"FRIENDLY FIRE" - Exposing Gulf War Syndrome
A Must See!!!
"Friendly Fire's" producer, director and writer, Dr. Gary Null, narrates with a professorial tone. Focus is given to striking interviews with angry, hurt, disillusioned and sick Gulf War troops, both in Iraq and at home. They report how their bodies and minds have been greatly damaged by the exposure of carcinogenic, toxic dust and gases emitted from detonated depleted uranium. They also tell of mandatory experimental vaccinations of botulism and anthrax, and of injections of mycoplasma fermentans incognitos (a bacteria)."
"This film tells the truth about what is causing "Gulf War Syndrome" in American veterans. In 81 minutes Gary Null reveals how since "Operation Desert Storm" in 1990 the Department of Defense (DOD) has given soldiers at war and at home toxic, experimental vaccinations and has left our troops unprotected from biological and radioactive weaponry. He also puts great emphasis on how children, babies, and developing fetuses are especially vulnerable to these effects."
Rob Brennan
Senior Editor - The New York Megaphone
One of the worst culprits misusing science is of course the military. It is bad enough what havoc modern weaponry wreaks on the target, but the soldiers hardly escape unscathed. In Vietnam it was just Agent Orange poisoning. Gulf War syndrome makes that look like a picnic. The military has a long history of experimenting on soldiers, and it appears their vain attempts to inoculate against weapons sent to Iraq from USA to fight Iran, such as botulism, anthrax, nerve agents, had nasty side effects on soldiers who never made it to Iraq. Depleted uranium is a euphemism for the stable isotope, since it is no good for fission bombs, but fine for dirty bombs. Nuclear waste is far more potent than DU in that sense. Military experts have the nerve to say DU is not toxic. It does take nearly the age of the earth for half to break down, so the rate of emission is slower than any other radioactive element. This does not make it safe by any means, especially if inhaled.
That was the state of my knowledge before I saw the LA premiere of the latest Gary Null documentary, Friendly Fire. Perhaps you think you know everything about this syndrome. I did, but by the end I was so angry it took me a long time before I could speak. The man is an innovative genius, and a straight shooter. This is a rare combination, in my estimation, and his documentaries have impact, not just on me.
With a news blackout preserving the coverup the movie blows out of the water, it may never make it out. The trailer can be seen at friendlyfirethemovie.com or garynull.com. See this movie, if it ever gets out, there is plenty more disclosed to make anyone mad than just the coverup. To see these insane experiments in action was quite a different experience than just knowing a little about the long sordid history.
DU dust is the problem for the people of Iraq. The rate of birth defects and childhood cancers has skyrocketed. The movie has graphic pictures. Some material took months to smuggle out of Iraq. Footage of Fallujah, not just a war zone reduced to rubble, but radioactive to boot. Iraqis talking about our soldiers stealing greenbacks from the dead.
DU is illegal under international law, dirty ammunition originally proposed by the Manhattan Project as a terrain contaminant, then becoming a staple of modern warfare because of the extreme density of DU, twice as dense as lead. Hundreds of tons have been exploded in Iraq. Afghanistan and Yugoslavia got their share. DOD says to this day, DU is not a problem, no link to Gulf War Syndrome. Tell that to all the Iraqis watching their children die.
It took 17 screenings to satisfy the demand at Cannes, unprecedented. Breaking from the pack is not unusual for Gary Null. He is best known as a cutting edge nutrition expert and researcher, here in his investigative journalist hat.