Amy Worthington On US Nuclear War In Iraq :: from www.uruknet.info :: news from occupied Iraq - ch
Amy Worthington On US Nuclear War In Iraq :: from www.uruknet.info :: news from occupied Iraq - ch: "Amy Worthington On US Nuclear War In Iraq
The Idaho Observer - www.rense.com
An Interview With Amy Worthington
The American Activist
The Idaho Observer - April 2005
May 15, 2005
On Thursday, April 7, 2005, Ingri Cassel interviewed independent researcher/writer Amy Worthington on The American Activist. Worthington's articles on chemtrails, vaccines, cell phones and depleted uranium munitions first appear in The IO and then go all over the world. The following interview is a discussion of what Worthington believes is the most horrible legacy our generation will be leaving for the next generations: A DU-contaminated world.
Ingri: HI, AMY, WELCOME TO THE SHOW AND THANK YOU FOR BEING HERE TO TALK ABOUT THE U.S. LEGACY OF DEPLETED URANIUM MUNITIONS.
Amy: It's really RADIOACTIVE WAR, Ingri. It's one of the most important topics of our day. Radioactive war has been raging since Bush-Cheney started bombing Afghanistan in 2001. And yet most Americans still don't understand that in THEIR name, and with THEIR money, this administration, the U.S. Congress and the Pentagon have committed nuclear war against both Iraq and Afghanistan, two non-nuclear countries whose citizens had nothing whatsoever to do with 9/1l.
Ingri: IF YOU TELL PEOPLE THAT THE U.S. AND THEIR BRITISH PARTNERS ARE USING NUCLEAR WEAPONS IN THE MIDDLE EAST, MOST ARE SHOCKED BECAUSE THE NIGHTLY NEWS HAS AVOIDED ALL MENTION OF NUCLEAR WEAPONRY.
Amy: That's right. But tens of thousands of civilians and non-combatants in Afghanistan and Iraq have been killed with these horrendous, radioactive weapons. The U.S. military is using two kinds of uranium weapons--non-depleted and depleted--against these poor people and in the process we are nuking our own troops.
Ingri: WHY DO YOU CALL THESE WEAPONS NUCLEAR WEAPONS?
Amy: Experts says that any weapon which incorporates radioactive material can be considered a nuclear"
The Idaho Observer - www.rense.com
An Interview With Amy Worthington
The American Activist
The Idaho Observer - April 2005
May 15, 2005
On Thursday, April 7, 2005, Ingri Cassel interviewed independent researcher/writer Amy Worthington on The American Activist. Worthington's articles on chemtrails, vaccines, cell phones and depleted uranium munitions first appear in The IO and then go all over the world. The following interview is a discussion of what Worthington believes is the most horrible legacy our generation will be leaving for the next generations: A DU-contaminated world.
Ingri: HI, AMY, WELCOME TO THE SHOW AND THANK YOU FOR BEING HERE TO TALK ABOUT THE U.S. LEGACY OF DEPLETED URANIUM MUNITIONS.
Amy: It's really RADIOACTIVE WAR, Ingri. It's one of the most important topics of our day. Radioactive war has been raging since Bush-Cheney started bombing Afghanistan in 2001. And yet most Americans still don't understand that in THEIR name, and with THEIR money, this administration, the U.S. Congress and the Pentagon have committed nuclear war against both Iraq and Afghanistan, two non-nuclear countries whose citizens had nothing whatsoever to do with 9/1l.
Ingri: IF YOU TELL PEOPLE THAT THE U.S. AND THEIR BRITISH PARTNERS ARE USING NUCLEAR WEAPONS IN THE MIDDLE EAST, MOST ARE SHOCKED BECAUSE THE NIGHTLY NEWS HAS AVOIDED ALL MENTION OF NUCLEAR WEAPONRY.
Amy: That's right. But tens of thousands of civilians and non-combatants in Afghanistan and Iraq have been killed with these horrendous, radioactive weapons. The U.S. military is using two kinds of uranium weapons--non-depleted and depleted--against these poor people and in the process we are nuking our own troops.
Ingri: WHY DO YOU CALL THESE WEAPONS NUCLEAR WEAPONS?
Amy: Experts says that any weapon which incorporates radioactive material can be considered a nuclear"
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