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DEFENSE NUCLEAR AGENCY
WASHINGTON,D.C. 20305

April 1980
Subject: Fact Sheet - Enewetak Operation
In April 1980 the Department of Defense (DoD) will return Enewetak Atoll to

its People. This event will mark the end of the largest radiological cleanup
operation ever conducted and will fulfill a moral obligation incurred by the United
States thirty-three years ago.

perspective of DoD.

This paper summarizes these events from the

Enewetak is the northwestern atoll in the Marshal! Islands--which themselves
are one of the major island groups in Micronesia and in the Trust Territory of the
Pacific Islands (TTPI). Enewetak lies some 2400 nautical miles west-southwest of
Honolulu. The atoll is formed by a coral reef, oval in shape, which surrounds a
lagoon stretching some 23 miles in a general north-south direction and |7 miles

east-west. Rising from the reef at intervals along its circumference are some 40
low, sandy islands--most of them quite small.

The People of Enewetak--who have lived on the atoll for centuries, and who
are different in many ways from other Marshall Islanders--subdivide into two

groups: the dri-Enewetak, whose homeis the largest southern island of the atoll

(Enewetak); and the dri-Enjebi, whose home is the largest island in the north

(Enjebi).

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Enewetak's role in the nuclear age began shortly after World WarIl, when the

imperatives of national security required the establishment of several proving
grounds for the testing of nuclear weapons. Enewetak was one of the principal
sites selected for this testing, particularly for the higher-yield thermonuclear

devices that were then in the conceptual stage.

The People of Enewetak--then

numbering about 150--were relocated in 1947 to a much smaller atoll,
Ujelang, some 125 miles to the southwest. A large scientific and military task
force, under the joint direction of the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC--now the
Department of Energy (DoE)) and DoD,established its headquarters on the southern

islands of Enewetak Atoll. Between 1948 and !958, 43 nuclear tests were carried

out on the atoll. The great majority were conducted in the northeastern quadrant,
to keep the base camps in the south free of contamination. Some of the "ground
zeros" were on the islands themselves, some were on the reef, some were in the

lagoon, and one was in the ocean nearby. The tests were detonated in the air, on

towers, on the surface of islands and reefs, on barges, and underwater. The nuclear
weapons developed through this decade-long test program have been major

elements in the mechanism of deterrence which has ensured the security of the

free world and the absence of nuclear war for succeeding decades.

In 1958 the U.S. ceased nuclear testing on Enewetak, in response to a

trilateral US-UK-USSR testing moratorium.
However, radioactive debris and
fission products from the detonations and the resulting fallout contaminated most

of the northern islands to varying degrees. The southern islands, which had been
used as a base for the scientific task force, remained relatively uncontaminated.

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