August 8, 2012 - Decades after the Vietnam War ended, more veterans are being diagnosed with Agent Orange related illnesses."If overnight it would kill all the vegetation, what did they think it was going to do to us?" asked Joel Buckner, of Little Rock.
The 68-year-old former Navy pilot was diagnosed two years ago with stage four non-Hodgkins Lymphoma. He thought he was a walking dead man but now he is 16 months into remission.
Bruckner is indicative of what the Veterans Administration calls a "surge" in new cases. The VA in March 2010 expanded the number of Agent Orange related illness and predicted it would see 100,000 veterans filing claims through 2012.
By its own estimates, the U.S. government sprayed 20 million gallons of the herbicide Agent Orange over southeast Asia as part of Operation Ranch Hand between 1962-1971. The purpose was to eliminate forests and jungles where the North Vietnamese Communist forces and Viet Cong could hide.
In the years after the war ended, some veterans exposed to the toxic chemical became ill and their children were born with birth defects.
It is that tragic legacy that the Parks family must live with every day. read more>>>
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