Those
Who Witnessed Castle Bravo Looked Into Armageddon
America’s most powerful nuke
caused our worst radiological disaster
by Paul Huard in War is Boring
Sixty-one years ago on an island in
the South Pacific, scientists and military officers, fishermen and Marshall
Islands natives observed first-hand what Armageddon would be like.
And it almost killed them all. The
Atomic Energy Commission code-named the nuclear test Castle Bravo.
The March 1, 1954 experiment was the
first thermonuclear explosion based on practical technology that would lead to
a deliverable H-bomb for the Air Force’s Strategic Air Command—part of the
Operation Castle series of tests needed to manufacture the high-yield weapons.
Bravo was the worst radiological disaster in American atomic
testing history—but the test provided information that led to a lightweight,
high-yield megaton bomb that would fit inside a SAC bomber.
Widespread contamination sickened
and exiled Pacific Islanders and killed a Japanese citizen. The United States
had to admit it possessed the ability to make deliverable H-bombs—an
information windfall for the Soviet Union, and the catalyst for serious
consideration of a ban on atmospheric nuclear tests.
Bravo’s fallout even inspired the
creation of a science fiction screen legend Godzilla. In the 1954 Japanese
movie of the same name, atomic testing resurrects the “King of Monsters”—a
symbol for the new terror felt in the only nation ever attacked with nuclear
weapons.
Perhaps most importantly, Bravo forced
many scientists and military officers to concede how deadly nuclear weapons
really were—not just in their immediate effects such as blast and intense heat,
but the lingering effects of high-energy radiation.
“I think the most important message
we might take away from the Castle Bravo shot is the amount of hubris it
represents,” Alex Wellerstein, a historian at the Stevens Institute of
Technology and blogger,
told War Is Boring.
“The scientists and military assured the politicians and
Marshallese people that it was a safe experiment, that they had things under
control, that they understood what would happen. And they were very wrong.”The Bravo shot in 1954 was not the
first test at Bikini Atoll, part of the 140,000-square-mile Pacific
Proving Grounds. Nor would it be the last—from 1946 to 1958, the U.S.
government held 67 atmospheric tests there.
Only two years earlier, the Ivy
Mike shot demonstrated the first true thermonuclear reaction. It produced a
10-megaton yield, but the device relied on cryogenic liquid hydrogen isotopes
that were bulky, required refrigeration equipment that weighed tons and was
almost impossible to store in a weapon.
A prototype “wet fuel” bomb based on
the Ivy Mike test was 24 feet long, five feet wide and weighed 30 tons. It was
more like a railroad box car than a deliverable weapon. But Bravo used lithium
deuteride “dry fuel,” which is solid and lightweight at room temperature.
Scientists estimated the device
would have a yield of about five megatons. They based many of their safety
precautions—such as the location of various observation posts and ships, a
safety “exclusion zone” in the Pacific Ocean surrounding Bikini and estimates
of fallout dispersal—on a five-megaton yield.
Zero hour for Bravo was at 6:45 a.m.
local time on March 1. From the moment the device detonated, many of the
observers knew something had gone spectacularly wrong.
The flash from the nuclear explosion
was overwhelming, even by the standards of nuclear explosions. Men saw their
bones appear as shadows through their living flesh. Streams of blinding light
shone through the smallest cracks and pinholes in secured doors and hatches.
Bravo’s thermal radiation was far
more intense than expected. More than 30 miles away from Ground Zero on Bikini
Atoll, sailors on board Navy ships said the heat was like having a blowtorch
applied to their bodies.
The shock wave destroyed buildings
supposedly outside of the calculated damage zone. It nearly knocked observation
aircraft out of the sky, and caused some men inadvertently trapped in a forward
observation bunker to wonder if the explosion ripped their concrete and steel
shelter from its foundations and flung it into the sea.
Then there was the fireball.
Film originally produced for classified
review by the Eisenhower administration and key members of Congressional
oversight committees. It emphasizes the successes of the Castle Bravo shot and
makes scant mention of the test’s miscalculations
It was four miles in diameter and
hotter than the surface of the sun. The Bravo fireball rose at the rate of
1,000 feet per second, and created a mushroom cloud that eventually topped
130,000 feet above sea level.
“In mere seconds the sailors sensed
that something unspeakably wrong was occurring … Battle-hardened men who
had served in World War II went to their knees and prayed,” wrote L. Douglas
Keeney in 15 Minutes: General Curtis LeMay and the Countdown to Nuclear
Annihilation.
“We soon found ourselves under a
large black and orange cloud that seemed to be dropping bright red balls of
fire all over the ocean around us,” one sailor recounted. “I think many of us
expected that we were witnessing the end of the world.”
Later, scientists calculated that
Castle Bravo’s yield was actually 15 megatons.
The reason? A “tritium bonus”
occurred during the thermonuclear reaction. Cascading neutrons transformed the
lithium-7 isotope—that comprised most of the “dry fuel”—into tritium and
helium.
Tritium causes extremely
energetic fusion.
It was the thermonuclear equivalent of throwing gasoline on
a small blaze and producing an instant conflagration.
Bravo’s yield was 1,000 times
greater than the Hiroshima bomb, far bigger than the scientists had planned. To
make matters worse, meteorological forecasts predicted that high-altitude winds
would blow the radioactive fallout away from inhabited areas.
Instead, the wind blew the
radioactive cloud toward them.
Fallout from Bravo rained down on
ships and sailors. Ships’ captains ordered entire crews below decks, and sealed
their vessels for days in an effort to escape contamination. Fallout dusted
U.S. service members stationed on nearby Rongerik Island.
Fallout maps showing dispersal of
Bravo’s radioactive plume and the distance it traveled from Ground Zero.
Illustration via permission from Restricted Data: The Nuclear Secrecy Blog
The plume blanketed Marshall
Islanders on Rongelap, Ailinginae and Utirik atolls downwind from Ground Zero.
Unaware of the danger, children played in the radioactive dust, while other
islanders licked it off their hands and arms because they thought it was snow.
And if things weren’t bad enough,
fallout contaminated the Japanese fishing boat Fukuryu Maru, exposing
the 23-man crew to high levels of radiation. One crewman died from radiation
exposure, which provoked international outrage and a diplomatic crisis between
the U.S. and Japan.
After the Fukuryu Maru
incident became known, the U.S. Navy expanded the exclusion zone around the
Pacific Proving Grounds to 570,000 square miles. However, the proving grounds
and exclusion zone were so huge, it caused serious problems for the Japanese
fishing industry.
The U.S. and Japan eventually
resolved their diplomatic differences, and the U.S. agreed to pay more than $15
million in compensation to the Fukuryu Maru survivors.
The Marshall Islanders hit by fallout experienced numerous
health problems for decades after the Bravo shot, including birth defects and
thyroid cancer.
Eventually, natives evacuated from
the contaminated islands, returned briefly, and then evacuated again because of
concerns about lingering radiation. The natives still in exile.
“We are sadly more akin to the
Children of Israel when they left Egypt and wandered through the desert for 40
years,” Bikinian representative Tomaki Juda said during a media conference in
2014 commemorating the 60th anniversary of Bravo. “We left Bikini and have
wandered through the ocean for 32 years and we will never return to our
Promised Land.”
In 1990, Congress passed the
Radiation Exposure Compensation Act. The Justice Department can make a one-time
payment of $75,000 to an “atomic veteran” for a nuclear testing-related
illness. However, government records indicate that fewer than three percent of
atomic veterans have made a claim.
In 1963, the United States signed
the Limited Test Ban Treaty that prohibited atmospheric testing of nuclear weapons.
“I think we should also make sure
not to let short-term national security fears keep us from being methodical and
careful about our thinking and actions,” Wellerstein said. “The reason Bravo
got so far wrong is because small errors in understanding, under certain
circumstances, can get magnified greatly.”
The original article with graphics can be found at: https://medium.com/war-is-boring/those-who-witnessed-castle-bravo-looked-into-armageddon-fa7610578413
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