First                  let me thank the Vietnam Association of Victims of Agent Orange/Dioxin                  for organizing this international conference and to the Agent                  Orange Vets from Korea, Australia, New Zealand and Canada who                  have traveled here to participate.
                
                The US delegation I am leading is made up of Agent Orange vets                  Frank Corcoran, Joan Duffy, Ralph Steele and Dan Shea.
                
                I was an infantryman with the 25th Infantry Division in Cu Chi                  and Tay Ninh in 1967 and was wounded 3 times but do not suffer                  from dioxin related health conditions myself.
                
                When I came back from the war,  I had knowledge of the use of                  Agent Orange from having seen sprayed areas and knew that they                  destroyed nature, but had no knowledge of the negative effects                  these defoliants had on human beings.
                
                I remember in 1969 a veteran I knew named Jeff Sharlett died of                  cancer at age 27 in the Miami, Florida Veterans Hospital and thinking                  it was strange that someone so young had cancer.
                
                Over the years other friends of mine got sick or had deformed                  children or sometimes died. Mike Keegan and John Miffin who died                  and John and Rena Kopystenski who had several children with birth                  defects are among them. So this issue has always been personal                  to me.
                
                In 1977, a woman who worked as a claims representative at the                  Chicago Veterans Administration named Maude DeVictor was the first                  person to really put two and two together when she witnessed the                  VA higher-ups denying veterans claims and covering up their health                  problems and the connections to dixon exposure.
                
                The next year, 1978, a veteran name Paul Reutershan who was sick                  with cancer got on television and said "my government killed                  me in Vietnam and I didn't even know it". He began a lawsuit                  against the chemical companies who manufactured Agent Orange,                  Blue, White, Purple etc. but he never lived to see that lawsuit                  completed because he died within the year.
                
                The reason that this lawsuit was started was because the VA was                  denying veterans claims for medical treatment and compensation                  and according to US law, citizens cannot sue the government for                  these type of claims.
                
                From 1978-1984 the lawsuit continued and was eventually settled,                  although many veterans opposed the settlement for millions of                  dollars. Sadly many veterans got very little of that money since                  the army of lawyers who got involved got a good portion of it                  in legal fees.
                
                I have been a member of Vietnam Veterans Against the War since                  1970 and that organization played a critical role in launching                  the movement for justice for Agent Orange vets, supporting Maude                  Devictor who became the godmother of the movement, recruiting                  veterans to joining the lawsuit and raising general public awareness                  of this issue.
                
                But we always believed that while the chemical companies had responsibility                  and should be held liable, the primary responsibility lay with                  the US government which ordered and continued to use these poisons                  after they were becoming aware of the negative effects on people.                  Instead of changing course, they covered up the facts and kept                  using them until 1971. After that they gave their remaining supplies                  to the former Army of the Republic of Vietnam who continued to                  use them until 1975 when that regime ceased to exist.
                
                In VVAW, our demand has always been Testing, Treatment and Compensation                  for Agent Orange Victims. We never thought the lawsuit against                  the chemical companies was the answer, but rather a way to continue                  putting pressure on the US government.
                
                Finally progress was made on that front when in 1991, Congress                  passed the Agent Orange Act, acknowledging several conditions                  as being dioxin related for purposes of medical treatment and                  disability compensation. It also established a mechanism for the                  National Academy of Sciences Institute of Medicine to review new                  studies and make recommendations to the Secretary of the Veterans                  Administration for expanding the recognized conditions.
                
                Currently there are thirteen conditions acknowledged by the VA                  including two conditions among veterans children but over 27 conditions                  have been rejected since there was a finding by the IOM of not                  enough scientific research to indicate a connection to dioxin                  exposure.
                
                So many veterans are still not being treated with any fairness.                  And how does someone give justice to all those who have died?                  The hidden casualties of the Vietnam War continue to grow but                  the struggle continues as well.
                
                And today we need to talk about the other side of the coin, not                  just American, Korean, Australian, New Zealand and Canadian veterans                  but the people of Vietnam as well.
                
                Remember also that these chemicals were also used in parts of                  Cambodia and Laos as well as along the DMZ in Korea and in Panama.
                
                In the United States we began the Vietnam Agent Orange Relief                  and Responsibility Campaign to support the efforts of VAVA and                  join with concerned veterans and people in other countries to                  demand Justice for ALL Agent Orange Victims!
                
                While the Campaign is sponsored by Veterans For Peace, it is made                  up of war veterans, Vietnamese-Americans, peace activists, environmentalists                  and other friends of Vietnam. We are supporting the international                  petition drive in support of the VAVA lawsuit and recently sponsored                  a 10 city speaking tour by 4 VAVA members.
                
                We are also planning to encourage sympathetic representatives                  and senators to introduce legislation in Congress for the US government                  to step up to the plate and provide compensation and medical assistance,                  if not for political reasons, then fro moral and humanitarian                  purposes. It is time to really heal the wounds of that war, not                  to ignore them or let them fade into history.
                
                Let me make on last point. This is a struggle to expose and end                  the use of chemical weapons by all nations but especially by my                  government. This is not just about something that happened over                  30 years ago. Today the Bush administration has led our country                  and the world into another invasion and occupation, this time                  in Iraq and is now used Depleted Uranium that will in time poison                  US troops and Iraqi citizens. They have also used White Phosphorous                  bombs against whole cities like Fallujah.
                
                It is time for humanity to demand an end to these weapons as part                  of our efforts to abolish war. That is what Veterans For Peace                  is pledged to work for. That will only come through the determined                  efforts of all of us, throughout the world.
                
                The great American abolitionist Fredrick Douglass said:
With that as our watchword, lets make this conference a call to all the people of the world."If there is no struggle, there is no progress. Those who profess to favor freedom yet depreciate agitation, are men who want crops without plowing up the ground, they want rain without the thunder and lightning. They want the ocean without the awful roar of its many waters.
This struggle may be a moral one, or it may be a physical one, but it must be a struggle. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never has and it never will"
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