- See more at: http://japanfocus.org/-Roger-Witherspoon/3919#sthash.vTn18AEA.dpuf
The
Reagan’s crew had been assured that there was no radiation to worry
about over the open ocean and, as the ship’s navigator, Enis had been
led to believe that the radiation was a distinct plume that they could
avoid. It was now apparent that the radiation cloud was everywhere, and
avoiding it would not always be possible.
On the quarter mile long deck there was another alarming note.
“I had a digital watch,” said quartermaster Jaime Plym, “and it suddenly stopped working. Somebody made a crack that radiation would do that. There were five or six of us on deck and everyone looked at their watches – and all the digital watches had stopped. There was one that was real expensive, and it wasn’t working either.
“We were laughing at first. But then that petered out and we just sort of looked at each other because it wasn’t funny anymore.”
- See more at: http://japanfocus.org/-Roger-Witherspoon/3919#sthash.hn4SMz6v.dpuf
begs the question of why the Department of Defense saw fit to discontinue the Todomachi Medical Registry, which would have established baseline data for exposed personnel and monitored them for health problems. CH 2/5/14]On the quarter mile long deck there was another alarming note.
“I had a digital watch,” said quartermaster Jaime Plym, “and it suddenly stopped working. Somebody made a crack that radiation would do that. There were five or six of us on deck and everyone looked at their watches – and all the digital watches had stopped. There was one that was real expensive, and it wasn’t working either.
“We were laughing at first. But then that petered out and we just sort of looked at each other because it wasn’t funny anymore.”
- See more at: http://japanfocus.org/-Roger-Witherspoon/3919#sthash.hn4SMz6v.dpuf
The
Reagan’s crew had been assured that there was no radiation to worry
about over the open ocean and, as the ship’s navigator, Enis had been
led to believe that the radiation was a distinct plume that they could
avoid. It was now apparent that the radiation cloud was everywhere, and
avoiding it would not always be possible.
On the quarter mile long deck there was another alarming note.
“I had a digital watch,” said quartermaster Jaime Plym, “and it suddenly stopped working. Somebody made a crack that radiation would do that. There were five or six of us on deck and everyone looked at their watches – and all the digital watches had stopped. There was one that was real expensive, and it wasn’t working either.
“We were laughing at first. But then that petered out and we just sort of looked at each other because it wasn’t funny anymore.”
- See more at: http://japanfocus.org/-Roger-Witherspoon/3919#sthash.hn4SMz6v.dpuf
On the quarter mile long deck there was another alarming note.
“I had a digital watch,” said quartermaster Jaime Plym, “and it suddenly stopped working. Somebody made a crack that radiation would do that. There were five or six of us on deck and everyone looked at their watches – and all the digital watches had stopped. There was one that was real expensive, and it wasn’t working either.
“We were laughing at first. But then that petered out and we just sort of looked at each other because it wasn’t funny anymore.”
- See more at: http://japanfocus.org/-Roger-Witherspoon/3919#sthash.hn4SMz6v.dpuf
The original coverage minimized the significance of the contamination,
saying it was equivalent to an extra month’s background radiation.
This narrative was called into question as sailors
who had served on the Reagan at that
time filed suit, first in San Diego court and then against the Tokyo Electric
Power Corporation or TEPCO, for damages relating to health problems they blamed
on the contamination. Currently, there are more than 50 plaintiffs and their attorney says he expects the number to grow.
Congress recently directed the Department of Defense to look
into potential health impacts from exposure during Operation Tomodachi.
Stars & Stripes reported the story with this arresting
image of a line of sailors pushing soapy water across the Reagan’s flight deck:
The picture is captioned “Sailors on the USS Ronald Reagan
scrub the aircraft carrier’s deck to remove potential radiation contamination
during Operatiion Tomodachi …
First off, the adjective “potential” perhaps conveys a false
idea of the level of confirmation that the Reagan
was contaminated. The Reagan is nuclear-powered, and
chock-a-block with radiation detectors.
Indeed, the CBS report at the time acknowledged that the radiation
detectors were triggered. So the
radiation contamination was “actual” not “potential” unless one wants to engage
in word-parsing that there were no radiation detectors on the surface of the
flight deck, so there was no confirmation of radiation contamination in the
particular locations where the sailors were pushing their brooms at that time.
But it looks pretty likely that there was contamination, for
a key and dire reason: the Reagan had
experienced a snow storm while it was near the Fukushima reactor, raising the
possibility that the plume of radioactive material, instead of dispersing in
the higher atmosphere, had been washed down—and all over the Reagan—by the precipitation.
Indeed, a sailor who is suing for health-related issues
stated that the snow “tasted metallic”.
Not exactly a good sign.
Which meant it is likely that radioactive particulate was all over the
ship, and available to be inhaled. So it’s
not like the crew simply experienced an increase in background radiation one
might associate with a stay on the space shuttle or by standing next to a
poorly shielded microwave; it is possible they were exposed to and inhaled
radioactive particulate, which is universally acknowledged to be very bad for
you.
The Stars & Stripes photograph confirms that there was a
concern over particulate contamination; otherwise they don’t send out the guys with the brooms.
The likely contamination of the Reagan by particulate radioactive material raising another
extremely expensive, difficult, and perhaps insoluble problem.
I am not aware of current advances in decontamination but,
unless revolutionary breakthroughs have occurred, complete decontamination of a
vessel exposed to particulate radiation is impossible.
In fact, the inability to decontaminate navy vessels guided
the evolution of US military strategy.
Faced with the threat to its mission and relevance in the
atomic age, in 1946 the US Navy conceived an experiment in decontamination, Operation Crossroads. We know it as the Bikini Atoll atomic
test. A flotilla of derelict ships were
anchored around the atoll and two nuclear devices were detonated—one, Able, an airburst, the second, Baker, under water—to see how the ships
and a few head of livestock would do.
As expected, the livestock did not do well, but the ships
did, riding out the shock wave with limited damage and raising hopes that, in a
wartime situation, US Navy ships could be experience a nuclear attack, survive,
be decontaminated, get a fresh crew, and return to action.
However, the decontamination exercise simply didn’t
work. Months were spent trying to scrub
down the ships and obtain an acceptable radiation level, but the contaminate
(particularly from Baker, which was a
spectacularly dirty underwater shot and perhaps analogous to the messy
meltdown and explosion at Fukushima) proved far too tenacious. On the military level, the takeaway was that
surface vessels did not have a viable survivable role in a nuclear
exchange. On the scientific level, the
Bikini test—and the revelation that the radiation aftereffects of a nuclear attack
could not be adequately remediated, no matter how much time and energy were expended—was an
important factory in the growing anti-nuke orientation of many scientists who
had willingly worked on the bomb during WWII.
In an indication of trends in decontamination technology,
here is a photograph from 1946 of sailors trying to decontaminate one of the
test vessels, the Prinz Eugen. Pushbrooms and soapy water seem to be a
universal element in decontamination strategy, and it is unlikely that today there is
any magic bullet that will allow a ship to be completely decontaminated.
A plaintiff in the TEPCO case claimed
that the USS Reagan had been denied
approval to dock in Japan or South Korea after contamination and had spent over
two months at sea before returning to San Diego. I would expect those two months were spent in
extensive and laborious decontamination efforts that got most of the radiation;
but with particulate radiation you can never get it all, and there’s a chance
that it can be ingested and cause serious illness.
There are some strikingly significant consequences to the
probability that the USS Reagan can
never be completely and demonstrably decontaminated.
First, sailors may not be particularly enthusiastic about
serving on the Reagan, especially
since dozens of the crew are blaming their time on the ship for serious health
problems.
Second, if the contamination story gains legs in the popular
media, the US disposition of forces in the Pacific is vulnerable to serious
disruption. The Navy has announced that
the Reagan will replace the USS George Washington at the Yokosuka
Naval Base in Japan. Post-tsunami, polls
in Japan have demonstrated a predominant dislike for nuclear power in general
and Fukushima radiation in particular, and it is unlikely to welcome it into a
Japanese port aboard the Reagan.
This is a matter of concern to the Abe government, not for
public hygiene reasons—the regime’s foot soldiers are busy trying to sell the
local population on the lack of peril and even the health benefits of Fukushima
radiation—but because the unconditional welcome that the Japanese government
offers to US forces is a key component of its strategy to use an unbreakable
alliance between the US and Japan to confront the PRC.
Abe already has enough problems trying to shove the Futenma
base relocation down the throats of the resisting Okinawans; he does not need
the additional headache of having to rebut the argument that the US alliance
brings with it additional nuclear contamination.
That is probably why, as CNN put it, “specific timelines are
yet to be announced” for when the Reagan
will actually show up at Yokosuka.
Third, the most logical way to deal with this issue once and
for all would be to scuttle the USS
Reagan in some conveniently deep marine trench and hope that the
radioactive particulate will disperse sufficiently on the seabed and in the
food chain to make the risk acceptable (the contamination issue, I imagine,
would make the financial and political cost of scrapping the ship
unsupportable). However, I imagine the
US Navy is loath to scuttle a $6 billion ship that is also the symbol and
instrument of US military hegemony in the Pacific in order to prevent a few
dozen potential premature cancer deaths.
Instead, as noted above, instead of shunting the Reagan off to some US base, the US
government announced in January 2014 it would station it at Yokosuka. Maybe the Defense Department has decided that
the best defense is a good offense, and instead of giving credibility to
Japanese nuclear anxieties, it’s just going to say The ship is clean, here’s
the ship, it’s not going anywhere else.
However, nuclear fears are notoriously difficult to allay
and it will be a challenge for the US Navy and the Abe government to use
scientific, statistical, and University of Chicago-style cost/benefit analyses
to reconcile the Japanese citizenry to the presence of the USS Reagan.
So I predict that the preferred strategy of the US Defense
Department and the Abe government will be: first, don’t acknowledge there’s a
problem, followed by the usual stonewalling, modified hangout, and suppression
of negative information—information like this from Stars
& Stripes:
Sailors who were
onboard the Reagan have claimed that they were drinking contaminated
desalinated seawater and bathing in it until the ship’s leadership came over
the public address system and told them to stop because it was contaminated.
They claim the ventilation system was also contaminated. Furthermore, some
claim they were pressured into signing forms confirming they had been given
iodine pills when none had been provided.
Given the stakes involved—not just the $6 billion aircraft
carrier and the health of its crew, but also the implications for the Abe
government and the US-Japan alliance if the Ronald
Reagan story gets out of hand—it will be interesting to see how the media
covers this story.
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