http://ap.tbo.com/ap/breaking/MGB2GN42W2E.htmlWASHINGTON (AP) - The United States sprayed more than 19 million gallons of defoliant over the jungles of Vietnam, a tactic designed to kill the forests and deny cover to the enemy.
The chemical worked. Miles of vegetation withered and died.
Under President Clinton, Congress added diabetes to the list. An estimate at the time, Brown said, was that the addition of diabetes - a lingering disease that is expensive to treat - added $3 billion every five years to the Agent Orange compensation costs to Vietnam veterans. snip
"Since all of the other diseases were relatively rare and less expensive to treat, the addition of diabetes completely dwarfed all the other disorders," Brown said.
The government also began providing for the treatment of children with spina bifida who were born to Vietnam veterans. The coverage was virtually for a lifetime, said Brown, and covered rehabilitation, special training and even wheelchairs. He said about 1,000 children - now adults - receive that benefit.
Some veterans have been judged disabled because of their contact with Agent Orange. Disability payments can range from $108 a month to almost $3,000 a month, depending on the level of disability and the number of dependents supported by the veteran.
more