PLAY PODCASTS
December 10, 1996: Gulf War Syndrome - Joyce Riley

December 10, 1996: Gulf War Syndrome - Joyce Riley

The Art Bell Archive · Arthur William Bell III

July 31, 20232h 55m

Audio is streamed directly from the publisher (archive.org) as published in their RSS feed. Play Podcasts does not host this file. Rights-holders can request removal through the copyright & takedown page.

Show Notes

Joyce Riley, a former Air Force flight nurse and spokesperson for the American Gulf War Veterans Association, delivers a devastating account of what she calls the worst cover-up in American history. She reports that 200,000 of the 700,000 troops who served in the Persian Gulf are now ill, with over 15,000 veterans believed dead from war-related illness. Riley draws a critical distinction between chemical exposure and the far more dangerous biological agents that veterans are bringing home to their families.

Riley reads from a classified Joint Chiefs of Staff document detailing 50 Iraqi soldiers killed by sporulated anthrax spores near Baghdad, proving biological weapons were present on the battlefield despite official Pentagon denials. She reveals that 80 percent of sick veterans have transmitted the illness to family members, creating a spreading communicable disease the government refuses to acknowledge. The VA restricts treatment of Gulf War veterans to three patients at a time while denying them doxycycline, the one antibiotic shown to be effective.

Gulf War veterans call in throughout the broadcast, describing memory loss, circulation failure, and fibromyalgia diagnoses. Riley notes that France, the only coalition nation to give prophylactic doxycycline and skip experimental inoculations, reports zero sick veterans. The episode stands as an unflinching indictment of institutional betrayal.