Toronto Star

Park marks launch of the nuclear age

U.S. officials say the trio of national sites will not glorify war or atomic weapons

- MATTHEW DALY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON— More than 70 years ago, scientists working in secret created the atomic bomb that ended the Second World War and ushered the world into the nuclear age.

At a ceremony this week in a Washington federal building where clandestin­e plans for the bomb were developed just blocks from the White House, Interior Secretary Sally Jewell and Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz formally establishe­d the Manhattan Project National Historical Park.

The park preserves three sites where work on the bomb was completed: Oak Ridge, Tenn.; Hanford, Wash.; and Los Alamos, N.M.

Jewell, Moniz and other officials said the sites will not glorify war or nuclear weapons, but will tell the story of the three historical sites from a range of perspectiv­es and include a focus on the cities in Japan where two nuclear bombs were dropped in 1945.

“It certainly is a celebratio­n that we will be telling the story of these three important historical sites,” Jewell told reporters. “It’s not necessaril­y a celebratio­n of the consequenc­es of that, but rather an opportunit­y to tell that story to a broader audience.”

The park will bring greater awareness of the developmen­t of nuclear weapons and energy to a worldwide audience, Jewell and Moniz said.

“The Manhattan Project is an incredible scientific and engineerin­g feat and that’s obviously part of the message” of the new park, Moniz said.

“But there is also a message about nuclear weapons and Japan. We want to keep driving toward a world free of nuclear weapons, and I think that’s a U.S.-Japan shared story.” The complex emotions the new park evokes were evident at the ceremony.

Reporters and photograph­ers from around the world, including more than a dozen from Japan, attended the event at the Interior Department’s South Auditorium, as did anti-nuclear activists and representa­tives of the three communitie­s commemorat­ed by the park. The building, which sits a few blocks from the White House, is where plans for the bomb were first developed in an isolated wooden structure on the roof.

Sen. Lamar Alexander, Tenn., recounted that then-president Franklin D. Roosevelt summoned former Tennessee senator Kenneth McKellar to the White House in 1942. McKellar, a Democrat, was chairman of the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee, responsibl­e for federal spending.

Roosevelt asked him to “hide a billion dollars in the appropriat­ions bill for a secret project to win the war,” Alexander said.

No problem, McKellar responded, according to Alexander. But he had one question: “Just where in Tennessee will the project be located?”

The answer, Alexander noted, was Oak Ridge, where the Manhattan Project was headquarte­red and uranium was enriched for the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima in August 1945. The Hanford site was used to develop the plutonium dropped days later on Nagasaki, and Los Alamos is where more than 6,000 scientists, engineers and other workers designed and built the atomic bombs.

The bomb was tested in the New Mexico desert in July 1945.

Jewell, who oversees the National Park Service, said officials are acutely aware of the need to “tell the complete story” of the Manhattan Project, “listening to all sides.”

The park will include the voices of people who experience­d devastatio­n in Japan, as well as those “whose lives were spared because the war came to an end,” Jewell said. The park also will tell the story of hundreds of thousands of ordinary people who were recruited to work in secret — often far from home — on a project they were told was vital to the war effort, but was never clearly defined.

“It did mark the end of the war, but it left devastatio­n in its wake,” Jewell said.

Jewell briefly teared up as she described her mother-in-law’s work as a nurse in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. “It was a powerful experience for her,” Jewell said.

While Japan is now one of America’s closest allies, that country “felt the consequenc­es” of the Manhattan Project, Jewell added. “Your story needs to be told as well,” she said, addressing Japanese citizens in the audience.

Greg Mello, director of the Los Alamos Study Group, an anti-nuclear watchdog group, called the new park “pure propaganda for Los Alamos National Laboratory and its enduring mission of creating weapons of global destructio­n.”

Mello, who did not attend the ceremony, said in an email that the new park was celebratin­g “heinous war crimes,” adding: “This park is not exactly about the past, because the Manhattan Project never ended.”

Nuclear work continues at all three sites commemorat­ed in the new park, a fact Moniz cited as an example of the project’s enduring importance in war and peace.

The Energy Department’s 17 national labs that “have grown out of the roots of the Manhattan Project are part of this country’s science and technology powerhouse,” Moniz said. “They drive innovation. They address critical problems and they provide the backbone for basic science research in this country.”

“We want to keep driving toward a world free of nuclear weapons, and I think that’s a U.S.-Japan shared story.” ERNEST MONIZ U.S. ENERGY SECRETARY

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? The mushroom cloud of a test blast rises among abandoned ships in Bikini lagoon, Bikini Atoll, on July 1, 1946.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO The mushroom cloud of a test blast rises among abandoned ships in Bikini lagoon, Bikini Atoll, on July 1, 1946.

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