We accept VISA & M/C by phone; Int’l Money Orders by Mail and now Paypal
.
Please Note: This Donate Button is NOT attached to any particular item - so please email us your choices. Also shipping charges apply - call or email for quote first!

Health, Education Details

 

Use these arrows to scroll through the catalog alphabetically (up arrow goes to catalog listing).

BRINGING THE WAR HOME

William Thomas

Call 1-800-294-5250 to order

USD$

CAD$

25.24

24.95

448 Pages, by William Thomas. Bringing the War Home is a war story unlike any you will ever read. Drawing on his experiences as a reporter and environmental emergency response worker in the war-torn Persian Gulf - as well as US congressional and military records never before assembled in a single volume - William Thomas takes readers from nighttime missile attacks on American forces and frantic cries of "gas, gas, gas!" to the dazed survivors of Baghdad bombing raids and the wreckage-clogged Highway to Hell. But this is only the beginning of a book that is really three volumes in one. In part two, this award winning journalist and former member of the US military lays bare a Pentagon cover-up intended to bury forever Washington's complicity in supplying the chemical and biological weaponry thrown into its soldiers faces. A succession of shocking disclosures leads us through a labyrinth of political expediency and military incompetence which saw American troops and support personnel inoculated with experimental vaccines - including a nerve agent pill that amplified the effects of the sarin nerve gas repeatedly detected in their positions. In a climactic courtroom-style drama, US Senator Donald Riegle confronts the head of the US Army's Chemical Warfare Department and demands the truth. Part three of this remarkable and timely book is a mini-medical thriller. Looking over the shoulders of medical investigators we peer into powerful microscopes as they search for a mysterious malady first identified as a syndrome, and later simply called Gulf War Illness. With official US combat-related casualties now exceeding 6,200 dead - and more than 100,000 returning American GI's stricken by a confusing spectrum of degenerative ailments that appear to be spreading to their spouses and children - researchers race the clock and their own superiors’ orders to desist to find the causes of a disease described as more baffling than AIDS. This book concludes with good news: Gulf War Illness can be treated. The chapter on successful treatments will bring new hope to those afflicted by this multi-faceted disease.