ee ee ee Mpa uae
Accordingly. five weeks after the end of
World War II. the Joint Chiefs of Staff

began to plan a series of aromuc tests, and it
ordered a joint task force to select ‘‘a suitable
site which will permit accomplishment of
the tests with acceptable nsk and minimum
hazard."’ The project was code named Opera-

tion Crossroads.
Thesite for the tests had to meet numerous
conditions: It had to be in an area controlled
by the United States. in a climatic zone free

from storms and cold temperatures, with a

large. sheltered area for anchoring target ves-

sels and measuring the effects of radiation. It
had to be uninhabited or have a small population that could be relocated easily. Naturally, the site had to be faraway from population centers in the Uniced Srates: as the AEC

told the Congress in 1953: ‘The Com.

mission felt that tests should be held overseas
until it could be established more definitely
that continental detonations would nor endanger the public health and safety.”
In late January 1946 the Joint Chiefs
selected Bikini Atoll for atomic testing.

munity. (In 1946 the population numbered
167.) It is remote, and the Bikinians had

never had much contact with other Mar-

shallese or foreigners. In fact. no foreigners
lived on Bikini until World War H, when a
unit of five Japanese soldiers established a
weather station there.
On Sunday, February 10, 1946, the
American military governor of the Marshalls,
Commodore Ben Wyatt, arrived in Bikini by

seaplane and told the people at the conclusion
of their church services that they would have
to leave their homes so the United States
could test nuclear weapons there. According.

to official Navy records, Wyatt ‘‘compared
the Bikinians to the Children of Israel whom

the Lord had saved from their enemy and led

into the Promised Land.’’ He described the

power of the atomic bomb. ‘‘the destruction
it had wrought upon the enemy.” and he

told the people chat American scientists ‘‘are

trying to learn how to use it for the good of

mankind and to end all world wars.”’ The

Navy had searched the entire world for che

best place to test these powerful weapons.

Bikini is one of 29 atolls and five islands
comprising the Marshall Islands. which are
scattered over 357,000 square miles just
north of the equator in the central Pacific
Ocean. The Marshall Islands. along with the

and Bikini was it. Wyatt then asked the
Bikinians: “Would you be willing to sacrifice your island for the welfare of all men?”

War II by the United States from Japan.

of the world want to use our island and atall

rest of Micronesia. were seized during World

which had earlier taken them from Germany

after World War I and held them under a
League of Nations mandate. Micronesia was

the site of many of the bloodiest battles of
World Warll. More than 6,000 US. soldiers
were killed and nearly 23,000 wounded dur-

ing Operations in these islands. The United
States placed them under U.S. military con-

The Bikinians deliberated, and Chief Juda

Kessibuki reported their decision: “If the
United States government and the scientists

for furthering development. which with
God's blessings will result in kindness and
benefit to all mankind, my people will be
pleased to go elsewhere."
“One Hell of a Good Sales Job"

by the United Srates.
Bikini met all the requirements for Operation Crossroads. One of the northernmost
atolls in the Marshall Islands. it receives
muchless rainfall than the atolls to the south,

Official Navy accounts notwithstanding,
the Bikinians’ decision to leave their atoll was
not based solely on a naive desire to see mankind benefit from atomic testing. The Bikinians were awed by America’s defeat of
Japan and by the fact that the five Japanese
soldiers stationed on Bikini committed suicide
when American troops landed on the atoll in
1944. Following the establishment of U.S.

76.

77.

4

4
h

tro] until July 1947, when the area became a
U.N. strategic trust territory administered

|

ana therefore supported oniv a smail com-

Select target paragraph3