The “Rainbow Herbicides” left a lethal legacy.
SEP 14, 2017 by ERIN BLAKEMORE
While Agent Orange may be the most well-known chemical used during the Vietnam War, it wasn’t the only one. An entire rainbow of new chemical formulations rained down on Vietnam’s forests and fields. The Rainbow Herbicides, as they were known, were only used as weapons in the war for a little over a decade, but their consequences can still be felt today.
The chemicals were deployed as part of Operation Ranch Hand, a military operation that lasted from 1962 to 1971. Ranch Hand’s unofficial motto—“only you can prevent a forest”—riffed off of Smokey Bear’s plea for people to prevent forest fires. The wry sarcasm of the phrase sums up the irony of the mission. Controversial then and now, it’s still not clear whether Operation Ranch Hand, a form of chemical warfare, was even permitted under international law.
Herbicidal warfare had been a military dream since the 1940s, when Allied researchers began to brainstorm ways to use chemicals to scorch the earth. However, early plans to use chemicals to, for example, starve the Japanese by ruining their rice crops, faltered.

In the 1950s, Britain became involved in the Malayan Emergency, an insurgency in a former British colony in what is now Malaysia. In an attempt to starve out Communist insurgents, British troops sprayed the lush forests with a substance similar to what became Agent Orange. The insurgents did fall, but the chemical spray had other lasting effects—severe soil erosion and lifelong health problems for Malayans.
“I remember the sight and the smell of the spray,” recalls Thomas Pilsch, who served as a forward air controller in South Vietnam in 1968 and 1969. In the early morning low angle sunlight, it appeared to have an orange hue.” By spraying Agent Orange, he thought he was helping the United States military bust through Vietnam’s impenetrable jungles on the way to victory.
The Geneva Protocol, developed after World War I to prohibit the use of chemical and biological weapons in war, would seem to forbid the use of these chemicals. But Britain argued that the conflict was an emergency, not a war—and that the treaty didn’t outlaw using chemicals for police actions.

The success of the operation—and its justification—prompted the United States to keep experimenting with the chemicals. In 1961, test runs began.
The U.S. had a rainbow of chemicals at their disposal. They were nicknamed according to the color on the barrels in which they were shipped. (Agent Orange didn’t appear orange, though it looked like that to Pilsch.) Once Operation Ranch Hand began, around 20 million gallons of Agents Green, Pink, Purple, Blue, White, Orange, Orange II, Orange III, and Super Orange were sprayed over South Vietnam. The chemicals were produced by companies like DOW Chemical, Monsanto, and Hercules, Inc.
“Trail dust” operations were conducted by the U.S. Air Force, whose “cowboys” flew C-123s escorted by fighters. As they approached a strategic target—dense, jungled areas that provided cover for the Viet Cong or crops suspected to feed their troops—the fighter jets would shoot down bombs and napalm. Then the sprayers would move in and douse an area with the chemical.
American soldiers were told the chemicals were safe. They were also effective. “We just blew away that jungle,” recalled Tom Essler, a U.S. Marine who served in Vietnam between 1967 and 1968, in an oral history. “Between the B-52 strikes and the Agent Orange, that lovely lush jungle around Khe Sanh was turned brown.”

As the jungle died, so did crops. Famine, malnourishment and starvation set in. By the end of the war, over 3.6 million acres had been sprayed with Rainbow Herbicides.
So had millions of Vietnamese people. (Though estimates vary, the government of Vietnam says that 4 million were exposed to the chemicals, 3 million of whom now suffer from health consequences.) American soldiers had also been exposed to the herbicides, reassured by their superiors that they presented no risk.
Not true: Sixty-five percent of the United States’ rainbow of chemicals contained dioxins—known carcinogens. Dioxins enter the bloodstream after being eaten or touched, build up in the food chain and can cause reproductive problems, cancer, hormonal interference, immune system damage, and developmental issues.

Contaminated soils, permanent forest loss, soil erosion, and other environmental damage have haunted Vietnam for years. It took years for the United States military to acknowledge that the chemicals were, in fact, harmful and even longer for them to begin compensating victims for their effects.
Meanwhile, the children of veterans and Vietnamese people exposed to the chemicals were born with serious birth defects and illnesses. In the United States alone, a ProPublica analysis suggests, a child born to a veteran exposed to Agent Orange was a third more likely to be born with a birth defect. And in Vietnam, people who lived beneath the rain of rainbow chemicals have experienced generations of health effects.
In recent years, it has become clear that not only did the government know about the herbicides’ awful effects, but that they relied on chemical companies for technical guidance instead of their own staff. The companies could have used fewer or no dioxins in their products, but they failed to do so. It’s an even more sobering twist to an already terrible story—one that keeps on illuminating the horrors of the Vietnam War decades after it came to an end.
Here’s a short (2.5 minute) video about Agent Orange:
https://www.history.com/embed/1053054019675
This article originally appeared in the History dot com website. Here is the direct link: https://www.history.com/news/agent-orange-wasnt-the-only-deadly-chemical-used-in-vietnam?sf100170174=1&fbclid=IwAR03Tl0JWSB9ULo4wd_ccmXwgnNJEW27C4kBQulc8mD1ze_DianCB6iuhrk
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I was a helicopter pilot ,a co 158 by 101 div 1969 1970 I was taxed to spray Deflolate around fire bases. The objective was to take away cover from the bad guys . The system used was a 150 gal sprayer powered by the air craft electric. They would load the tank and booms into the Uh 1 cargo bay and then pump the chemicals into the empty tank.
As they were loading I could smell the chemicals I told the loaders are f-/- in’s crazy . No dilution I was a farmer in my other life. We would spray wheat at a rate of 6 oz in 2 gal. Of water to spray1 acre, This stuff was much stronger . And we would apply it at 20 gallons per acre. They called it agent orange because it came in orange 55 gal barrels. So by spraying this shit along all roads rivers and crops So we drank it ate it showered with it no wonder. Also bad mission you always were shot at cause that’s where the bad guys were.
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This stuff killed my husband. The crazy part is that they think I might have it as well. This is something else. Our own government is killing us all. I am scared to death that it might be true.
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Patricia;
I am sorry to hear about your husband. This is the sad part of it all. I know war is not fair sometimes to kill some we kill all. I wish we could get a purple heart for that. This is not that a purple heart would help, at least they would remember us even after we are gone. This would be also something for you that they cared for your husband he was not forgotten. God bless you and sorry for your loss.
“WE WILL NEVER FORGET ALL WHO SERVED.”
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I served in Vietnam during the heaviest spraying of Agent Orange et al (67-68) and in the area of Vietnam with the greatest concentration (III & IV Corps). I’m the first of my family to incur cancer (Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma).
Our commander told us that the sticky gooey stuff all around us and on our helicopters was harmless.
Sadly, we were young and naïve. Those of us still here are paying the price, but quickly disappearing.
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I served in 3 and 4 Corp at long Binh we had barrels at the motor pool. Used sprayer full to keep the fence lines clear. We thought we were making it better. Yes I to suffer with the effects of agent Orange. I hope all who are in the same boat that you get help.
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Read the Hatfield report done in Hanoi in 2002. Very detailed about the chemicals Pay particular attention to the paragraph that discusses killing of living Organisms. They knew in 62.
I tried to post the report but facebook deleted it and will not allow reposting. I found it when wondering when was it tested and when did the scientists know of the toxicity.
Rey Rivera
Sent from my iPad
>
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Two million eight hundred thousand of us fought in the Vietnam War. Between 1975 and 2015 some two million of us died. We have been dying at the rate of one hundred fifty thousand a year since then. No 2021 for us!! Our government has killed more of us than the enemy ever did!!–Tom Reilly
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I was in Vietnam in July 1968 to July 1969 I had cancer we move from my top of my head.
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thank you for this info. our gov’t sucks. they lied to draft us, then tried to kill us with “defoliants”, then lied about how many americans were killed over there. I have no doubt our “depleted uranium” ammo will be killing americans for decades. anybody joining up as a mercenary to fight in the sand box should kill every leader over captain that they come across. they are all bastards killing their own soldiers. how about returning to the dept of DEFENSE with little if any offensive powers. except for nuclear weapons, the air farce is useless.
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A Historic note.
During World War II chemical herbicides came within inches of being used. Agent Blue was the first type of herbicide that developed for military use, and was created by the British at their chemical weapons establishment at Porton Down for the purpose of attacking water-borne crops, such as rice and millet. During the late Summer of 1945, a special squadron of RAF Lancasters was deployed to Okinawa. They had been modified with spray tanks in their weapon bays and their crews had trained to fly at very low level at night. Their missions would have involved systematic use of Agent Blue against Japan’s rice crop, combined with a massive tactical bombing campaign against Japans’ dikes, dams, canals, and waterways.
The purpose being to destroy the nation’s rice crop, with the ultimate goal of starving the nation into submission.
The nuclear strikes against Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and the subsequent Japanese surrender prevented this from happening. But its also a bit chilling to know that had the nuclear bombs malfunctioned, the Allies had another potential holocaust in the wings to unleash on Japan and its people.
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The article was great it affected all of us. Now here they have round-up to kill the rest of us. I think all the guys with problems from Agent Orange should get purple hearts. You get them for injuries and death service connection is this consideration the same. Thank God to all those that came home and prayers for those that have passed.
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