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Military Exposure Overview

From WikiMesothelioma — Mesothelioma Knowledge Base


Military Asbestos Exposure Facts
What every veteran should know
Veterans Affected 30-33% of all mesothelioma cases
Highest Risk Branch U.S. Navy (SMR 2.15)
VA Disability (2026) $3,938.58/month (100% rating)
Avg. Settlement $1 - $1.4 million
Peak Exposure Era 1940s - 1980s
Branch Pages Air Force
Free Veteran Case Review →

Military Exposure Overview provides comprehensive documentation of asbestos exposure patterns across all five branches of the United States Armed Forces. Veterans comprise 30-33% of all mesothelioma diagnoses in America despite representing only 7-8% of the population, making military service one of the strongest risk factors for developing this aggressive cancer.[1] A landmark 65-year follow-up study of 114,000 atomic veterans found Navy personnel face the highest risk with an SMR of 2.15, while high-risk Navy ratings show an SMR of 6.47.[2] Veterans diagnosed with mesothelioma qualify for VA disability benefits worth $3,938.58 monthly (2026 rates), plus trust fund claims averaging $250,000-$500,000 and legal settlements ranging from $1 million to over $11 million.[3]

Military asbestos exposure at a glance:

  • 30-33% of all cases — veterans account for roughly one-third of U.S. mesothelioma diagnoses despite being only 7-8% of the population
  • 3x higher risk — veterans are approximately three times more likely to develop mesothelioma than the general population
  • Navy SMR of 2.15 — U.S. Navy personnel have the highest overall mesothelioma risk among military branches with high-risk ratings reaching 6.47
  • 803,000 tons peak consumption — the United States consumed a record volume of asbestos in 1973 during the Vietnam era
  • $3,938.58 per month — VA disability compensation at 100% rating for single veterans diagnosed with mesothelioma (2026 rates)
  • $1-$1.4 million average settlement — legal compensation for veteran mesothelioma cases with trial verdicts averaging $2.4-$20.7 million
  • 60+ active trust funds — holding $30+ billion in combined compensation with average recovery of $250,000-$500,000 per claimant
  • PACT Act (2022) — mesothelioma is now a presumptive condition for VA disability claims, significantly streamlining the approval process
  • Feres Doctrine exception — veterans cannot sue the government but CAN sue asbestos product manufacturers who supplied the military
  • Presumptive service connection — the VA assumes mesothelioma is service-related without requiring proof of specific exposure incidents

Key Facts

Military Asbestos Exposure Key Facts
  • Veteran Percentage: 30-33% of all U.S. mesothelioma cases occur in veterans (approximately 1,000 diagnoses annually)
  • Risk Multiplier: Veterans are 3 times more likely to develop mesothelioma than the general population
  • Peak Consumption: U.S. consumed over 700,000 tons of asbestos annually during Vietnam era, reaching 803,000 tons in 1973
  • Navy Risk: Navy personnel have SMR of 2.15; high-risk ratings reach SMR of 6.47
  • VA Benefits: 100% disability rating provides $3,938.58/month for single veterans (2026 rates)
  • Legal Compensation: Documented veteran verdicts range from $2.6 million to over $11 million
  • Trust Funds: 60+ active trusts hold $30+ billion; average combined recovery $250,000-$500,000 per claimant
  • Processing Time: VA claims average 146.4 days; trust fund claims typically 90-180 days
  • PACT Act: Mesothelioma is presumptive for VA claims — no need to prove specific exposure incidents

✓ Good News for Veterans: Mesothelioma qualifies for presumptive service connection with the VA under the PACT Act. This means the VA assumes your cancer is service-related without requiring you to prove specific exposure incidents—significantly streamlining the claims process.[4]

Branch-by-Branch Exposure Guides

Detailed Exposure Guides by Military Branch
Branch Mesothelioma Risk (SMR) Primary Exposure Sources Detailed Guide
U.S. Navy 2.15 (High-risk ratings: 6.47) Ships, shipyards, engine rooms, boiler rooms Navy Ships Asbestos Database
U.S. Coast Guard 5.07 (Curtis Bay shipyard workers) Cutters, shipyards, Curtis Bay facility Coming soon
U.S. Air Force 0.85 (ICBM workers: significantly elevated) Aircraft maintenance, ICBM silos, base facilities Air Force Asbestos Exposure
U.S. Marines 0.75 Navy ships (dual service), vehicles, base facilities Coming soon
U.S. Army 0.45 Vehicles, base construction, HVAC systems Coming soon

Why Do Veterans Face Higher Mesothelioma Risk?

Veterans are approximately three times more likely to develop mesothelioma compared to the general population.[1] This dramatic disparity stems from the military's extensive use of asbestos in virtually every aspect of operations from the 1930s through the early 1980s. Asbestos was considered an ideal material for military applications because of its heat resistance, durability, and low cost.

"The evidence we've seen over decades of representing veterans consistently shows that military asbestos exposure was pervasive and often unavoidable," explains Paul Danziger of Danziger & De Llano. "Service members had no choice about where they served or what materials surrounded them. The companies that supplied asbestos products to the military knew the dangers but prioritized profits over the health of those who served."

The military used asbestos in ships, aircraft, vehicles, buildings, and equipment. During the peak consumption years of the Vietnam era, the United States consumed over 700,000 tons of asbestos annually, reaching an all-time high of 803,000 tons in 1973. Much of this material found its way into military applications where service members worked in close proximity to asbestos-containing products daily.[5]

How Does Risk Vary by Military Branch?

A landmark 65-year follow-up study of 114,000 atomic veterans who participated in nuclear weapons testing between 1945 and 1962 provides the most reliable comparative data on mesothelioma risk by branch.[2] The study calculated Standardized Mortality Ratios (SMR) that reveal significant differences in risk based on service branch.

Branch SMR (Mesothelioma) Risk Level Primary Exposure Sources
U.S. Navy 2.15 (High-risk ratings: 6.47) Highest Ships, shipyards, engine rooms, boiler rooms
U.S. Coast Guard 5.07 (shipyard workers) Very High Cutters, shipyards, Curtis Bay facility
U.S. Air Force 0.85 Moderate Aircraft maintenance, base facilities, ICBM sites
U.S. Marines 0.75 Moderate Navy ships, vehicles, aircraft, base facilities
U.S. Army 0.45 Lower Overall Vehicles, base facilities, construction

These SMR values demonstrate that Navy personnel faced dramatically elevated risk due to continuous shipboard exposure in poorly ventilated spaces. However, individual risk within any branch depended heavily on specific occupation and duty assignment.[6]

U.S. Navy: Highest Overall Risk

The U.S. Navy has the highest documented mesothelioma rate among all military branches. Navy personnel are twice as likely to develop mesothelioma compared to the general population, and approximately one-third of all Americans with asbestos-related diseases served in the Navy.[7]

ℹ Key Statistic: The Navy used over 300 million pounds of asbestos between 1940 and 1970, with more than 3,300 vessels containing asbestos materials. Every major ship class incorporated asbestos extensively.

The VA has classified 18 Navy ratings as having "Highly Probable" asbestos exposure, including Boiler Technician (BT), Damage Controlman (DC), Engineman (EN), Machinist's Mate (MM), Hull Maintenance Technician (HT), Interior Communications Electrician (IC), Water Tender (WT), Machinery Repairman (MR), and Gas Turbine Systems Technicians (GSE/GSM).[8]

"Navy veterans often tell us they remember the white dust that covered everything below decks," notes Rod De Llano. "They didn't know at the time that dust was asbestos fibers that would stay in their lungs for decades. The ships were floating asbestos environments, and the men who served on them had no way to avoid exposure."

For comprehensive information on Navy-specific exposure, see our detailed guides on Navy vessels and shipyard exposure.

U.S. Air Force: Aircraft, Bases, and ICBM Exposure

Main article: Air Force Asbestos Exposure

While the Air Force overall SMR of 0.85 shows no statistically significant elevation, specific Air Force occupations carried substantial risk. A 2023 Associated Press investigation revealed that ICBM launch control centers contained materials with asbestos concentrations up to 50 times EPA safety limits, and the subsequent Missile Community Cancer Study identified 198 cancer cases among 2.2 million service records.[9]

Air Force veterans faced asbestos exposure through three primary pathways:

  • Aircraft maintenance — Over a dozen aircraft types manufactured before the 1980s contained asbestos in brakes (16-23% composition), engine gaskets, heat shields, and electrical insulation. AFSCs including Aircraft Maintenance (2A5X1), Aerospace Propulsion (2A6X1), and Crew Chiefs faced daily contact with these materials.[10]
  • Base facilities — At least 25 Air Force installations have documented asbestos contamination, with George AFB requiring $113 million in cleanup and Kelly AFB costing $329 million for total remediation. Seven bases are EPA Superfund sites.[11]
  • ICBM missile sites — Minuteman and Titan missile facilities used asbestos extensively in launch control centers, silos, and connecting tunnels. Underground capsules contained thermal system pipe insulation with 15-30% chrysotile asbestos, while acoustic tiles in Quebec-series capsules contained up to 50% amosite asbestos.

For the complete Air Force exposure analysis — including base-by-base contamination data, all 13 high-risk AFSCs, 14 aircraft models with asbestos components, ICBM facility details, and government investigation findings — see Air Force Asbestos Exposure.

U.S. Army: Vehicle and Base Facility Exposure

While the Army has the lowest overall SMR (0.45) among military branches, individual soldiers in certain occupations faced substantial risk. The Army's ground-based operations resulted in different exposure patterns than naval service, but asbestos was pervasive in vehicles, buildings, and equipment.[12]

Unlike the Navy, the VA has not created official MOS exposure classifications for Army veterans. However, these occupations carry documented elevated risk: Wheeled Vehicle Mechanic (91B), Combat Engineer (12B), Motor Transport Operator (88M), construction engineers, HVAC technicians, boiler technicians, and aircraft mechanics.[13]

Multiple Army installations have documented asbestos contamination requiring ongoing remediation, including Fort Bragg, NC (1,200 soldiers relocated from asbestos barracks in 2022), Fort Lewis, WA (EPA Superfund Site with 100+ contaminated structures), Fort Hood, TX (150+ WWII-era buildings demolished), and Fort Benning, GA.[14]

All military vehicles manufactured before the early 1980s contained asbestos in brake pads, clutches, gaskets, heating systems, and engine components — including M48/M60 Patton tanks, early M1 Abrams, M113 APCs, and M109 self-propelled howitzers. Vehicle mechanics who performed brake and clutch work faced particularly high exposure as these repairs released concentrated asbestos fibers directly into the breathing zone.

U.S. Marines: Dual Exposure From Ship and Shore

Marines face a unique exposure pattern because they served both on Navy ships and in ground-based operations. The overall SMR of 0.75 reflects this mixed exposure profile, but individual Marines in certain roles faced substantial risk.[15]

Prior to 1998, entire Marine Detachments (MARDETs) deployed on Navy vessels, exposing Marines to the same shipboard asbestos environment as Navy sailors. Marines living in berthing areas, working in shipyards, and traveling on Navy ships experienced significant exposure identical to their Navy counterparts.

Multiple Marine Corps installations have documented asbestos contamination: Camp Lejeune, NC (700+ sq ft asbestos floor tiles found in 2018), Camp Pendleton, CA (EPA Superfund Site affecting 36,000 personnel), MCAS Yuma, AZ (asbestos soil contamination up to 1 foot deep), and MCAS Tustin, CA (2023 hangar fire spread asbestos debris within a 3-mile radius).[16]

⚠ Burn Pit Exposure: Over 141,000 veterans have formally reported health conditions from burn pit exposure. Many burn pits contained asbestos-containing materials, creating additional exposure pathways for Marines and other service members in Iraq and Afghanistan. 54-67% of Iraq bases and 59-71% of Afghanistan bases still had burn pits during 2011-2013 despite DoD prohibition.

U.S. Coast Guard: Shipyard and Cutter Exposure

Coast Guard personnel who worked on ships and in shipyards faced exposure patterns similar to Navy personnel. The Curtis Bay Shipyard study of 4,702 civilian workers (1950-1964) documented an SMR of 5.07 for mesothelioma—one of the highest documented rates for any occupational group.[17] Workers employed at Curtis Bay for 10 or more years were 33% more likely to die from mesothelioma than those with shorter tenure.

Over 300 Coast Guard cutters built between the 1930s and 1991 contained asbestos materials, including Hamilton-class high endurance cutters, medium endurance cutters, Polar-class icebreakers, and pre-1991 patrol boats. The Coast Guard officially stopped using asbestos in new cutters in 1991, but legacy asbestos remains in older vessels still in service.

High-risk Coast Guard ratings include Machinery Technician (MK), Damage Controlman (DC), Electrician's Mate (EM), shipyard workers, and ship maintenance personnel.

What Compensation Can Veterans Receive?

Veterans diagnosed with mesothelioma can pursue multiple compensation sources simultaneously. These sources are independent—receiving VA benefits does not reduce eligibility for legal settlements or trust fund claims.[3]

VA Disability Benefits

Mesothelioma qualifies for 100% disability rating from the VA, providing substantial monthly payments:[4]

  • Single veterans: $3,938.58/month (2026 rates)
  • Married veterans: approximately $4,156/month
  • Additional allowances for dependents

VA claims processing averages 146.4 days as of January 2025. The PACT Act (2022) made mesothelioma a presumptive condition, meaning the VA assumes it is service-connected without requiring proof of specific exposure incidents.[18]

Veterans have secured substantial legal compensation through lawsuits against asbestos product manufacturers:[19]

Branch Case Details Amount
Air Force Arizona veteran $11+ million
Navy Massachusetts family $9.3 million
Army Maryland heavy equipment operator $5.31 million
Navy Indiana boiler room repairman $4.42 million
Army Ohio construction worker $4.35 million
Army Colorado veteran $3.4 million
Marines Virginia insulator $2.6 million

Average settlements range from $1 million to $1.4 million, while trial verdicts average $2.4 million to $20.7 million.

ℹ Feres Doctrine: Under the Feres Doctrine, veterans cannot sue the federal government for injuries sustained during military service. However, veterans can sue the private manufacturers and suppliers of asbestos-containing products used by the military. This distinction is critical — the companies that sold asbestos brake pads, insulation, and fireproofing to the Armed Forces are legally liable.

Asbestos Trust Funds

Over 60 asbestos bankruptcy trusts hold more than $30 billion in compensation funds. Veterans can typically file claims against multiple trusts, with average combined recovery of $250,000-$500,000 per claimant.[20]

See our complete trust fund guide for detailed information on available trusts and filing procedures.

How Do Veterans Prove Military Asbestos Exposure?

ℹ Important: Veterans do not need to prove a specific exposure incident to receive VA benefits. The VA uses a probability-based system that considers your service branch, MOS/rating, duty stations, and service dates.[2]

Documentation That Strengthens Claims

Documents you should gather:

  • DD-214 (discharge papers)
  • Service records showing duty stations and assignments
  • Medical records with mesothelioma diagnosis
  • Personnel records listing MOS/rating
  • Ship assignments or base assignments

Documents attorneys can obtain:

  • Asbestos product identification records
  • Company internal documents showing knowledge of hazards
  • Historical exposure documentation for your duty stations
  • Expert witness reports connecting exposure to disease
"We've helped thousands of veterans document their exposure," explains Rod De Llano of Danziger & De Llano. "Even when service records are incomplete, we can often establish exposure through ship records, base environmental reports, and testimony from fellow service members. The key is working with attorneys who understand both military service and asbestos litigation."

Special Populations: Who Else Is Affected?

Women Veterans

Women veterans faced the same asbestos exposure as men in similar occupations. No comprehensive studies exist on gender-specific mesothelioma rates among veterans, but women who served in contaminated facilities face the same disease risk as male veterans.

Reserve and National Guard

Weekend drill exposure at armories and training facilities created asbestos risk for Reserve and Guard members. The 9/11 toxic dust cloud demonstrated that even single exposure events can cause mesothelioma—a 2022 American Cancer Society study found that 9 individuals developed mesothelioma after 9/11 exposure alone.[16]

Military Families

Family members living on military bases or with service members faced secondary exposure through:[21]

  • Asbestos fibers carried home on uniforms, shoes, and equipment
  • Contaminated base housing (a 2020 DoD Inspector General report found "systematic deficiencies" in asbestos management)
  • Environmental exposure from deteriorating base structures

Families may qualify for VA survivor benefits and can pursue independent legal claims against asbestos manufacturers.

What Should Veterans Do Next?

Free, Confidential Case Evaluation

Call (866) 222-9990 or visit dandell.com/contact-us

No upfront fees • Experienced representation • National practice


⚠ Statute of Limitations Warning: Filing deadlines vary by state from 1-6 years from diagnosis. Texas allows 2 years from diagnosis or discovery. Contact an attorney immediately to preserve your rights.
Resource What You'll Learn
Air Force Asbestos Exposure Complete Air Force analysis: 25+ bases, 13 AFSCs, ICBM exposure, aircraft models
Veterans Benefits Complete guide to VA disability, DIC, and healthcare benefits
VA Benefits for Veterans with Mesothelioma VA claims process, presumptive conditions, and filing guidance
Navy Ships Asbestos Database Vessel-specific exposure documentation
Veterans Mesothelioma Quick Reference Quick-access veteran statistics and compensation data
Asbestos Trust Funds How to access $30+ billion in available compensation
Statute of Limitations by State Critical filing deadlines for your state
Occupational Exposure Index Cross-reference military and civilian occupation exposure data

References


This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or medical advice. Consult qualified professionals for guidance specific to your situation.

Last updated: February 2026