Muhammed45
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At 3,300 and sixty villages in the southern part of Vietnam, which were victims of this chemical attack, there are now about 800 people suffering from various physical injuries and should always be under medical care.
During the years of the Vietnam War, US military aircraft dropped over eighty million liters of orange agents contained chemical weapons on the Vietnamese forests, which, in addition to shedding leaves, (with the aim of eliminating the possibility of camouflage of the Viet-Kongs militants) destroyed the valuable deposits of tropical rainforests and soil contamination, in These areas the innocents that have been affected by this chemical attack includes the third generation of Vietnamese children and even children who have not yet been born.
At 3,300 and sixty villages in the southern part of Vietnam, which were victims of this chemical attack, there are now about 800 people suffering from various physical injuries and should always be under medical care. On the other hand, cleansing of the toxic substance of Dioxin on the soil of this country is another dilemma for the people of this country.
After decades of American troops and diplomats leaving from Saigon airport in April 1975 and ending the war in Indo-china, the country remains contaminated.
Although relations with the United States have improved since the 1990s, the memory of US crimes in Vietnam will never be erased from the historical memory of the Vietnam people and the people of the world.
In Vietnamese daily life, in addition to threats from unexploded bombs, due to contamination of water and soil with orange agents, the problem of developing various cancers or the birth of defective children has become a commonplace issue.
But, despite all this scientific certainty document, why does the United States not accept its legal responsibility for Vietnam?
Why is it still not willing to pay fines and treatment for injured people and clean up contaminated areas, even in the form of humanitarian aid?
The answers to these questions are clear: if the United States accepts its responsibility to use the orange agent, then there will be further cases of napalm bombs and phosphorous weapons.
The people of Rwanda, Sierra Leone and Serbia must also receive compensation. Iraq and Afghanistan will also sue for the chemical and microbial contaminations of the Middle East wars, and the United States Crimes Account in Hiroshima and Nagasaki will be on the table.
Maybe the chemical and microbial victims of the imposed war of Saddam Hussein against the Iranian people and the oppressed people of Iraq and Halabcheh are also in line with the plaintiffs.
In any case, the following pictures are just a fraction of the deadly and annoying effects of Orange agent on Vietnamese children. These children are the third generation after the Vietnam War:
During the years of the Vietnam War, US military aircraft dropped over eighty million liters of orange agents contained chemical weapons on the Vietnamese forests, which, in addition to shedding leaves, (with the aim of eliminating the possibility of camouflage of the Viet-Kongs militants) destroyed the valuable deposits of tropical rainforests and soil contamination, in These areas the innocents that have been affected by this chemical attack includes the third generation of Vietnamese children and even children who have not yet been born.
At 3,300 and sixty villages in the southern part of Vietnam, which were victims of this chemical attack, there are now about 800 people suffering from various physical injuries and should always be under medical care. On the other hand, cleansing of the toxic substance of Dioxin on the soil of this country is another dilemma for the people of this country.
After decades of American troops and diplomats leaving from Saigon airport in April 1975 and ending the war in Indo-china, the country remains contaminated.
Although relations with the United States have improved since the 1990s, the memory of US crimes in Vietnam will never be erased from the historical memory of the Vietnam people and the people of the world.
In Vietnamese daily life, in addition to threats from unexploded bombs, due to contamination of water and soil with orange agents, the problem of developing various cancers or the birth of defective children has become a commonplace issue.
But, despite all this scientific certainty document, why does the United States not accept its legal responsibility for Vietnam?
Why is it still not willing to pay fines and treatment for injured people and clean up contaminated areas, even in the form of humanitarian aid?
The answers to these questions are clear: if the United States accepts its responsibility to use the orange agent, then there will be further cases of napalm bombs and phosphorous weapons.
The people of Rwanda, Sierra Leone and Serbia must also receive compensation. Iraq and Afghanistan will also sue for the chemical and microbial contaminations of the Middle East wars, and the United States Crimes Account in Hiroshima and Nagasaki will be on the table.
Maybe the chemical and microbial victims of the imposed war of Saddam Hussein against the Iranian people and the oppressed people of Iraq and Halabcheh are also in line with the plaintiffs.
In any case, the following pictures are just a fraction of the deadly and annoying effects of Orange agent on Vietnamese children. These children are the third generation after the Vietnam War: