256

DASA 2019-2

FREMONT-SMITH:
_ MILLET:

How did you mean crimials?

These sailors who didn’t want tu come home because

they were going to get in trouble,
FREMONT-SMITH: ILsee.

jail before,

MLL..LET.

‘

You mean because they had been in

Whereas, the Spaniards were al. good virtuous prasants,

ROOT: [ think another thing, you got very little information until
the press became abccrbed inthe scarch., Then everybody was with
the drama in Spain hoping and praying for a happy ending, In the
Japaneseincident you got no knowledge at all until burned bodies |
came home, Then, worldwide reports {cllowed concentrating on the
horror, with no explanation and no preparation, Thie Il think hada

lot te do with the global impact.
CASARETT:

Certainly one large difference between tha two inci-+

dents is the previous exprrience on the receiving end of nuclear

weapons, ft akculd imagine that such sensitization would be much
greater in Japan.

FREMONT-SMITH: You mean if Hiroshima had been in Spain,

you would have expected an entirely different response?
CASARETT:

MILLER:

shock. '"'

Yes.

De. Schull called the Bikini experience ‘anaphylactic
.

WOLFE: Is there any record of anybody but the United States
dumping radioactive material or bombs or what not on other nations?

LANGHAM:
WARREN:

No.
The Russian. “Chinese and French fallouts, that's all.

That's not « weapon,

WOLFE: But there have been no large incidents, If they had one,
we do not know abuut it:et. They would be slow in letting it loose.
LANGHAM:

This situaticn was a bit unusual,

Select target paragraph3