Cliff Sloan
June 24, 1980
Page Two

already spent in exile by the Injebi people.

It is my belief

that prudence and caution mst take precedence over expedient
and often-catastrophic political considerations. In the case of

the mjebi resettlement, if history should prove that we were too
cautious and that we acted too prudently, I assure you that it
would be a first in the Marshall Islands.
I know that I personally
would rather be in the position-esay ten or twenty years hence-of having to explain why there was a six-month delay in the Injebi
retum, rather than have to explein why one more previously

"unexposed" group of Marshallese became an "exposed" group because

of a hasty decision made by some “concerned" people who thought

that things were "alright" on Mijebi.

I think the following points will substantiate my present

concem over the Injebi resettlement and my request for truly

independent radiation experts in the Marshall Islands.

We can

only stand to gain from having an alternate point of view in
relation to the radiological data and the recommendations therein,
and I am convinced that the Injebi people can only benefit fron

our acting with caution and prudence?

1) The entire history of the “nuclear age" has been beset with the
constant downward revision of what constitutes a "safe" level of
radiation for humans.

It was previously believed that a dose of

50 rem was “safe” for humans; the dose was then decreased by a

factor of ten to 5 rem; end the current BEIR (Biological Effects

of Ionizing Radiation) Committee of the National Academy of Sciences~-

which was itself divided over the question of “safe" radiation levels,
and whose recommendations are far from being universally accepted
by well-respected radiation experts--recommends a dose of 0.5 rem

in its 1979 updated Report.

What this adds up to is a history of

continuing uncertainty concerning the assessment of “safe* levels
of radiation for humans, and this ongoing debate 1s exemplified by

Drs. Gofman and Rall in the enclosed symposium transcript of the
recent American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
symposium I was asked to chair.

2)

Dr. Robert A. Conard, who was the former head of the Brookhaven

National Laboratory~Marshall Islands Program, expressed great surprise
over the late-occurring thyroid effects in the exposed Marshallese
povulations.
He claimed that these late effects were not anticipated

before 1963, and it is fair to say that we still do not know what is
Foing to havpen in the future in this population.

Again, this is a

ih

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