CHAPTER 14.1
GENERAL
The isolation of the Project, though important for scientific purposes, led to the major handicap in supply. Logistics were greatly

complicated by the fact that the Project site was not located on any

established commercial maritime route nor on any commercial air route.
The avenues of supply were limited to either military surface and air

transportation facilities or to the use of privately chartered merchant
shipping and chartered air carriers. It was, however, the policy of
the AEC that the Contractor make maximum use of transportation facili-

ties of the military establishment; and although the Contract permitted

the supplemental use of commercial facilities, maximum emphasis was

placed on the use of military transport. The distance of the site from
adequate sources of supply of personnel or material was such, however,
that their delivery by military surface shipping required a period of

fifteen to twenty days from the time of departure from Oakland to the
time of arrival at Eniwetok. Also, under postwar conditions of maximum

military economy and under the later duress of Korean war conditions,
there was frequent conflict among all agencies for available space on

established military transportation facilities. The logistic problem
was further complicated by the absence of any established commercial
communication facility, but perhaps the most serious complication of all
resulted from the radical and sometimes unanticipated changes in the
scope of the Project. These changes, which were usually of the greatest
degree of urgency from the point of time and which at times altered the

entire logistic schedule as applied to both personnel and material, provided uncertanties of long range forecasting and scheduling.
Since it was realized that logistics would constitute an important
factor in the success of the entire Project, and since many of the pro-

blems connected therewith would require a thorough kmowledge of military
Shipping procedures and a close liaison with various military head-

quarters in the Pacific area, the firm obtained on July 5, 1949, the
services of a retired Navy Commodore who had served as Chief of Operations
on CincPac's steff during the war, and who was well equipped to supervise transportation operations and other problems which might arise in
connection with H & N relations with military authorities,

AVE

0,
Because of the nature of the Marshall Islands with their sparse

population, undeveloped resources, and insignificant value as trade
centers, no steamship line has considered them sufficiently attractive
from the point of view of revenue to justify their inclusion as a regular
port of call for cargo or passenger service. They are so far removed
from the regular trade routes between the United States and Japan or
between the United States and Australia that it has not appeared economically feasible to divert commercial steamers from either of these
routes to Eniwetok.

14-1

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