Dayton Daily News

Benefits

- Contact this reporter at (937) 681-5610 or email tom. gnau@coxinc.com.

“This will give people the coverage that they deserve, for what happened with Agent Orange exposure, and I think that’s huge,” Smith added.

But the defense policy bill, known as the NDAA or National Defense Authorizat­ion Act, does not extend that presumptio­n of exposure to veterans who served in Thailand.

“Currently, veteranswh­o served in Thailand are not granted presumptiv­e status. The FY21 (fiscal year 2021) NDAA only addresses those who served in Vietnam,” Caleb Randall-Bodman, deputy communicat­ions director for the Armed Services committee, said in an email to this newspaper Friday.

For years, veterans of the VietnamWar­who have been exposed to the dangerous chemicals have pushed for “presumptiv­e benefit” status, cutting through red tape in attaining Veterans Affairs benefits.

Veterans of that era served in more than one country, on land and sea. And those who served in nearby Thailandwh­ilesufferi­ngexposure to herbicides have found they have a higher hurdle to win crucial VA benefits than those who served in Vietnam.

The distinctio­n continues to frustrate vetswho served in Thailand.

“The president and senators and Congress need to stop all this BS … and use a common sense approach,” said local Thailand veteran Paul Skinner, 66, who has had a disability claim into theVAfor illnesses related to what he believes was exposure

to toxic herbicides and other chemicals.

“The old politician­s start these wars but send the young to fight them,” Xenia resident Skinner added. “But then when it is time to help the veteran fromtheir decisions and mistakes, they want to ignore us.”

On background, those close to lawmakers in Congress have said that the incidence of Agent Orange use in Thailand is seen as more limited, compared to its use in Vietnam.

At the height of the war, some 50,000 American military personnel were stationed in Thailand. The herbicides­were used as a defoliant — to kill plants and vegetation at the perimeter or fence-line of U.S. bases so that base personnel could see anyone approachin­g that fence-line.

Exposure to these chemicals has been linked to types of leukemia, Hodgkin’s disease, multiplemy­eloma and other conditions.

A VA spokeswoma­n told this newspaper last year that the department strives to help Thailand veterans from that era. But that distinctio­n between those who served inThailand and those who served in Vietnam is anchored in law, she said.

No vote had been scheduled on thenewdefe­nse bill, but on Wednesday, House Armed Services Committee Chairman Adam Smith, D-Wash., and RankingMem­berMacThor­nberry, R-Texas, issued a joint statement saying both chambers of Congress have reached agreement on the bill.

 ??  ?? BobMcHenry, aVietnamWa­r-era veteran who served in Thailand as an airman during thewar.“We’re the stepchildr­en of the VietnamWar becausewew­eren’t in country in the VietnamWar,” theWashing­ton Twp. resident said.
BobMcHenry, aVietnamWa­r-era veteran who served in Thailand as an airman during thewar.“We’re the stepchildr­en of the VietnamWar becausewew­eren’t in country in the VietnamWar,” theWashing­ton Twp. resident said.

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