Independent public-interest resource for U.S. veterans
Asbestos Exposure in the U.S. Military
For most of the 20th century, asbestos was built into nearly everything the armed forces used — the ships, vehicles, aircraft, engine rooms, boiler rooms, and barracks of every branch. Veterans who served for decades were exposed without warning, and many are diagnosed with mesothelioma and other asbestos-related diseases years later. This site explains, branch by branch, how that exposure happened and what a diagnosed veteran — or a surviving family member — can do about it.
If you have been diagnosed
If you served in the military and were later diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestosis, or an asbestos-related lung cancer after being exposed to asbestos-containing equipment or materials, you may have a legal claim against the companies that made those products. A filing deadline may already be running.
If you lost a loved one
If a veteran in your family passed away from mesothelioma or another asbestos-related disease, surviving spouses and children may be able to pursue a wrongful-death claim and asbestos-trust recovery on their behalf — a separate deadline that can run from the date of passing.
Two separate paths — and they don't cancel each other out
A VA disability claim for asbestos exposure is filed directly with the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. It is a government benefit, not a lawsuit, and no attorney is required. Veterans Service Organizations like the DAV, VFW, and American Legion help file these claims for free. Start at VA.gov › Hazardous Materials Exposure.
A civil claim is brought against the private companies that made and sold the asbestos products — never against the military or the government. This is the lane an asbestos attorney handles. A civil claim runs in parallel with VA benefits: pursuing one does not reduce or affect the other.
Exposure by Branch of Service
Tracked and wheeled vehicles, armor, boiler rooms, motor pools, and barracks — brake and clutch friction, gaskets, pipe insulation, and building materials.
How Army veterans were exposed ›Aircraft wheel brakes and engine gaskets, hangars, flight lines, and base boiler plants — the friction and heat-resistant materials that surrounded aircraft maintainers.
How Air Force veterans were exposed ›Amphibious ships, landing craft, combat and support vehicles, and base infrastructure — a mix of shipboard and vehicle exposure sources.
How Marines were exposed ›Cutters and ships' engine and boiler rooms, shore stations, and lighthouses — the same shipboard insulation, gaskets, and packing found across the sea services.
How Coast Guard veterans were exposed ›Go Deeper
For ship-by-ship exposure histories — individual hulls, shipyards, and shipboard ratings — visit our companion resource NavyShipExposure.com. Coast Guard cutters and Navy vessels are covered in depth there.
Look up the specific asbestos-containing products — brakes, gaskets, packing, insulation — allegedly used in military equipment, indexed by manufacturer, at Asbestos-Products.com.
Connect With a Military Asbestos & Mesothelioma Attorney
Veterans of any branch diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestosis, or an asbestos-related lung cancer may have a legal claim against the asbestos product manufacturers whose materials were allegedly present in the vehicles, aircraft, ships, and buildings where they served. O'Brien Law Firm represents veterans and their families in the civil product claim at no upfront cost — a claim against the manufacturers, never against the military, and separate from any VA disability benefits.
If you were diagnosed with an asbestos-related disease after being exposed during your service, a filing deadline may already be running. You may have a legal claim now — and claims can often be pursued even if the company is out of business.
Surviving spouses and children may pursue a wrongful-death claim and asbestos-trust recovery on a loved one's behalf — a separate deadline that can run from the date of passing.
- Free case evaluation — no obligation to hire
- No attorney fee unless a financial recovery is made
- Personal-injury and wrongful-death claims both evaluated
- Civil claims against asbestos manufacturers & bankruptcy trust funds
- Runs in parallel with VA benefits — a civil claim does not reduce VA disability compensation
VA disability benefits are separate. A VA disability claim for asbestos exposure is filed directly with the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs — not through this firm or any attorney. To file, visit VA.gov › Hazardous Materials Exposure, call 1‑800‑827‑1000, or contact a Veterans Service Organization (DAV, VFW, American Legion) for free claim assistance. The attorney's role is limited to the civil product claim against asbestos manufacturers.