Weisgal!

during the testing program. The 1946 Baker
shor alone left 500,000 tons of radioactive
mud in the lagoon. Nevertheless, official Navy
pronouncements remained optimistic concerning Bikini's condition. A 1947 release is
typical: “Scientists now engaged in an intensive six-week survey of the Bikini Atoll
can find few visible effects of [the atomic

tests}."" The atoll, the release continued, is
“the same placid palm-ringed lagoon on
which King Juda and his subjects sailed in
outrigger canoes.”
Among the U.S. tests was the 1954 Bravo

shot, the second of the hydrogen bombtests.
750 times more powerful than the Hiroshima
bomb. Bravo, the largest single nuclear ex-

plosion detonated by the United Srates, was
so powerful that it vaporized several small
islands and parts of others in Bikini Atoll
and left a one-mile circular hole in the reef.
Moreover, what was described at the time as
an unprecedented shift in wind direction sent

the 20-mile-high cloud of radioactive parti-

cles from the blast drifting 240 miles eastward across Bikiniand several inhabited atolls

in the Marshalls. In face. U.S. officials had
received an incomplete and alarming report
concerning possible changes in the wind direction.
Rongelap and Utirik atolls were in the
path of the fallout, which fluttered down like
snowflakes. Ninety per cent of the Rongelapese people suffered skin lesions and loss of
hair. Today. 19 of 21 Rongelapese who were
under 12 years old at the time of the ironically
code-named Bravo shot have developed thyroid tumo.s or other radiation-related illnesses. The people of Utirik, who were not
removed from their atoll] until more than
three days after the blast. have recently ex-

to the Marshallese people in its role as U.N.
trustee. One can only wonder where the
American nuclear energy industry would be
today if the accident at Three Mile Island in
1979 had perceptibly injured several hundred
U.S. citizens.
In 1958 President Etsenhower declared a
moratorium on U.S. atmospheric nuclear
testing, ending the 12-year testing program

in the Marshall! Islands and raising the Biki-

nians’ hopes for resettlement. It was not until
1967, however, that a blue-ribbon ad hoc

committee appointed by the AEC reviewed
the results of a radiological survey of Bikini
and declared the atoll “‘once again safe for
human habiration.”” The committee, which
according to the AEC’s chairman consisted of
“eight of the most highly qualified experts

available.”’ concluded that ‘‘the exposures to
radiation that would result from the repatriation of the Bikini people do not offer a significant threat to their health and safety.” A year
later Johnson announced that ‘“‘the major

islands of the aroll are now safe for human
habitation.”’ and he ordered the atoll rehabilitated and resettled ‘‘with all possibie
dispatch.”

One Navy press release reported

that the “‘natives are delighted, enthusiastic about the atomic bomb.”’
The Bikinians on Kili were jubilane at

the news. and nine of rhem were taken on a

reconnaissance of Bikini. Their elation soon

turned to shock and sorrow. The idyllic

homeland of their memories had disappeared:

the coconut trees were gone. and only scrub

vegetation remained. One journalist reported

that ‘‘areas closer to the bomb sites have the

perienced a sudden increase in thyroid diseases
and cancers.
The United States has paid several thou-

look of African desert country, with scrub
trees and brush in command of parched Jand.”’
On seeing the site of the Bravo shot, where

peoples, and it will provide them with medical care in the post-trusreeship period. Bur

the double standard the United States applied

mained of three or four islands, the Bikinians
declared that their islands had lost their
bones. One of the leaders was so overcome
that he wept openly.

84.

&5.

sand dollars in compensation to the two

they, like the Bikinians, are living legacies of

blue water and sand bars were all that re-

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