would involve a sizeable number of inhabitants (154) and would entail some
degree of hazard and hardship and (c) since such action would not go un-

noticed in worldwide discussions of nuclear weapons testing there should
be an impelling safety reason to require evacuation.

Recognizing the validity of these arguments, the counterarguments were:
(a) there were ships capable of removing the inhabitants from Utirik by the
third day after shot day (b) it might be possible to save them 45 roentgens
of exposure by doing so and (c) the major decision, in terms of public relations, had already been made when the first Rongelapese and Ailinginaese

were evacuated.

°

A decision was reachedand evacuation of the 154 inhabitants of Utirik
was started at about H + 55 hours and completed on H + 78 hours,

They were

also transported to Kwajalein where they were given the same care as those
from Rongelap and Ailinginae and were returned to their home island of Utirik
on June 5, 1954.”
In a retelling of this story more than a decade later the situation may
appear so clear that the decisions should not have been difficult.

However,

like any emergency situation there are always uncertainties in the immediately
available information,

This was especially so since the initial radiation

DOE ARCHIVES

*Twenty-eight members of the Task Group conducting the nuclear tests were
evacuated from Rongerik Island at H + 28.5 and H+ 34 hours. Their total
external gamma dose was estimated to be 78 rads.~
It was later reported
by the Japanese that some fishermen aboard a vessel near the Pacific
Proving Ground may have received higher exposures than the Marshallese.>°

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