Maine questions Canadian study of Agent Orange use at New Brunswick military base
FREDERICTON — Maine’s state legislature has called for a new investigation into the use of herbicides, including Agent Orange, in the 1960s on a southern New Brunswick military base, describing a Canadian study that found no risks to human health as flawed.
The potential links between health problems and the use of Agent Orange at Canadian Forces Base Gagetown need to be re-evaluated, says a report released in January by the 10-member Gagetown Harmful Chemical Study Commission.
A new investigation, it said, would help United States veterans access medical care if they had worked at the base, where in 1966 and 1967 the American military tested defoliants such as Agent Orange, which was used extensively by U.S. forces during the Vietnam War to destroy crops of the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese.
The commission’s report said the data and analysis in the Canadian study is “incorrect, biased, and based on, in some cases, incomplete data and poor study design — at times exacerbated by the rapid period in which these reports were required to be conducted and issued.”


