DU: “We’re All Downwind”

Facebook
Twitter
Email
WhatsApp
Print


Standing before one of the major production facilities for depleted uranium (DU) weapons in the U.S., 15 CPT delegates released over 400 helium balloons into the air with a message inside:

“…If you received this balloon, you may have breathed pollutants emitted by Aerojet Ordnance in Jonesborough, TN, a company that makes weapons from nuclear waste left over from the uranium enrichment process. These munitions are used in Afghanistan and Iraq where our troops breathe their poisonous radioactive dust. America’s soldiers and their families, along with Iraqi and Afghani families, are suffering from above normal incidences of birth defects, cancers, and symptoms of heavy metal and radiation poisoning. Please help us learn the reach of Aerojet’s air emissions by mailing this balloon back to us…”

Delegates joined 60 other participants in a “Stop DU” conference held May 19 at East Tennessee State University. “We are all downwind,” said CPTer Cliff Kindy, considering that the toxic dust from exploded weaponized uranium doesn’t just stay in the war zones but circles the globe.

ACTION: Please express your concern about the continued use of radioactive, toxic weapons of mass destruction by the Pentagon to Aerojet and its parent company, GenCorp of California.

  • Charles Pepper McCary, AOT-Jonesborough, charles.mccary@aerojet.com;
  • Linda Cutler, GenCorp-California, lcutler@gencorp.com;
  • Claudia Smith, GenCorp-California, claudia.smith@gencorp.com

Subscribe to the Friday Bulletin

Get Ryan’s thoughts and the entire bulletin every Friday in your inbox, and don’t miss out on news from the teams, a list of what we’re reading and information on ways to take action.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Read More Stories

flag flies over building in sunlight

Fragile peace

Earlier this year, the Kurdistan Workers’ Party – the PKK – announced it would disband, bringing to a close a decades-long armed struggle against the

Welcome to Checkpoint 160

In August, CPT Reservist Maggie Hindley returned to Al Khalil/Hebron after a few years. She reunited with those she’d met before, and reflects on the changes in their daily lives after two years of war in Gaza.

A damaged house

A cold peace: a ceasefire without demobilization

Seven months on from the PKK’s unilateral ceasefire, bombardments and attacks by the Turkish Armed Forces in Iraqi Kurdistan seem to have ceased. But the increasing military presence by both actors makes the situation appear fragile.

Skip to content