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Paul Davidson
Executive Director
Veterans of Modern Warfare
3027 Walnut St.
Kansas City, MO 64108
Toll Free 866.531.7183
pdavidson@ngwrc.org
________________________________________________________________
Subject: Gulf War vets to
testify before Congress
SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/247343_msvets07.html
Gulf War vets to testify before
Congress
They want U.S. to recognize
health problems as
service-related
Monday, November 7, 2005
By MIKE BARBER
SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER
REPORTER
Veterans of the 1991 Persian
Gulf War felled by a
disproportionate number of
neurological disorders are
picking themselves up for one
last hurrah.
The fight this time involves
summoning up the energy to turn
out to address
in a congressional hearing this
month government funding and
response to
their needs after exposure to an
array of toxins during and after
the first
war against Iraq.
"It's our last chance to stand
up together because many of us
are so ill,"
says Julie Mock of Bothell,
president of the National Gulf
War Resource
Center, herself afflicted with
the fatigue and pain of
service-connected
multiple sclerosis.
A flurry of activity followed
after a Seattle
Post-Intelligencer story in
August documenting how Mock and
a growing number of fellow 1991
Gulf War
veterans suffer from multiple
sclerosis, though not all may be
recognized as
having service-related
illnesses.
The story included an account
from Liz Burris of Tacoma, a
Desert Storm
veteran and former Fort Lewis
Army officer whose multiple
sclerosis also is
service-connected. Burris now is
co-founder of MSVets.com, a
Yahoo! Web site
that has attracted nearly 500
Gulf War veterans nationwide who
display
symptoms of multiple sclerosis.
Persian Gulf War veterans were
galvanized to sign up to testify
at the
hearings before Congress on Nov.
15 to push for an additional $10
million in
funding for Gulf War veterans'
illnesses research, Mock said.
Meanwhile, the Northwest chapter
of the Paralyzed Veterans of
America last
month unanimously passed a
motion asking the national
organization to back
the cause of veterans of that
war who now display symptoms of
multiple
sclerosis.
Of the 700,000 U.S. troops who
served in the Persian Gulf in
1991, a
disproportionate number have
come down with serious
neurological disorders.
More than 65 percent have sought
health care for service-related
ailments.
Nearly 200,000 are receiving
disability compensation -- twice
the rate as
vets from World War II, Korea
and Vietnam.
Veterans point to a lineup of
potential suspects behind their
afflictions:
disease-carrying sand fleas,
anti-biological warfare pills
and a poison
plume covering a wide area after
U.S. troops inadvertently
incinerated Iraqi
rockets containing sarin, a
nerve gas, at Khamisiyah, Iraq.
Brain-cancer deaths; amyotrophic
lateral sclerosis, commonly
known as Lou
Gehrig's disease; and
fibromyalgia which all attack
the nervous system, are
now linked by Pentagon and
national Institute of Medicine
studies to 1991
service in the Persian Gulf.
Mock, Burris and others call for
mass screenings and widening the
window in
which veterans can apply for
disability benefits, especially
for multiple
sclerosis.
Unless veterans document
symptoms within seven years of
discharge, as Mock
and Burris knew to do, they
might not qualify as having
service-connected
disabilities.
The federal government this
summer began notifying about
300,000 veterans of
the possibility of brain cancer
being linked to units exposed to
the plume
of sarin in 1991.
The Nov. 15 hearing before the
House Government Reform
Committee's
subcommittee on national
security will consider a
bipartisan amendment to
the 2006 Defense Appropriations
Bill co-sponsored by U.S. Reps.
Dennis
Kucinich, D-Ohio, the ranking
minority member, and Bernard
Sanders, an
independent from Vermont.
The amendment would earmark $10
million from the Army to uncover
physiological mechanisms behind
Gulf War diseases.
U.S. Rep. Christopher Shay, the
Connecticut Republican who heads
the
subcommittee, already has held
17 hearings on Gulf War
veterans' illnesses
over the last decade. He has
said that those veterans have
persisted in the
face of "entrenched indifference
and bureaucratic inertia" to
prove post-war
illnesses connected to exposures
to various toxins in wartime.
In Seattle, Michael Killen, a
Marine Corps veteran of the 1991
Gulf War,
said the upcoming congressional
hearings "are very important
because so many
people who served overseas in
that war came down with MS."
They need the government to look
outside the seven years from
date of
discharge in which evidence of a
disability can be linked to
service, said
Killen, who now helps other
veterans.
"I know a number of 1991
veterans outside the seven-year
presumptive period
that are frustrated with the
whole system altogether," he
said.
HAVE YOUR SAY
Persian Gulf War veterans say
fellow veterans who cannot sign
up to attend
the Shay committee hearings can
send testimony online to
Kristine.McElroy@mail.house.gov.
The record will remain open for
two days after the hearing. All
written
testimony will be entered into
the Congressional Record. Name,
contact
information, branch, dates
served and a statement of the
event that
occurred, problem resulting from
that action and proposed
solution should be
included.
P-I reporter Mike Barber can be
reached at 206-448-8018 or
mikebarber@seattlepi.com.
(c) 1998-2005 Seattle
Post-Intelligencer
Jim Bunker
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