Israel Used Depleted Uranium Munitions During Gaza Offensive       
   Richard Silverstein
   Dec 6, 2012
  12160.info
   I’m beginning to read reports from Gaza that indicate that the IDF  may’ve used depleted uranium munitions during its recent assault.  A  local journalist writes  in Electronic Intifada about the grotesque forms of some of the  victims’ wounds.  He (incorrectly, I believe) associates them with  chemical weapons like white phosphorus:
    Among those receiving treatment in Nasser hospital in  Khan Younis is a man who was hit by an  Israeli drone  that struck a farm owned by his family in southern Gaza. A friend of  his was killed in the attack. “I was hit directly in my abdomen and two  legs,” said the man, who is in his thirties and asked not to be named.
   Baker al-Derdy, the head nurse in Nasser hospital, said that when  this man was first admitted, there was “a strange smell, almost  chemical” from him. Al-Derdy pointed to other indications that Israel  may have used chemical weapons during its offensive.
   “Some of the symptoms we have seen are abnormal,” al-Derdy added.  “The type of burns that appear on the bodies suggest that the weapons  employed were not conventional. The burns go deep into the skin and the  skin itself turns blue. And I can tell you that the burns hit even the  third layer of the skin.”
   …Ashraf al-Qedra, a spokesperson for the health ministry in  Gaza…acknowledged that some of the burns witnessed were deeper than  those associated with conventional weapons.
   “We in Gaza and health bodies in the West Bank do not have  laboratories where we could properly examine what types of weapons have  been used in Israeli attacks,” al-Qedra said. “But according to what we  have seen so far, it appears that Israel used some explosive weapons or  ammunition that caused burns and deep wounds. In most cases of those  killed, we have seen that bodies were either torn apart or completely  burnt out. Also, many of those injured have had their lower or upper  limbs amputated.”
     Making clear that I’m neither a doctor nor a weapons specialist, the  general description of these savage wounds reminds me much more of the  DIME munition developed by the U.S. and used by the IDF in Gaza in 2006.  I  posted  several times about this horrific weapon.  The Gaza Interior Ministry, in the midst of the fighting,  released a statement  claiming it had recorded high rates of radioactivity at bombing sites,  claiming that unconventional weapons were used against a civilian  population:
    Major Hazem Abu Murad, assistant director of explosives engineering  and member of the Committee to document war crimes, revealed that the  occupation used radioactive materials in the explosives with which it  had bombed the Gaza Strip.
   Abu Murad told the Interior Ministry that the weapons with which  Israel targeted Gaza contain heavy elements, including the Uranium,  tungsten, aluminum and nickel”, and pointed out that these materials  raise the temperature in the center of the explosion to 7 thousand  degrees Celsius, and boost the destructive ability of the shell.
   He also pointed to the types of weapons used by the occupation during  the recent aggression on the Gaza Strip, noting that among those  weapons there are  three types of ammunition which have been used for  the first time.
     If true, and I have no way of knowing whether Hamas’ claim was based  on scientific testing, tungsten would be indicative of the use of DIME.   The presence of uranium might lead in a different direction, as the IDF  has weapons that contain  depleted uranium.  Here are some of its characteristics:
    Depleted uranium is very dense…Thus a given mass of it has a smaller  diameter than an equivalent lead projectile, with less aerodynamic drag  and deeper penetration due to a higher pressure at point of impact. DU  projectile ordnance is often incendiary because of its pyrophoric  property.
   …Depleted uranium is favored…because it is self-sharpening and  pyrophoric. On impact with a hard target…the nose of the rod fractures  in such a way that it remains sharp. The impact and subsequent release  of heat energy causes it to disintegrate to dust and burn when it  reaches air…When a DU penetrator reaches the interior of an armored  vehicle, it catches fire, often igniting ammunition and fuel.
     Further support for the thesis of its use by the IDF is a report to  me from an Israeli source confirming the IDF used depleted uranium in  Gaza.  My source cannot confirm whether DIME was used or not.
   The UN Human Rights Commission has asked member states to  curb the use of such weapons  and a paper prepared for the body argued that they may contravene  numerous international treaties.  The European Parliament called for a  ban on DU munitions.
   Here are some of their  health effects:
    Normal functioning of the kidney, brain, liver, heart, and numerous  other systems can be affected by uranium exposure, because in addition  to being weakly radioactive, uranium is a toxic metal. DU is less toxic  than other heavy metals such as arsenic and mercury.[65] It is weakly radioactive but remains radioactive because of its long half-life.
   …British Army doctors warned the British…Ministry of Defence that  exposure to depleted uranium increased the risk of developing lung,  lymph and brain cancer, and recommended a series of safety precautions.
     This seems perfectly in synch with the typical practice of the IDF to  exploit whatever weapons appear convenient and effective, no matter how  controversial or even illegal their use might be, especially against a  largely civilian population.  This holds true for cluster bombs, white  phosphorus and DIME, all of which Israel has employed during attacks on  civilian areas of Lebanon and Gaza.
   By the way, I’ve read several mainstream journalists claim that less  than half those killed in Gaza were civilians.  This is not true.  Gaza  human rights groups have counted 183 fatalities of whom 103 were  civilian. |