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"James Ls Liverman

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that misunderstanding and I anticipate success.

However, there is

a deeper misunderstanding which derives, I believe, from the very
fact of Dr. Conard's appointment.
Dr. Conard is accepted and
recognized as an authority on radiation-induced illness.
The May
1969 press release took notice of his "15 years of experience in
working with the people of the Marshall Islands", and the people
of the Marshalls, today, associate that experience with thyroid

abnormalities, miscarriages and

fatal leukemia.

Is

it not then reasonable to expect the same sorts of things in the
returning Bikini population? Otherwise, why send Dr. Conard?. .. or

amy

medical surveillance team?

These are difficult questions to

answer, especially for responsible and careful U. S. officials who

must acknowledge that there are elevated radiation levels at Bikini

and who decline to use such terms as "perfectly safe", etc.

There are also those in the Marshalls who rationalize that since we
are proposing to return people to Bikini, where some exceptional
medical surveillance is required, we are deliberately planning to
expose people to Bikini radiation in furtherance of our own research
interests.
In an interview which I gave to the Editor of the

Micronesian Independent en route returning from Kili, I made the
following statement which was reported verbatim:

"Our primary concern in recommending continuing monitoring
is the health and safety of the people returning."
Then the writer editorializes:

"He (Ray) never mention (sic) what ERDA's implied secondary

concern of continued monitoring is."

filsewhere this writer strongly implies that ERDA's real interest is
in obtaining data.
The concern of the people is understandable. We have left room for
a completely rational (albeit incorrect) interpretation of the facts.
We have done an insufficiently precise and thorough job of informing
the Department of the Interior, the Administration of the Trust
Territory and the affected populations of our purposes and our plans.
Our recent experience at Kili and Bikini, and our earlier experience
with the people of Enewetak, indicate the need and the real value of
frequent and candid direct dialog with the people.
Through this means,
I believe that we can and will gain understanding and acceptance of

our actions.

DOE ARCHIVES

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