casualties
  • Pennsylvania approximately 100 casualties

137
The War on Terror(The War on Afghanistan, Iraq,
and ?)
  • May last 50 or more years Cheney
  • Afghanistan
  • Ruled by repressive
  • human-(womens-)rights abusingTaliban
  • Potential transit route for oil and gas pipeline
    from Central Asia
  • Strategic importance in Middle East

138
Afghanistan
  • Population 27 million
  • Life expectancy 46 years
  • Literacy rate 32
  • Avg. annual income 280

139
Afghanistan
  • Negligible infrastructure secondary to decades of
    civil war
  • 1 of every 230 persons is a land mine amputee
  • Infant mortality 146/1000
  • 50 of children malnourished 33 are orphans

140
The War in Afghanistan
  • Estimated 6000 civilians killed
  • Up to 5 million refugees in border states, many
    more internal refugees
  • 9000 US troops remain
  • Bin Laden not caught
  • US abandoning commitment to rebuilding
  • Bush war yes, nation building no

141
Afghanistan/Iraq Parallels
  • 10 years of sanctions, bombings resulting in
    500,000 to 1,000,000 deaths (per UN)
  • UN Devt. Index 126/174
  • Infant mortality rates jumped from 65/1000
    (pre-Gulf War I) to 103/1000 (2003)
  • Life expectancy decreased from 62 to 56

142
Afghanistan/Iraq Parallels
  • Literacy decreased from 89 to 57
  • Infrastructure devastated, Environment degraded
  • Rebuilding post-war?
  • Bushs 2003 budget does not even request the
    money the US promised Afghanistan for rebuilding

143
What goes around comes around
  • 1980s CIA arms Afghan rebels with hundreds of
    Stinger missiles
  • Late 2002 Terrorists using a similar
    Russian-made version of Stinger almost bring down
    Israeli passenger airline over Kenya
  • CIA trying to buy back, but most unaccounted for
  • Can shoot down a plane at up 6000-8000 feet
  • 24 diverted to Iran

144
Before Gulf War I
  • US sells weapons to Iraq/Hussein
  • Including components to produce WMDs
  • Rumsfeld visits Baghdad to promote US weapons
    sales
  • US minimally perturbed when Hussein gasses 4000
    Kurds, torpedoes US naval vessel

145
Gulf War I
  • 105,000 military and 110,000 civilian deaths
    (almost all Iraqis)
  • 2/3 of US casualties from friendly fire
  • Cost 61 billion (82 billion in 2003 dollars)
  • US pays only 10 of costs (most from Saudi
    Arabia, Kuwait, Germany and Japan)
  • Environmental devastation
  • 48 billion in claims to UN

146
Kuwaiti Oil Fires
147
Gulf War II
  • 48,000 260,000 deaths predicted during conflict
  • 20,000 deaths from potential resultant civil war
  • Up to 200,000 post-war deaths
  • Est. 900,000 refugees
  • Massive humanitarian crisis

148
Gulf War II
  • Financial cost of war 100 billion - 200
    billion
  • 810 million to 16.2 billion to Oregon
  • US likely to bear majority of costs
  • Cost of rebuilding 50 billion
  • Global travel industry expected to lose 460
    billion
  • Distraction from North Korea, other threats
  • Shock and awe battle plan targeting
    infrastructure explicitly prohibited by the
    Geneva Conventions

149
George W Bushs Military Record
  • February, 1968 States desire to be pilot scores
    in 25th percentile in pilot aptitude section of
    Air Force officers test.
  • May, 1968 Enlists in Texas Air National Guard
    jumps list with assistance of Texas House
    Speaker pledges two years of active duty and
    four years of reserve duty

150
George W Bushs Military Record
  • June, 1968 Student deferment expires
  • September, 1968 Pulls inactive duty to serve on
    Florida Senators re-election campaign
  • November, 1968 Re-activated

151
George W Bushs Military Record
  • November, 1970 Promoted to First Lieutenant,
    rejected by UT Law School
  • Spring, 1970 Hired by Texas agricultural
    importer to shuttle plants to/from Florida
  • June, 1970 Joins Guards Champagne Unit,
    flying with sons of Texas elite

152
George W Bushs Military Record
  • May, 1972 Transfers to Alabama Guard unit so he
    can work on Senator Blounts re-election campaign
  • His commanding officer states he never showed up
    for duty
  • Grounded for missing a mandatory physical

153
George W Bushs Military Record
  • Returns to Houston but never reports for Guard
    duty
  • December, 1972 DUI arrest
  • October, 1973 Air National Guard relieves him
    from commitment 8 months early, allowing him to
    attend Harvard Business School

154
New US Nuclear Weapons PoliciesUnder GW Bush
  • Nuclear Posture Review expands scope of use of
    nuclear weapons, including first-strike against
    non-nuclear states
  • Withdrawal from ABM Treaty
  • Boycotted Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty
    Conference
  • Budgeted money to resume nuclear testing and
    development
  • Possible use of nuclear-powered predator drones

155
Phillip Berrigan
  • Nuclear weapons are the scourge of the earth to
    mine for them, manufacture them, deploy them, use
    them, is a curse against God, the human family,
    and the earth itself.

156
Disturbing TrendsThe Patriot Bill
  • Passed with minimal debate, most Congresspersons
    acknowledge not reading
  • Increased governmental and corporate secrecy
    polluters subject to decreased public scrutiny
  • Erosion of civil liberties deportations,
    accused held without charge/access to legal
    counsel
  • 70,000 individuals on governments list of
    suspected terrorists

157
Disturbing TrendsThe Homeland Security Agency
  • The HSA absorbs two dozen agencies, 170,000
    employees, 38 billion budget
  • TIPS program (citizen spying program)
  • Total Information Awareness System (Poindexter)
  • Paranoia alert levels, duct tape and plastic
    sheeting

158
Special Interest Provisions in the Homeland
Security Law
  • Vaccine liability protection (incl. existing
    thimersol lawsuits) Eli Lilly
  • US corporations setting up offshore business
    fronts to avoid paying taxes allowed to contract
    with HSD
  • US government prohibited from publicly releasing
    information related to vulnerabilities incl.
    safety of nuclear reactors, environmental toxins,
    etc

159
Special Interest Provisions in the Homeland
Security Law
  • Immunity from liability for manufacturers of
    anti-terrorism products and technologies
  • Army investigations show 60-90 of soldiers CBW
    protective gear malfunctions
  • Liability protection for airport screening
    companies
  • Secret advisory meetings with industry permitted,
    even if meeting not related to national security
  • C.f. Cheneys Energy Commission

160
Disturbing TrendsCensorship and Propaganda
  • US blacks out names of corporations which sold
    weapons to Iraq on UN inspectors reports
  • Covering of Picassos Guernica for news
    conferences outside UN Security Council
  • Armed Services Edition books for soldiers
  • WW II the Classics to popular fiction
  • Gulf War II Henry V, Art of War, War Letters,
    Profiles of American Military Heroes

161
Disturbing TrendsCensorship and Propaganda
  • No Child Left Behind Education Act contains
    amendment requiring that all public schools allow
    recruiters in their buildings and provide
    military with contact numbers and addresses for
    all students
  • 21st Century McCarthyism

162
Disturbing Trends
  • Hate crimes, intolerance
  • Media jingoism
  • New shows planned Profiles From the Front
    Line, Military Diaries, AFP American Fighter
    Pilot
  • Army to ignore FDA safety standards in
    experiments on soldiers (legacy of 20th Century
    crimes)

163
Disturbing Trends
  • 2000 budget surplus 5.6 trillion
  • 2003 Budget deficit 2.1 trillion
  • Cities and states facing 68 billion budget
    shortfall
  • Bush States are on their own.
  • Patriot II

164
George W. BushAugust 5, 2004
  • Our enemies are innovative and resourceful, and
    so are we. They never stop thinking about new
    ways to harm our country and our people, and
    neither do we."

165
James Madison
  • The fetters imposed on liberty at home have
    ever been forged out of the weapons provided for
    defense against real, pretended, or imaginary
    dangers from abroad.

166
Samuel Johnson
  • Patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel

167
Responses to TerrorJust War Theory
  • The cause must be just
  • A lawful authority must decide to resort to force
  • The intention of the war must be in accord with
    international law
  • The use of force must be a last resort

168
Responses to TerrorJust War Theory
  • The probability of success should be high
  • The cost-benefit ratio must be high
  • The means used must conform with international
    humanitarian law

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How to Win Without War in Iraq
  • Border monitoring in Jordan, Syria and Turkey
  • Advanced X-ray scanning technology and an
    electronic pass system at borders
  • Sanctions assistance missions to enforce military
    sanctions
  • Political assurances and economic incentives to
    neighboring states

171
How to Win Without War in Iraq
  • Improve cargo monitoring at port of Azqaba,
    Jordan (high-volume port for sea-going cargo to
    Iraq)
  • Create a green list of approved oil companies to
    purchase Iraqi oil i.e., those not providing
    kickbacks to Hussein
  • Require audited financial reports from oil
    purchasers to enforce above

172
How to Win Without War in Iraq
  • Control or shut down the Syria-Iraq pipeline
  • Expose and penalize arms embargo violations
  • Justice in Palestine
  • Israel most UN Security Council Violations
  • Economic and humanitarian assistance to poor
    Muslim countries build alliances, good will
  • Middle Eastern Marshall Plan
  • Truth and Reconciliation Commissions (c.f. South
    Africa, El Salvador)

173
The US Rogue Nation
  • History Native Americans, slavery, current
    excesses, disparities and injustices
  • Co-opting Nazi and Japanese WWII scientists
  • Minimum 277 troop deployments by the US in its
    225 year history

174
The US Rogue Nation
  • Since the end of WWII, the US has bombed
  • China, Korea, Indonesia, Cuba, Guatemala, Congo,
    Peru, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Nicaragua, El
    Salvador, Grenada, Libya, Panama, Afghanistan,
    Sudan, Yugoslavia, and Iraq

175
The US Rogue Nation
  • Conservative estimate 8 million killed
  • US invasions/bombings often largely at behest of
    corporate interests

176
The US Rogue Nation
  • In 2002, the US spent about 1,211 per US citizen
    on defense
  • vs. 2.27 per citizen on international
    peacekeeping efforts
  • The US maintains military bases in 69 sovereign
    nations around the world

177
The US Rogue Nation
  • Continued funding of the Western Hemisphere
    Institute for Security Cooperation
  • Formerly the School of the Americas
  • Over 60,000 graduates, including many of the
    worst human rights abusers in Latin America
    (e.g., Manuel Noriega, Omar Torrijos, and the
    assassins of Archbishop Oscar Romero)
  • School of the Americas Watch, arrests

178
International Non-Cooperation/Isolationism
  • Failure to sign or approve
  • Kyoto Protocol on Climate Change
  • Convention on the Prohibition of Anti-Personnel
    Land Mines
  • Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty

179
International Non-Cooperation/Isolationism
  • Failure to sign or approve
  • Convention on the Rights of the Child
  • Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination
    Against Women Convention on Economic, Social and
    Cultural Rights
  • Convention for the Suppression of Traffic in
    Persons

180
International Non-Cooperation/Isolationism
  • Failure to sign or approve
  • Protocol 1, Article 55 of the Geneva Conventions,
    which bans methods or means of warfare which are
    intended, or may be expected, to cause
    widespread, long-term and severe damage to the
    natural environment
  • The Basel Convention on the Control of
    Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes
    (designed to control dumping of hazardous wastes
    from the industrialized world in developing
    countries)

181
The US Rogue Nation
  • Death Penalty
  • US executes more of its citizens than any other
    country
  • Until recently, the US was the only country to
    execute both juveniles and the mentally ill
  • Failure to follow World Court Decisions
  • Largest debtor to the UN (only 40 of dues paid)

182
Solutions
  • Physician activism (PSR, IPPNW, etc.)
  • Increased education public, medical and public
    health students
  • Tolerance and appreciation of diversity
  • Conservation measures
  • Assist victims of war (PHR, MSF, etc.)

183
Thomas Jefferson
  • Nothing can keep (government) right but (the
    peoples) vigilant and distrustful
    superintendence

184
Harvey Cushing
  • A physician is obligated to consider more than a
    diseased organ, more even than the whole man. He
    must view the man in his world.

185
Rudolph Virchow
  • Doctors are natural attorneys for the poor If
    medicine is to really accomplish its great task,
    it must intervene in political and social life

186
The role of the doctor in society
  • World Health Organization
  • The role of the physician in the preservation
    and promotion of peace is the most significant
    factor for the attainment of health for all.

187
Pastor Niemoller
  • First they came for the Jews, and I did not
    speak up, for I was not a Jew.
  • Then they came for the communists, and I did not
    speak up, for I was not a communist.
  • Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did
    not speak up, for I was not a trade unionist.
  • Then they came for me, and there was no one left
    to speak up for me.

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Contact Information
  • Public Health and Social Justice Website
  • http//www.phsj.org
  • martindonohoe_at_phsj.org
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