The Guardian (USA)

Endless fallout: the Pacific idyll still facing nuclear blight 77 years on

- Lucy Sherriff

At first glance, the aquamarine waters that surround the Marshall Islands seem like paradise. But this idyllic Pacific scene hides a dark secret: it was thelocatio­n of 67 nuclear detonation­s as part of US military tests during the cold war between 1946 and 1958.

The bombs were exploded above ground and underwater on Bikini and Enewetak Atolls, including one device 1,100 times larger than the Hiroshima atom bomb. Chernobyl-like levels of radiation forced hundreds from their homes. Bikini Atoll remains deserted. At the US government’s urging, residents have begun returning slowly to Enewetak.

Today, there is little visible evidence of the tests on the islands except for a 115-metre (377ft)-wide cement dome that locals nickname the Tomb – for good reason.

Built in the late 1970s and now aged and cracking, the huge concrete lid on Runit Island covers more than 90,000 cubic metres (3.1m cubic ft) – or roughly 35 Olympic-sized swimming pools – of radioactiv­e soil and nuclear waste. Unbeknown to the Marshalles­e people, the US shipped the waste from Nevada, where it was testing nuclear weapons on Native American land.

The legacy of America’s nuclear testing on Indigenous communitie­s both on the US mainland and its territorie­s has come under renewed scrutiny with the release of Oppenheime­r, the blockbuste­r film about the physicist who led developmen­t of the atomic bomb.

Although his team tested the nuclear weapons on Native American land – there were 928 large-scale nuclear weapons tests in Nevada, Utah and Arizona during the cold war, dispersing huge clouds of radioactiv­e material – the film never mentions the impact of the testing on the local Native Americans.

“The film completely ignores the experience­s of our people,” says Ian Zabarte, principal man of the Western Bands of the Shoshone Nation – who have been described as “the most bombed nation on earth”.

Zabarte is attempting to forge connection­s with those Pacific Islanders who were similarly affected by nuclear testing. Earlier this year, he met representa­tives from the Marshall Islands when they visited Nevada to discuss the effects on their health from nuclear weapons testing.

“The health impacts on our people have never been investigat­ed,” Zabarte says. “We have never received an apology, let alone any kind of compensati­on.”

Separately, a band of Marshalles­e activists are now sailing around the country’s 29 atolls, along with artists and climate scientists, on a 12-day tour that aims to raise awareness of nuclear testing on the archipelag­o.

The 520-mile ocean voyage is being operated by Cape Farewell, a cultural programme founded by the British artist David Buckland and funded by the Waverley Street Foundation, Laurene Powell Jobs’s climate charity.

“Cancers continue from generation to generation,” says Alson Kelen, a master navigator and community elder who grew up on Bikini Atoll and is joining the expedition.

“If you ask anyone here if there’s a legacy of nuclear impact on their health, the answer would be yes. The Marshall Islands Nuclear Claim Tribunal has a list of cancers that are related to nuclear throughout our people. These cancers are hereditary.”

The US maintains that the Marshall Islands are safe. It seized them from Japan in 1944, and eventually granted the islands independen­ce in 1979, but the fledgling nation remained in “free associatio­n” with the US. Under this system, along with Micronesia and Palau, the Marshall Islands are self-governing but economical­ly remain largely dependent on Washington, which also retains a military presence. Today it continues to use the US dollar, and American aid still represents a large percentage of its GDP.

In 1988, an independen­t internatio­nal tribunal was establishe­d to adjudicate between the two countries, and it later ordered the US to pay $2.3bn (£1.8bn) to the Marshall Islands in healthcare and resettleme­nt costs.

The US government has refused, arguing that its liabilitie­s ended when it paid $600m in the 1990s. In 1998, the

US stopped providing medical care for cancer-stricken islanders, leaving many in financial hardship.

The agreement is up for renegotiat­ion this year, and the Marshalles­e hope they will have stronger negotiatin­g power with the US now that China is showing an interest in the islands due to their strategic location. The islanders are pushing for the $2.3bn they feel they are owed, and a cleanup of the Runit Dome, which is at risk of collapsing due to rising sea levels and the natural ageing of concrete structures.

“Of course it’s going to break,” says Stephen Palumbi, a Stanford University marine scientist who led a research trip to the islands in 2016. “What else can you expect? You can’t just build something like that and walk away from it and expect it to stay there. You wouldn’t do that with your patio.”

According to a 2019 investigat­ion by the LA Times, many US military per

sonnel present at the constructi­on of Runit Dome realised that radioactiv­e material was leaking from it, and would continue to do so – yet did not alert the Marshalles­e government.

The threat to the Tomb is particular­ly acute because the islands, which lie just 2 metres above sea level on average, are very vulnerable to rising sea levels. The country’s capital, Majuro, is highly likely to be at risk of frequent flooding, according to a World Bank study.

The US says it has discharged its responsibi­lities to the Marshall Islands, and because the dome is on Marshalles­e land, the onus is not on Washington to fix it.

It is not clear what will happen to the environmen­t when the Tomb crumbles, and has also been hard to track how the ecosystem has behaved over time as “there’s just not many people” on Bikini Atoll to even casually monitor changes, Palumbi says.

But a 2012 United Nations report said the effects of radiation on the Marshall Islands are long-lasting and have caused “near-irreversib­le environmen­tal contaminat­ion”.

On Palumbi’s visit, locals warned his team not to eat the coconuts – which are radioactiv­e due to the contaminat­ed groundwate­r – or the coconut crabs that feed on them. “You do not grow crops, you do not eat coconut, you do not drink the water,” Palumbi says.

In general, it has been shown that nuclear blasts represent an extreme threat to local biodiversi­ty. A 1973 US government-funded study on nuclear testing in Alaska found both immediate harm and long-term damage to marine species: fish exploded when their gas-filled swim bladders reacted to the change in pressure underwater, and hundreds of sea otters were also killed instantly.

Researcher­s have recently found that sea turtle shells can be used to study nuclear contaminat­ion, with traces of uranium found in animals not born when testing in the Pacific Islands ended. The turtles are thought to accumulate human-made radionucli­des in their bony outer shell, which is usually made of keratin, through the food chain by eating uranium-contaminat­ed algae.

Japan recently announced it would start dumping waste from the Fukushima nuclear power plant, which had meltdowns in 2011, into the ocean. Although the UN’s nuclear watchdog says it is safe to do so, there are fears that there is still not enough understand­ing of how radioactiv­e nuclear waste affects the ecosystem to be sure of this.

Palumbi notes that the resilience of the ocean is impressive, with corals regrowing on the Marshall Islands as soon as 10 years after the bombs were exploded. “This is the most destructiv­e thing we have ever done to the ocean, dropping 23 atomic bombs on it, yet the ocean is really striving to come back to life.”

There are, however, eerie reminders of what happened decades ago, including a fine talcum powder-like sediment covering the reefs – and still-visible damage to the reef itself. “On the inside of the lagoon, where the actual bombs were, it’s still an amazing mess,” Palumbi says. “The reef has cracked in half, and you realise that it was the bomb.”

Kelen says he would not trust anyone who says releasing nuclear material into the water is safe. “Everybody who has talked to me about nuclear has been lying,” he says. This, he says, includes the US “who promised our islands were safe to live in. This continues. I do not trust politician­s who say this will be OK.”

Zabarte, who has numerous family members who have died of cancer, is similarly concerned about the longterm impacts of radiation. “My people have nowhere to go,” he says. “We have to stay there, exposing ourselves on a daily basis. We have no choice.”

“We have to keep repeating this story,” says Kelen. “We have forever been moved around by people who make decisions over us, telling us our lives will be safe and how to live. But no matter what life has thrown at us, from nuclear testing to rising sea levels, our home and life are very much still here.

“We live this story, and it informs us culturally, but we do not let it define who we are.”

The health impacts on our people have never been investigat­ed. We have never had an apology, let alone any compensati­on

Ian Zabarte, Western Shoshone Nation, Nevada

 ?? ?? An aerial view of ‘the Tomb’, the concrete-covered crater on Runit Island that conceals more than 90,000 cubic metres of radioactiv­e soil and nuclear waste. Photograph: Asahi Shimbun/Getty
An aerial view of ‘the Tomb’, the concrete-covered crater on Runit Island that conceals more than 90,000 cubic metres of radioactiv­e soil and nuclear waste. Photograph: Asahi Shimbun/Getty
 ?? Corbis/Getty ?? The Seminole nuclear blast on Enewetak Atoll in 1956, part of the Operation Redwing series of US thermonucl­ear bomb tests. Photograph:
Corbis/Getty The Seminole nuclear blast on Enewetak Atoll in 1956, part of the Operation Redwing series of US thermonucl­ear bomb tests. Photograph:

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