HOW HORRIFIC IT WAS :U.S. NUCLEAR TESTING ON THE MARSHALL ISLANDS 1946 TO 1958
PRÉCIS
Over a period of twelve years the United States detonated 67 atomic
explosions on the Marshall Islands beginning with Operation Crossroads
on June 6th, 1946, and ending with the last explosion under Operation
Hardtack I (32nd within that program) on August 18th, 1958. While the
military/scientific experiments yielded valuable information on the newly
developed atomic bomb that ended WWII, it had significant negative
impact on areas in the Marshall Islands where the explosions took place.
Both the United States and the Marshall Islands acknowledge the tragic
consequences of these tests and the United States has made efforts to
compensate the people and government of the Marshall Islands. Ethically,
concerns focus on the moral culpability of the United States for
these damages and the adequacy of efforts to clean up and to compensate
the people affected by the tests. Finally, with the recent availability of
previously unreleased material, concerns of possible cover-up and deception
have surfaced.
The Nuclear Testing and Its Effects on the Marshall Islands
In 1946 Bikini Island became the site of Operation Crossroads, a vast military/scientific experiment to determine the impact of atomic bombs on naval vessels. During the next twelve years the U.S. Nuclear Testing Program (NTP) detonated 67 nuclear bombs from the air, water, and land under seven operations: Crossroads, Sandstone, Greenhouse, Ivy, Castle, Redwing, and Hardtack I. The total destructive output of these bombs was 108,496 kilotons, more than 7,200 times greater than the atomic weapons dropped on Japan during WWII. The world’s first peacetime atomic-weapons test was conducted at Bikini Atoll on July 1, 1946. A 20-kiloton atomic bomb test code named “Able” exploded in the air over a fleet of about 80 obsolete World War II unmanned naval vessels, among them battleships and aircraft carriers. On July 25, the second test, “Baker,” was the world’s first underwater atomic explosion; besides sinking nine ships, it pushed a mile-wide column of water high into the sky. Of particular significance are the millions of tons of debris and water that descended back to earth unleashing a huge wall of mist that traveled at 60 miles per hour destroying anything in its way; further, a massive 43 foot wave was created that tossed aircraft carriers and battleships around as if they were toys. All told, this blast created the greatest amount of radioactive fallout yet to be witnessed by humankind.
In 1952 the U.S. government conducted the world’s first thermonuclear test (fusion instead of fission based explosion), code named “Mike,” on Enewetak Atoll. This test literally vaporized the island of Elugelab and was estimated to be 10.4 megatons, 750 times larger than the bomb dropped on Hiroshima and containing more energy than all previous atomic blasts combined (including those of Russian origin). It was the largest fireball produced to date, measuring 3 ¼ miles in diameter, a blast that would have engulfed ¼ of the island of Manhattan and would require 32 Empire State buildings be stacked on top of each other to reach the cloud’s height. Ten minutes after the blast, the cloud had extended to a diameter of one hundred miles and a height of ten miles.
But perhaps the most famous blast, “Bravo,” under Operation Ivy, was detonated on Bikini Atoll on March 1, 1954; it was a 15 megaton hydrogen bomb, the largest blast to date, 1000 times more powerful than the Hiroshima bomb. Due to the decision to continue with the detonation of this massive bomb in spite of unfavorable weather conditions that developed shortly before the test, a literal snowstorm of gritty, white ash descended on several nearby atolls within hours of the blast. Those exposed experienced nausea, vomiting, and irritation on their skin and eyes. Residents of Rongelap were evacuated 48 hours later and those residing on Utrik were evacuated 72 hour after “Bravo” was detonated. Through the nuclear explosions on the Marshall Islands, the NTP gained a much more sophisticated understanding of nuclear weapons and just as important, the health effects of exposure to excessive dosages of radioactive fallout. After the “Bravo” test the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) began Project 4.1, “the study of the response of human beings exposed to significant beta and gamma radiation due to fallout from high-yield weapons.”2 Citizens of the Marshall Islands were divided into “exposed” and “control” groups to observe the short- and longterm effects of exposure to radiation from fallout and the contaminated environment where they lived. This 1954 study was stamped “secret restrictive data” due to the anticipated negative public reaction to its findings and was only declassified in 1994.
The human aspect of these tests is the real subject of this case study. Though the mishap associated with the massive “Bravo” blast just mentioned is most unfortunate, it is but one of many such incidents. The initial tests made it necessary to first relocate the Bikini Atoll’s 167 native Micronesians to Rongerik and then to Kili Island (after nearly starving on Rongerik for 6 months), about
500 miles southeast of Bikini. The Bikini Atoll suffered serious radioactive contamination which persists to this day. As noted in reference to the “Bravo” blast, the inhabitants of Rongelap were seriously exposed to radiation over an extended period of time. On average, they received a radiation dose of about 190 rems (radiation units). This dose was, according to current medical opinion, sufficient to cause an extra 1 in 7 risk of dying of cancer. Medical examinations carried out on adults in Rongelap between 1970 and 1974, which compared exposed and unexposed inhabitants, showed that there was a higher-than-average incidence among those exposed of anemia, thyroid disease, rheumatic heart disease, and tumors. In 1969, the U.S. government began work on a long-range project to reclaim the land and ultimately to repatriate the Bikinian population. Some Marshallese began returning to Bikini in the late 1960s, but their atoll was found to be too contaminated for permanent habitation and in 1978, the people, once again, had to be evacuated back to Kili. In January 1999, decontamination began on U.S. nuclear weapons test sites on Enewetak; today, the Enewetak people have returned to their homeland, and a program to monitor Bikini has been put in place. Still, all water samples taken from Bikini and Enewetak islands show that the levels of radioactive contamination are too high to allow islanders to live exclusively on food grown and caught there.
ETHICAL ISSUES
Before embarking on the assorted ethical issues generated out of the U.S. Nuclear Test Program in the Marshall Islands, it should be acknowledged that while there are certain indisputable facts, there is also much that is in dispute. There have been at least four formal studies of environmental radioactivity levels on the four main islands affected, measuring contamination of food, animals, plants, and human beings; each test has required several years to complete. Two long-term U.S.-sponsored research studies are still being carried out. At this juncture, most of the scientific community has come to the position that relatively safe radiation levels have been reached on all islands, such that repopulation of the inhabitants can be accomplished with some safeguards put in place regarding limitation of intake of food grown and caught on the contaminated areas. In spite of In spite of the fact that this conclusion was reached by several independent studies that were in turn, checked, and evaluated by independent, internationally-constituted groups of experts in relevant fields for these studies, the Marshallese government has still not accepted the findings of these scientific groups. In fact, it continues its demand against the United States government for further compensation in the amount of $300 million dollars for losses incurred due to the atomic testing over the twelve years.
In 1946 Bikini Island became the site of Operation Crossroads, a vast military/scientific experiment to determine the impact of atomic bombs on naval vessels. During the next twelve years the U.S. Nuclear Testing Program (NTP) detonated 67 nuclear bombs from the air, water, and land under seven operations: Crossroads, Sandstone, Greenhouse, Ivy, Castle, Redwing, and Hardtack I. The total destructive output of these bombs was 108,496 kilotons, more than 7,200 times greater than the atomic weapons dropped on Japan during WWII. The world’s first peacetime atomic-weapons test was conducted at Bikini Atoll on July 1, 1946. A 20-kiloton atomic bomb test code named “Able” exploded in the air over a fleet of about 80 obsolete World War II unmanned naval vessels, among them battleships and aircraft carriers. On July 25, the second test, “Baker,” was the world’s first underwater atomic explosion; besides sinking nine ships, it pushed a mile-wide column of water high into the sky. Of particular significance are the millions of tons of debris and water that descended back to earth unleashing a huge wall of mist that traveled at 60 miles per hour destroying anything in its way; further, a massive 43 foot wave was created that tossed aircraft carriers and battleships around as if they were toys. All told, this blast created the greatest amount of radioactive fallout yet to be witnessed by humankind.
In 1952 the U.S. government conducted the world’s first thermonuclear test (fusion instead of fission based explosion), code named “Mike,” on Enewetak Atoll. This test literally vaporized the island of Elugelab and was estimated to be 10.4 megatons, 750 times larger than the bomb dropped on Hiroshima and containing more energy than all previous atomic blasts combined (including those of Russian origin). It was the largest fireball produced to date, measuring 3 ¼ miles in diameter, a blast that would have engulfed ¼ of the island of Manhattan and would require 32 Empire State buildings be stacked on top of each other to reach the cloud’s height. Ten minutes after the blast, the cloud had extended to a diameter of one hundred miles and a height of ten miles.
But perhaps the most famous blast, “Bravo,” under Operation Ivy, was detonated on Bikini Atoll on March 1, 1954; it was a 15 megaton hydrogen bomb, the largest blast to date, 1000 times more powerful than the Hiroshima bomb. Due to the decision to continue with the detonation of this massive bomb in spite of unfavorable weather conditions that developed shortly before the test, a literal snowstorm of gritty, white ash descended on several nearby atolls within hours of the blast. Those exposed experienced nausea, vomiting, and irritation on their skin and eyes. Residents of Rongelap were evacuated 48 hours later and those residing on Utrik were evacuated 72 hour after “Bravo” was detonated. Through the nuclear explosions on the Marshall Islands, the NTP gained a much more sophisticated understanding of nuclear weapons and just as important, the health effects of exposure to excessive dosages of radioactive fallout. After the “Bravo” test the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) began Project 4.1, “the study of the response of human beings exposed to significant beta and gamma radiation due to fallout from high-yield weapons.”2 Citizens of the Marshall Islands were divided into “exposed” and “control” groups to observe the short- and longterm effects of exposure to radiation from fallout and the contaminated environment where they lived. This 1954 study was stamped “secret restrictive data” due to the anticipated negative public reaction to its findings and was only declassified in 1994.
The human aspect of these tests is the real subject of this case study. Though the mishap associated with the massive “Bravo” blast just mentioned is most unfortunate, it is but one of many such incidents. The initial tests made it necessary to first relocate the Bikini Atoll’s 167 native Micronesians to Rongerik and then to Kili Island (after nearly starving on Rongerik for 6 months), about
500 miles southeast of Bikini. The Bikini Atoll suffered serious radioactive contamination which persists to this day. As noted in reference to the “Bravo” blast, the inhabitants of Rongelap were seriously exposed to radiation over an extended period of time. On average, they received a radiation dose of about 190 rems (radiation units). This dose was, according to current medical opinion, sufficient to cause an extra 1 in 7 risk of dying of cancer. Medical examinations carried out on adults in Rongelap between 1970 and 1974, which compared exposed and unexposed inhabitants, showed that there was a higher-than-average incidence among those exposed of anemia, thyroid disease, rheumatic heart disease, and tumors. In 1969, the U.S. government began work on a long-range project to reclaim the land and ultimately to repatriate the Bikinian population. Some Marshallese began returning to Bikini in the late 1960s, but their atoll was found to be too contaminated for permanent habitation and in 1978, the people, once again, had to be evacuated back to Kili. In January 1999, decontamination began on U.S. nuclear weapons test sites on Enewetak; today, the Enewetak people have returned to their homeland, and a program to monitor Bikini has been put in place. Still, all water samples taken from Bikini and Enewetak islands show that the levels of radioactive contamination are too high to allow islanders to live exclusively on food grown and caught there.
ETHICAL ISSUES
Before embarking on the assorted ethical issues generated out of the U.S. Nuclear Test Program in the Marshall Islands, it should be acknowledged that while there are certain indisputable facts, there is also much that is in dispute. There have been at least four formal studies of environmental radioactivity levels on the four main islands affected, measuring contamination of food, animals, plants, and human beings; each test has required several years to complete. Two long-term U.S.-sponsored research studies are still being carried out. At this juncture, most of the scientific community has come to the position that relatively safe radiation levels have been reached on all islands, such that repopulation of the inhabitants can be accomplished with some safeguards put in place regarding limitation of intake of food grown and caught on the contaminated areas. In spite of In spite of the fact that this conclusion was reached by several independent studies that were in turn, checked, and evaluated by independent, internationally-constituted groups of experts in relevant fields for these studies, the Marshallese government has still not accepted the findings of these scientific groups. In fact, it continues its demand against the United States government for further compensation in the amount of $300 million dollars for losses incurred due to the atomic testing over the twelve years.