AOA Otrds

STANDARD FORM NO. 64

ERNMENT
Office Memorandum * UNITED STATES GOV
TO

:; Biles

/

DATE: January 5, 1953

FROM

+ Howard Brown

oD

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SUBJECT: POLICY WITH RESPECT TO PROVIDING WEAPONS EFFECTS DATA TO FCDA

The FCDA, in a letter of December 18, 1952,
"fuller access within the AEC to information
planning.'' The letter is not specific as to
desired. By implication it would appear that
handicapped due to lack of vital information
supplied.

has indicated a need for
necessary to civil defense
the type of information
FCDA planning has been
which AEC could have

Before replying to FCDA's letter the AEC should very carefully examine
its position on the matter. In the first place, we do not admit that
the FCDA has not been given all information which they need and which
the AEC. could supply within the categories of data previously agreed
upon. in the second place, there is an obvious practical and legal
limit to the stage to which any outside agency can be taken into the
confidence of the AEC on weapons developments. On the other hand, I
question whether the AEC could take the position that no information
with respect to potential weapons effects would be made available

except as the result of actual tests.

In other words, I do not

believe it would be a very tenable or defensible policy to state that
we will provide no weapons effects information prior to a test
detonation, and together with the Military we will screen for trans~
mittal all effects data occuring after tests. It seems to me that

it is witain the realm of theoretical possibility that there now

exists or may exist a situation in which information in our possession
with respect to potential weapons effects would greatly benefit the
civil defense program of the nation even though the effects are
estimated and are not the result of actual test detonations,
Accordingly, I would think that we ought to have a clearly defined
and generally understood policy within the AEC with respect to how
much and how soon weapons effects data should be provided FCDA. It
seems to me that serious consideration should be given to a policy
which would make available to the FCDA weapons effects data within
the agreed upon categories when it appears that such data would
significantly affect or modify civil defense planning. Data would
not be limited to that resulting from test detonations but would

include effectscapableofestimationwith—measenable accuracy

provided:

US DOE ARCHIVES

326 U.S. ATOMIC ENERGY
COMMISSION

RG DOE HISTORIAN
Collection
Box _3362
Folder

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