Gulf War veteran Jack Morgan served with the 82nd Airborne during the War
Written by Anthony Hardie
(91outcomes.com) – Nearly 20 years after the war, former Army military policeman Jack Morgan, of the Tampa Bay, Fla. area, has released previously unpublished photos of the Khamisiyah, Iraq demolition of conventional and chemical munitions just after the end of the 1991 Gulf War.
Morgan says these pictures are from the 10th and 11th of March 1991.
“We were to the east of the main body of the 37th engineers closing off this approach to the demo area. The last picture is on the 11th and speaks for itself,” he said.
Morgan, who served with the 82nd Airborne Division as a member of the 810th Military Police Company in Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm, and was at Khamisiyah, Iraq providing security for the 37th Engineers when they “blew the dump.”
For the first several years following the 1991 Gulf War, the Pentagon adamantly denied that Iraqi chemical munitions had even been deployed by the Iraqi military during the military buildup leading to the war.
However, through the work of Gulf War veterans, including through use of the Freedom of Information Act, the public later learned that the exploded munitions at Khamisiyah had included sarin and cyclosarin nerve agents and probably also included mustard gas, a vesicant known to cause cause lifelong lung, eye, and skin problems, sometimes severe.
Sarin and cyclosarin have been shown in more recent years to cause long-term, subtle brain damage, even at levels lower than those known to cause recognizable immediate effects.
Gulf War veterans also learned, again primarily through the Freedom of Information Act, that the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency had known for years that chemical munitions were stored at the Khamisiyah depot and had informed the Pentagon of this intelligence. However, the information never reached the Gulf War ground troops at or near Khamisiyah, leaving a scramble of finger pointing and buck shifting inside the federal government with at least tens of thousands of troops exposed.
Finally caving to overwhelming public pressure, the U.S. Department of Defense in sent letters in July 1997 to veterans who the Pentagon estimated may have been exposed to the three-day plume and resultant fallout of low levels of Iraqi chemical warfare agents. Predictably, the DoD letters denied any known health effects and downplayed any risks associated with the exposures.
At the same time, the Pentagon consistently asserted that the growing health issues among Gulf War veterans was attributable solely to “stress.”
Through elaborate DoD modeling, the number of potentially exposed veterans later grew to 100,000, nearly one-fifth of Gulf War troops serving on the ground.
At the urging of Gulf War veterans, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) reviewed the Pentagon’s methodology for modeling the plume and found it to be entirely unreliable, leaving the actual number and location of Gulf War troops exposed to the Khamisiyah plume unknown.
Demolitions of other Iraqi chemical warfare agent production and storage facilities were key targets during the Gulf War’s nearly six-week air campaign, with innumerable toxins blasted up into the prevailing winds that led directly over the Coalition troops massed along the northern Saudi Arabian border with Iraq and Kuwait.
Today, of the 696,842 veterans of the 1991 Gulf War, the Institute of Medicine estimates that 250,000 – more than one third – continue to suffer from chronic multi-symptom illness. Chemical warfare agents, nerve agent protective pills (NAPPs), military strength pesticides, and other hazards are believed to be linked to these veterans’ enduring disabilities from the short, intense war.
JACK MORGAN’S KHAMISIYAH PHOTOS
PHOTO 1: Demolition of Iraqi munitions at Khamisiyah munitions depot, March 10, 1991. -Previously unpublished photo courtesy of Jack Morgan.
PHOTO 2: Demolition of Iraqi munitions at Khamisiyah munitions depot, March 1991. -Previously unpublished photo courtesy of Jack Morgan.
PHOTO : 3 Demolition of Iraqi munitions at Khamisiyah munitions depot, March 11, 1991. -Previously unpublished photo courtesy of Jack Morgan. Used with permission.
OFFICIAL U.S. SATELLITE IMAGES OF KHAMISIYAH DEPOT
PHOTO: Pre-demolition photo of Khamisiyah ammunition storage area showing Bunker 73 and pit area. Courtesy U.S. Central Intelligence Agency.
PHOTO: An Air Force Photo Of Khamisiyah Weapons Storage Complex
Note: Each Bunker Is The Size Of A Football Field.
Hey Jack, I was in the 810th too, during the Gulf "Tracy Burgett" Feel free to contact me ttrobaugh2@yahoo.com
ReplyDeleteHEY JACK, MY NAME IS LAZARO AMADOR AND I WAS ALSO IN THE 810th TOO.YOU COULD CONTACT ME AT LAZ0806@GMAIL.COM. AND AS A BONUS I WAS DIAGNOSED WITH MS.
ReplyDeleteThe top two pictures are from March 4th, not march 10th
ReplyDeletePhoto #3 is not Khamisayah, it's Talil Airbase about 30 miles North.
ReplyDeleteI was there on a 36th medevac crew. I have one or two very close up origional photos of the Khamisiyah Demolition.
ReplyDeletejames.broin@yahoo.com
Amara Broin
DeleteI was part of the 79th MP Co. who provided overwatch during the demolition. would it be possible for you to email me those two pictures to compare with my photo's ? Thanks. Matthew Mueller - email: muel0312@gmail.com
I also had a brain tumor.15 hours of surgery .Never been the same.I was attached to 7th corp.Skin problems.Joint problems really bad.Arthiritis all over.Had 2 strokes right after brain surgery.Only reason they found tumor is i had a vessel burst in the tumor.That about ended it all for me.This was 3 months after i got home.Never got any help from va till 2015.Now my 22 year old daughter has tumors on her liver and breast and they can not tell her what they are.coinsodence ,think not
DeleteMy brother CWO-2 Herbert Carter passed away tonight from a brain tumor I believe created from exposure to a chemical agent from this incident. Does anyone know about other incidents
ReplyDeleteMy brother passed away this evening from complications of a brain tumor I believe was the result of exposer to this incident. Has any else heard of this issue/
ReplyDeleteAmara Broin,
ReplyDeleteI was attached to the 79th MP Co. who provided over watch during the demolition, could you please email me your 2 close up photo's, Currently in a battle with VA over exposure. Thanks, Matthew Mueller email: muel0312@gmail.com
I would like to know more. Three people including myself had a rash. Mine was on my arms. There was a white fog like a cloud that settled on our encampment for about three days. We were part of 7th corps and we're on the neutral zone as part of the convoy as we went into Iraq.
ReplyDeleteThe Explosion I saw was like an "A"bomb! Big Ring on the top
ReplyDeleteAttached to 2nd Armored 17th Engineer Bat. And still messed up.I have no idea where we were at the Big Boom!?
I was in A Co 37th Eng Bn, I was there from August 1990 to April 1991. I have probably the closest pics from inside bunkers and during detonation.
ReplyDeleteI was attached to the 37th Eng Bn and have pics of the inside of bunkers as well as the detonations from a short distance.
DeleteHey Dallas. 1sg Sean Rigsby here. Hope all is well
DeleteI was attached to the 37th Eng Bn for the same duration, also have pics from inside the bunkers as well as the detonations from a short distance.
ReplyDeleteAnyone willing to send pictures to me? I would greatly appreciate it! I was with 156TH Maintenance company supporting an infantry unit. We thought we were being hit when the detonated this....it was like a mushroom cloud and we jumped in our foxholes....it did look like an atomic bomb....I am fighting breast and lymph node cancer and all of my Dr's believe it is due to my exposure....my email is kninham@hotmail.com....thank you to all and good health
ReplyDeleteMy name is joel young and i served with A btry 1/319th AFAR we were there to and i also have a few photos i having hell with my body and mind feel like there falling apart and All the VA does is hand me more and more drugs while at the same time will not give me more than 60% for 10 years on jump status that completely screwed my body up not to mention the constant unexplained pain i have through out my whole body this is like some jacobs ladder shit if any one can help like i said i have more photos from where we were email me at j.ayoung1972@yahoo.com thanks guys i though it was just me and i was loosing it
ReplyDeleteI got one of the letters they sent you. So far, I have survived two brain tumors.
ReplyDeleteI was there with the 68th Chemical Company,1st Cavalry Division. I remember the plumes like an atomic bomb. I remember our M-8 chemical alarms going off. I was a 54B chemical operations specialist. Since then I've had many medical issues. No help from the VA. We also found chemicals in bunkers as we moved from the highway of death. A Polish decon unit that was attached to our unit was hit with chemicals. I also saw on 60 Minutes one of our LTs back in the 90's describing what happened and how it affected his physical health. He was with the 11th chem and were attached to us. We were all in 7th Corp. Something needs to be done by the VA.
ReplyDeleteSee 37th Engineers link, https://youtu.be/W9nG-gSL0zc , “ATW!” Hey Jack, Eric Kalashnikov says hi...See 2nd plt vehicles in foreground at 1:45 to 2:00 minutes in the video going balls out going from Right to left..between the 37 Engineers and ASP.
ReplyDeleteHey Jack, it’s Eric . Please review link: https://youtu.be/W9nG-gSL0zc
ReplyDeletePlease note on video; between 1:45 and 2:00 minutes, two, second platoon vehicles going balls out between the 37th Engineers and the ASP...ask Laz about that day.....”ATW!”...more evidence against the VA and their cheap ass shenanigans.
I was with C/319th AFAR,82nd Abn I'm looking for fellow paratroopers that I served with so that we can help each other with statements, pictures ect... to verify claims as the scumbags at the VA have been giving me the run-around about even treating me for headaches, rashes, fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue even though they know I was in the area of Khamisiyah, hell they even sent me a letter confirming it, now I have a brain tumor and and they still won't admit it is related. Just waiting for me to for off I guess. More than a decade of service and this is how they treat us. Chrishchrishamiltonhines@gma
ReplyDeleteI was with C/319th AFAR,82nd Abn I'm looking for fellow paratroopers that I served with so that we can help each other with statements, pictures ect... to verify claims as the scumbags at the VA have been giving me the run-around about even treating me for headaches, rashes, fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue even though they know I was in the area of Khamisiyah, hell they even sent me a letter confirming it, now I have a brain tumor and and they still won't admit it is related. Just waiting for me to for off I guess. More than a decade of service and this is how they treat us. Chrishchrishamiltonhines@gma
ReplyDeleteThank you for your courage. I will tell you the reason why Kamasiyah was blown up violating Army S.O.P. I was in A Co 2/505th PIR and was at Kamasiyah. After we captured the base we broke up into 4 man teams to inspect each bunker. The first three bunkers my team found 122mm/155mm Artillery rounds with blue and red bands and Chinese and Soviet markings.
ReplyDeleteIN THE FOURTH BUNKER MY TEAM FOUND AMERICAN 'STINGER' SHOULDER FIRED SURFACE TO AIR MISSLES ($1MILLION EA.) AND T.O.W. ANTI-TANK SYSTEMS.
When I called that in to my CO, I was ordered to guard the bunker and wait for two 'Black Birds' (black op helicopters). Sure enough 45 minutes later two Blackhawks landed and a man in desert cameo with full bird Colonel rank (no unit designator, no Army, no other ID) and five men with long hair and black jumpsuits (Delta/CIA?) They went into the bunker for 20 minutes then came out and asked 'who's in charge'. I am sir I stated. The Colonel said 'Under Uniform Code Of Military Justice you are not to discuss or mention anything about what you saw in this bunker, do you understand Sergeant?' Roger that sir, I said.
Just 5 years earlier was the 'IRAN CONTRA SCANDAL' That almost got Reagan impeached. There were journalist impeded with troops. Just a week earlier I met Sam Donaldson when he interrupted my time in a desert latrine. If Journalist found that Hi-Tech American munitions were in an Iraqi Weapon Storage facility, there would have been hell to pay.
My theory was justified when I wrote a story about this and shared it at a WRITERS WITHOUT BORDERS meeting (think AA meets professional writers) and the next week when I was about to enter the meeting a 'MAN IN BLACK' asked me by name, and then stated I could lose my VA disability benefits and more and that it would be a huge mistake to publish this story. This was 4 years ago before GBSr. died. In my humble opinion this would stain his legacy and also could cost the US government Billions of dollars in benefits to Veterans that suffer from Gulf War Syndrome. Now that GBSr. is dead, I have come out from being off-grid and slowly disclosing this information.
PASS IT ON! WWG1WGA!!
I hope this finds someone that knows all of the units that were in the area that would have been supporting the 37th Eng Bn. I was part of 23rd Eng Bn 3rd AD. Does anyone have any information of any other sites that rockets were pulled from? I was in a bunker while rockets and other stuff was being removed from the bunker to take a the pit for destruction. I'm convinced it was Khamisiyah but who knows besides the folks that don't want to tell the truth to begin with. I was sent the letter years ago that my unit was in the area but I never attributed the so called low level exposure to any of my health issues. I can be reached at baker68@cox.net. Thanks
ReplyDeleteI was with the 2nd Brigade TAC, 24thID with Colonel Kern. My unit was 1/5th Air Defense Artillary. I remember drawing (copying) the battle plans. I remember the objective Orange, Red, Gold, etc.. I remember attacking Jalabah (so) airfield. I have joint problems in knees, hips, shoulders. I hurt all the time. Arthritis everywhere basically. Moving in the morning is rough. I get very stiff. I have skin rashes when I get hot all over my torso. Per biopsies, they don't exist. Again, there is no difference in comparing a normal skin biopsy and one of the rash. I have major hearing issues that occurred when a captain lined about 8-10 of us in a row with AT-4's. On the count of 3, we all fired. A pain shot down from my right ear, down my neck and into my chest. I was deaf for 2 days, and then my hearing gradually returned. I have scapula bursitis. I have twitches and jerky movements all the time. I just met another evaluator yesterday 2021/05/24. She said it appears as though I have the onset of Parkinson's disease. I have memory issues. Short-term is gone and remember names is like snapping your fingers and disappearing. I slur my speech and run words together. Depression and anger are other issues. When I get heated in a hot environment, I tell my family to stay away from me. I am rated as 70%. They only acknowledge low level GWI. No rating for it. Anyone like me or served in that area?
ReplyDeleteI also took those pills I remember red and white pills. Told they were for malaria. I got 5-6 shots the same day at the 224th Support Battalion, 2nd Brigade, 24th ID. The more I think about it, the more anger I have. Frustrating.....
ReplyDeleteMy dad was in the 201st Field Artillery (They are a National Guard Unit) They were bounced between a couple different units before finally ending up with the 18th (XVIII) Airborne, what they called Puking Dragons, but others call Sky Dragons. He went through the burnt mile and they passed the front a couple times. When the bunker blew, he was cooking dinner (Mess SGT) and they were dodging all the debris that was flying at them. If anyone has any information or photos that they can send to me, I would greatly appreciate it. My email is shawnasines3008@hotmail.com
ReplyDelete