Study: U.S. Troops Food Loaded with Pesticides, Banned Vet Drugs, and Heavy Metals

American military personnel may be consuming dangerously contaminated food on a daily basis, according to a new independent laboratory analysis commissioned by Moms Across America, with support from the Children’s Health Defense Military Chapter and Centner Academy. The testing examined 40 military meals, including Meals Ready to Eat and cafeteria food from six bases, and reported widespread contamination with toxic pesticides, banned veterinary drugs, heavy metals, and glyphosate.

The urgency is hard to overstate. Soldiers often rely on these meals exclusively during training and deployment. If the findings are accurate, the people responsible for defending the nation are being exposed to substances that could undermine their health, performance, and readiness.

Licensed nutritionist Kendall Mackintosh said, “America’s service members are trained to withstand extreme physical, mental, and environmental stress in defense of the nation. In return, the United States has a fundamental obligation to protect their health, safety, and well-being, especially when it comes to the food they are required to consume daily.” She concluded that the results raise “urgent and deeply troubling concerns that this obligation is not being met.”

Moms Across America commissioned independent laboratory testing of 40 military food samples. The samples included 24 MREs and 16 cafeteria items containing ingredients such as wheat, corn, soy, and meat. The testing looked for pesticides, glyphosate and its metabolite AMPA, heavy metals, and veterinary drugs and hormones.

Zen Honeycutt, founder of Moms Across America, described the results bluntly: “What we found was extremely disappointing. And in fact, it was stunning.”

Pesticides found in every sample tested
The laboratory testing reported that 100 percent of military food samples tested positive for pesticide residues. A total of 62 pesticides and chemical mixtures were detected across the samples.

More than 70 percent of the foods contained multiple pesticide residues, ranging from 2 to 26 different chemicals. Some individual items contained between 15 and 26 pesticide residues. The report states that these chemical mixtures have not been evaluated for cumulative or synergistic health effects.

Specific examples included:

  • An applesauce sample with more than 1,300 parts per billion of pesticide residues.
  • The fungicide pyrimethanil detected at 954.09 parts per billion in one sample and described as a possible human carcinogen.
  • The fungicide chlorothalonil detected at 115.09 parts per billion and described as a probable carcinogen.

The report also states that 100 percent of the pesticides detected are known to be produced in China, with 65 percent primarily produced there, raising supply chain concerns. Honeycutt said, “Unfortunately, 100 percent of those pesticides are made in China, which is concerning.”

Glyphosate contamination was nearly universal
The testing reported that 19 out of 20 samples, or 95 percent, contained detectable glyphosate and AMPA. The material cites Dr. Don Huber stating that exposure to 0.1 parts per billion is harmful and should be avoided. Using that benchmark, the report says most samples exceeded that level, with some reaching as high as 63.9 parts per billion.

The report explains that glyphosate can enter food through heavy use on commodity crops such as corn, soy, and wheat, including spraying during crop growth and pre-harvest use as a drying agent.

Honeycutt said the combined exposures matter: “These different chemicals mixed with heavy metals, veterinary drugs and hormones can impact their ability to function and to think and to be at their best performance.”

Banned veterinary drugs detected in military meals
Testing of 10 meals for veterinary drugs identified five pharmaceutical compounds, four of which are described as banned in most countries or not approved for human use.

Examples reported include:

  • Hydroxy-dimetridazole detected at 161.81 parts per billion in a teriyaki beef stick, described as banned for use in food-producing animals in multiple countries.
  • Trenbolone acetate detected at 47.44 parts per billion, described as a growth hormone not approved for human use.
  • Monensin detected in 5 out of 10 samples.
  • Ractopamine detected in one sample at 3.248 parts per billion.
  • Nicarbazin detected at trace levels in two samples.

The report states that the presence of banned or unapproved drugs suggests illegal use or contamination from imported meat. Honeycutt said, “These banned veterinary drugs imply either illegal use or that the meat that they were found in are imported from, for instance, China or Africa or other countries.”

Heavy metals were found in every sample
The testing summary reports that 100 percent of samples contained arsenic, cadmium, lead, mercury, and aluminum. Some levels were compared to EPA drinking water standards as a reference point.

Examples included:

  • Arsenic up to 53.1 parts per billion.
  • Cadmium up to 51.4 parts per billion.
  • Lead detected at 8.97 parts per billion in one sample.
  • Mercury detected at 1.20 parts per billion.
  • Aluminum reaching 34,800 parts per billion in a chicken meal, described as far above EPA drinking water guidance levels.

Honeycutt said, “We also found 100 percent of these samples were positive for heavy metals.”

The material points to several possible pathways. These include chemical-intensive farming practices that leave pesticide residues on crops, glyphosate contamination of animal feed that transfers into meat, imported ingredients or meat products that may contain banned veterinary drugs, and supply chain vulnerabilities tied to foreign production of agricultural chemicals.

The scale of the issue is potentially enormous. The material states that more than 1.5 billion military meals and 37 million MREs are served every year. If contamination is widespread, the exposure could affect a large portion of the force.

The report links the problem to long-standing agricultural and procurement practices, including decades of chemical-intensive farming and reliance on commodity ingredients. It notes that the tested ingredients were likely grown or imported during the Biden Administration while also indicating the issue spans multiple administrations.

The Trump Administration Responds with Quick Action

The Trump administration is launching a new push to improve food quality at military bases.

Moms Across America said it learned from the Department of Health and Human Services that 20 military bases plan to roll out “Real Food Pilot” programs over the next two months. The goal is to improve meal quality and sourcing.

U.S. Army Under Secretary Michael Obadal said, “Our mission is to ensure the American soldier is the most fueled, most fit, and most lethal human weapon system on the planet.” He added that the Army is shifting to a campus-style dining model after finding the previous system pushed soldiers toward low nutrient processed foods.

The effort comes alongside broader military health changes, including stricter fitness standards under Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth.

Service members do not choose their food. They are issued meals as part of their duty. If those meals contain harmful contaminants, it is not just a nutrition problem. It becomes a readiness problem and a moral failure.

Army veteran and former USDA contractor Charlene Guzman said, “Providing access to clean, nutrient-dense food is not a luxury. It is a basic measure of care, dignity, and respect for those who serve.”

NP Editor: Is any of this overblown? We have little expertise in knowing how many parts per billion is harmful in any of the substances found here. How much of this is due to the preservatives that give the food longevity? If anyone has definitive knowledge please comment below. The author has spent about 10 weeks in total living on MRE’s and has suffered no ill effects.

The impact of the report, whether it is overly alarmist or not, is that the Trump Administration has already responded and food for U.S. servicemen is being scrutinized. Well done, Moms.