Nov 1, 2018 Nov 1, 2018 Updated Sep 14, 2020 After serving in three wars, it wasn't armed conflict that killed Rear Adm. Emmett Bonner. It was cancer, possibly caused by the herbicide Agent Orange.
The U.S. Veterans Administration should pay retroactive benefits to thousands of Navy veterans who served on ships off Vietnam’s coast for Agent Orange-related health problems without making them file ...
(WRDW/WAGT) - Our I-TEAM has uncovered documents that could show Agent Orange was stored at Fort Eisenhower for years longer than the government admits. The VA routinely denies veterans benefits ...
The U.S. Veterans Administration must honor the terms of a 1991 settlement and pay retroactive benefits to thousands of Navy veterans who served on ships off Vietnam’s coast for Agent Orange-related ...
This cost is rather evident from the lingering health issues experienced by Agent Orange veterans as well as their children and grandchildren. In Larry’s case, for example, effects of Agent ...
VA recently added 22 additional U.S. Navy ships to the presumption of Agent Orange list ... For more on veteran benefits, visit the Military.com Benefits Center.
A new system of benefits was established including ... 1996 that the government agreed to compensate veterans that were victims of Agent Orange. Organizations such as the Veterans of Foreign ...