SICK VIETNAM VETS BLAME AGENT ORANGE,
WASHINGTON—Sam Genco, at age 19, narrowly survived one of the United States’ worst military aircraft carrier fires. Today, 50 years later, it’s that ship’s drinking water he says could be killing him.
Genco was diagnosed last year at a North Carolina veterans’ clinic with ischemic heart disease—a common condition the federal government says is linked to Agent Orange exposure. He suffers from severely blocked arteries, cutting off the normal flow of oxygen and blood to the heart.
“It’s fatigue. Your muscles just don’t want to work. Like an engine full of sludge,” Genco said. “The engine keeps working harder but going slower.”
But the 69-year-old can’t access veterans’ disability benefits tied to exposure to the herbicide Agent Orange.
If the federal government approved his claim, his monthly veteran’s benefit check would jump from about $1,400 to more than $3,000. Full disability benefits also have tax advantages and would improve his wife’s health care coverage. Despite no acknowledgment from the government that he was exposed to Agent Orange, Genco does get free medical treatment, like other veterans, at veterans’ clinics.
His bid for financial help is caught in a bureaucratic maze and a struggle involving widespread disagreement among experts about why he’s sick.
Genco, who lives in Pine Knoll Shores, N.C., is one of an estimated 90,000 affected “blue water Navy Vietnam veterans,” named for the open seas and harbors where they served.
Federally funded research by the Institute of Medicine—now the National Academy of Medicine— concludes the sailors were possibly exposed to Agent Orange via their ships’ drinking water or from winds blowing the chemical out to sea.
The 2011 study, the most recent assessment, says the blue water controversy can’t be solved with science because the military didn’t track Agent Orange’s drift and presence in the water during the war.
The Department of Veterans Affairs wants more evidence before it will award the sailors benefits—even if their health problems mirror conditions known to have been caused by Agent Orange. Under pressure from veterans, the department has made some exceptions for blue-water sailors who have non-Hodgkin lymphoma or who temporarily were on land in Vietnam or whose ships docked close to shore.
VA Secretary David Shulkin told McClatchy in a statement the department will continue its review of the blue-water sailors topic and “will be guided by the relevant science in determining any recommendations concerning this important issue.”
At first, Genco said, he was in disbelief that Agent Orange had caused his heart disease.
He’d heard only about the cancer-causing chemical dioxin in Agent Orange effectively poisoning the soldiers who had fought on land in Vietnam. He knew about the Air Force pilots and mechanics assigned to planes that extensively sprayed the herbicide on dense jungles, crops and forests in the region.
The U.S. military used Agent Orange during Operation Ranch Hand from 1962 to 1971 to eliminate heavily forested areas where enemy combatants may be hiding and to wipe out food sources for the Viet Cong army. Some children and grandchildren of both the U.S. veterans and the people of Vietnam have well-documented birth defects associated with Agent Orange exposure.
Most U.S. veterans who served in Vietnam are eligible for presumptive Agent Orange-related disability benefits, meaning the federal government thinks there’s a high likelihood that chemical exposure caused certain latein-life health problems. Presumptive benefits means individual veterans don’t have to prove they came in direct contact with Agent Orange.
Like the blue-water sailors now, other service veterans have wound their way through the VA system and fought for Agent Orange benefits even after initially being denied and told there wasn’t evidence of exposure. In 2015, the VA relented for a small group of Air Force reservists who flew C-123 planes that had been used to spray Agent Orange.
VA officials told McClatchy they don’t know how many blue-water sailors have applied for or been denied Agent Orange-related disability benefits. Since 2010, the VA has added more than 300 Navy and Coast Guard vessels to expand the pool of eligible sailors. Veterans are eligible if there’s documentation that their ships docked close to shore or traveled in inland waterways.
“The book is never closed,” said Dr. Ralph Erickson, a 32-year Army veteran who’s chief consultant at the VA overseeing veteran post-deployment health issues.
Erickson and others are running a new health survey for Vietnam veterans, including blue-water sailors, to see whether there’s new information about Agent Orange-related illnesses. The results will be published next year, comparing Vietnam veterans’ health to that of their contemporaries in the civilian population as well as military personnel at the time who served elsewhere.
The everyday uses of water—“Bathing in it. Doing laundry in it. Cooking with it. Drinking it.”—are what Genco remembers aboard one of the Navy’s largest Vietnam wartime ships. Compared with other dangers in the South China Sea at the halfway point of the Vietnam War, the USS Forrestal’s drinking water, at the time, seemed innocuous.
Not the least of the dangers was the July 29, 1967, Forrestal fire, caused when a rocket misfire triggered a chain reaction of exploding bombs. The blasts left giant holes in the ship’s flight deck, where Genco worked 12-hour days, sliding under the bellies of combat planes to ready them for takeoff.
With the fire raging, Genco and other sailors heaved heavy bombs over the side of the ship to try to contain the catastrophe. He was spared, but 134 other crew members were killed and 161 were injured.
“That was before we had body bags,” Genco said. “There were just bodies on the deck. Burnt to a crisp.”
Four months later, he left the war zone, thinking he’d escaped the worst of what Vietnam could do to him.
A fellow Navy veteran in North Carolina, Nelson Lee, understands.