Veteran’s Family Blames Cancer Death on Army Burn Pits
By Erin Jordan, Reporter
Kristi Casteel stands next to a portrait of her late son Joshua Casteel at her in Cedar Rapids on Tueday, October 2, 2012. The photo was taken in 2006 or 2007 while Joshua spoke with peace activist Jim Forest. Joshua's experience serving as an interrogator at Abu Graib in Iraq led him to becoming a conscientious objector and a outspoke peace activist upon his return to the US. The 32-year-old died of adenocarcinoma, a type of lung cancer, which his family believes my have been caused by burn pits used by the Army to dispose of waste in Iraq. (Cliff Jette/The Gazette-KCRG TV9)
By
Aaron Hepker
Story Created:
Oct 25, 2012 at 3:28 PM CDT
Story Updated:
Oct 25, 2012 at 10:27 PM CDT
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa - Cedar Rapids native Joshua Casteel, 32, died Aug. 25 of lung cancer his family believes was caused by toxins from an Army burn pit at Iraq’s Abu Ghraib prison, where he served as an interrogator in 2004.
“I don’t think any of the soldiers thought twice about it,” said Kristi Casteel, Joshua’s mother. “Most of them, I’m sure, had no idea what they were breathing.”
Burn pits were the primary trash disposal system for wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, with up to 200 tons of waste burned daily at some of the Army’s largest military bases. Among materials burned were plastics, metal cans, rubber, chemicals, paint and munitions, according to a 2011 report by the Institute of Medicine.
These types of fires are illegal in the United States. Hundreds of soldiers and veterans are suing the Texas-based contractor that operated the burn pits on behalf of the military.
The Department of Defense isn't ready to concede burn pits caused soldiers’ illnesses.
“Evidence to date is inconclusive,” the department said in a statement.
“Some previously deployed personnel have experienced persistent symptoms or, in some cases, developed chronic respiratory diseases, possibly as a result of increased susceptibility, elevated exposures, combination of different exposures, preexisting health conditions, or other unknown factors,” the department said.
The Casteel family will continue to push for the Army to accept responsibility not just for Joshua and other Americans, but Iraqis who lived near burn pits.
“The same chemicals these soldiers breathed in on a daily basis are in the farming soil and in the groundwater,” said Naomi Thompson, Casteel’s sister. “The Iraqi people are now going to be dealing with the same illnesses.”
Conversation Guidelines
Be Kind
Don't use abusive, offensive, threatening, racist, vulgar or sexually-oriented language.
Don't attack someone personally. Keep it civil and be responsible.
Share Knowledge
Be truthful. Share what you know and what you are passionate about.
What more do you want to learn? Keep it simple.
Stay focused
Promote lively and healthy debate. Stay on topic. Ask questions and give feedback on the story's topic.
Report Trouble
Help us maintain a quality comment section by reporting comments that are offensive. If you see a comment that is offensive, or you feel violates our guidelines, simply click on the "x" to the far right of the comment to report it.
read the full guidelines here »
Commenting will be disabled on stories dealing with the following subject matter: Crime, sexual abuse, property fires, automobile accidents, Amber Alerts, Operation Quickfinds and suicides.
Most Popular