![]() From Afghanistan to Kosovo to the Gaza Strip and Sudan-armed conflict causes significant harm to the environment and the communities that depend on natural resources. Since 1999, the United Nations Environment Programme has conducted over twenty post-conflict assessments, using state-of-the-art science to determine the environmental impacts of war. The use of chemical weapons in the Syrian conflict as well as the burning of oil fields by the Dae’sh terrorist group are poignant recent examples. Armed conflicts around the world, and their aftermath, continue to impact the health and well-being of people and the environment through pollution, infrastructure damage and the collapse of governance. Sadly, Viet Nam and Kuwait were not isolated cases. Many of us remember shocking images of environmental destruction from conflicts across the globe from the spraying of the poisonous chemical Agent Orange over the forests in Viet Nam in the 1970s, to the burning oil wells in Kuwait in the 1990s. And they never told me then, that it would hurt my health today. We’d hike all day on jungle trails through clouds of poison spray. ![]() Like Agent Orange defoliants, to kill the brush and trees. Oh, the army tried some fancy stuff to bring them to their knees. ![]()
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