FACES of RESISTANCE

GALLERY 9
PART 1 | PART 2 | PART 3 | PART 4 | PART 5 | PART 6
PART 7 | PART 8 | PART 9 | PART 10 | PART 11 | PART 12 |PART 13

RESPONDING TO 9/11
AND THE "WAR ON TERROR"


On May 28, 2003, over 100 citizens gathered in front of Alliant Techsystems' corporate headquarters in Edina, Minnesota, as part of the worldwide marking of the International Day to Ban Depleted Uranium (May 29). Alliant Techsystems (ATK) has been one of the largest suppliers of Depleted Uranium (DU) munitions to the United States Department of Defense. Speakers at the May 28 event included Jack Nelson-Pallmeyer (pictured above second from left) on U.S. foreign policy, Dr. Gene Ott on the medical implications of DU, and Jerry Berrigan on the legacy of his father Phil Berrigan--after whom the local campaign to ban DU was named.

The misnamed "Depleted Uranium" is left after enriched uranium is separated from natural uranium to produce fuel for nuclear reactors and nuclear weapons. During this process, the fissionable isotopes Uranium 234 and Uranium 235 are separated; the remaining uranium, which is 99.8% Uranium 238, is called "Depleted Uranium." This waste product is disposed of by producing deadly weapons. DU has a half life of 4.5 billion years.

Four days after the action at Alliant Techsystems' corporate headquarters, Deborah Blum had an article published in the June 1, 2003, edition of the Los Angeles Times. Entitled "A Dark Magic in America's Silver Bullet," the article notes that "Early this spring, the U.S. Department of Defense held a barely noticed briefing on America's use of radioactive weaponry in the Iraq war. The weapons in question are called 'Depleted Uranium' bullets and--as military officials proudly say--they may be the best tank-busting weapons ever made.

"The critics [of DU], ranging from environmentalists in Europe to scientists in the Middle East, say that in all our recent engagements--the 1991 Persian Gulf War, Kosovo, Bosnia and now the latest Iraqi conflict--we left our poisonous, uranium-dusted footprints all over other people's homelands. They worry that the chunks of radioactive litter scattered across former battlefields have already caused a variety of illnesses. They worry, too, about the potential for future harm.

". . . In Iraq, physicians have blamed . . . an increasing rate of birth defects on the [use of DU weapons by the] United States. The Pentagon estimates that the 1991 Gulf War left behind about 320 tons of DU debris. It hasn't calculated the tonnage from the recent conflict . . . but the numbers are expected to be higher."



"What is it about DU bullets that makes our military swoon?" asks Deborah Blum in her Los Angeles Times piece. She goes on to report that "Depleted Uranium is a byproduct of weapons processing. Remove the lighter, more radioactive isotopes for bomb production and you're left with something like the world's heaviest rock. DU is almost twice as dense as lead. It was this big-bad-stone-in-a-slingshot potential that first attracted weapons scientists. But then they discovered something even better. Other metals, from tungsten to steel, flatten on impact. But the uranium heats, peeling back from the bullet's point. In effect, it self-sharpens, meaning that it can tear into armored tanks with unparalleled force. As [Army Col. James Naughton] said: 'We don't want to fight even. Nobody goes into a war and wants to be even with the enemy. We want to be ahead, and DU gives us that advantage.'"



142. Jerry Berrigan - May 28, 2003.






148. Artist Jane Evershed - June 4, 2003.

Commenting on her artwork while standing across from Alliant Techsystems corporate headquarters, Jane says, "The mother has just given birth to an extremely genetically deformed baby caused by Depleted Uranium used in the 1991 Gulf War. She is horrified by what she's given birth to. The umbilical cord is attached to the cold heart of the profiteering arms dealer who manufactured the awful missiles with Depleted Uranium in them. In the background you see this current war going on and a U.S. soldier looking into the window. The soldiers are also deeply affected by Depleted Uranium. Their wives have given birth to deformed infants."



149. "I confronted an army recruitment officer at my high school and asked him if he knew anything about Depleted Uranium and the possible effects it might have on me if I were to join the army," said Chris on June 4, 2003. "His response to me was simply that he didn't know. I found that very disturbing."

In March 2003, when the U.S. launched its invasion and occupation of Iraq, Chris and others at his high school initiated a walk-out. "We walked out about a half-an-hour into school and met up with students from Southwest High School," he said. "We'd told our teachers in advance and typed up a mission statement and handed it to the principal who made copies. We had a really good response from our teachers-they were helpful and cooperative and made sure everything went well. A lot of students came out and joined us-students who I didn't think were going to come. We had a really good turn out-about 300 people in Lynhurst Park on 50th Ave. We stood out there all day."

Commenting on how he became involved in activism, Chris says, "My mom's always raised me with a very aware attitude. I went to Washington, D.C., for the big "No War!" protest on January 18. That was my introduction [to anti-war activism] and I came back and it just kinda all snowballed from there."


PART 10


BACK TO ALLIANT ACTION GALLERY




CONTENTS AND LINKS


INTRODUCTION
GALLERY 1 - FACES OF RESISTANCE
GALLERY 2 - CONFRONTING CORPORATE GLOBALIZATION
GALLERY 3 - A16
GALLERY 4 - MAY DAY 2000
GALLERY 5 - RESPONDING TO THE CRISIS IN IRAQ
GALLERY 6 - CLOSING THE SCHOOL OF THE AMERICAS
GALLERY 7 - HIGHWAY 55
GALLERY 8 - ALLIANT ACTION