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The following comments relate to the timing of the evacuation
of the Rongelap people.
(a)According to C. L. Dunham, Director of the AEC Division of
Biology and Medicine, (Cronkite et al, 1956),
“unexpected changes
in the wind structure deposited radioactive naterials on inhabited
atolls and on ships of Joint Task Force 7, which was conducting the
tests. Radiation surveys of the areas revealed radiation levels
above permissible levels: therefore evacuation was ordered, and was
carried out as quickly as possible with the facilities available to
the Joint Task Force".
(b) According to Merril Eisenbud (personal communication, see
references) a scientific member of the Task Force, "There are many
unanswered questions about the circumstances of the 1954 fallout.
It is strange that no formal investigation was ever conducted.

There have been reports that the device was exploded despite an

adverse meterological forecast. It has not been explained why an
evacuation capability was not standing by, as had been recommended,
or why there was not inmediate action to evaluate the matter when
the Task Force learned (seven hours after the explosion) that the
AEC Health & Safety Laboratory recording instrument on Rongerik was
off scale. There was also an unexplained interval of many days
before the fallout was announced to the public".
(c)
Since the Rongelapese had been evacuated prior to previous
tests, it is not clear why the usual procedure was changed. In
February 1954, Dr. Bertell has told me, Magistrate John Anjain of
Rongelap was told about the Bravo test, but was not given the date.
He said that “there are no orders from Washington to evacuate the
people".
(d) Rongelap was evacuated on March 3, 1954, approximately 50-55
hours after the shot.

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