From Publishers Weekly
Based on a wealth of previously untapped material, this comprehensive examination of the world's first nuclear disaster is the first account of the Bikini atomic test explosions from a nongovernment source. Weisgall reconstructs the air-dropped "Able" test and the underwater "Baker" test, both conducted in July 1946, and explains how the sites were determined from a bitter rivalry between the Navy and the Air Force, how the tests affected U.S.-Soviet relations and why there was a scientific failure. In light of the current attention on U.S. government radiation experiments on humans and the postwar cover-up of nuclear-weapons testing, Weisgall's study is timely as well as chilling. He charges that the Navy ignored warnings about the dire consequences of radioactive fallout which, during the Operation Crossroads tests, blanketed 95 guinea-pig ships with deadly radiation and sunk 16 of them at Bikini lagoon. Finally, he relates the sad saga of the Bikinians who were relocated several times before and after the tests, which turned their atoll in the Ratok chain of the Marshall Islands into a laboratory of death. An attorney in Washington, D.C., and adjunct professor at Georgetown University, Weisgall has represented the people of Bikini in suits against the U.S. government since 1975. Photos.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
The author of this comprehensive study of the 1946 nuclear tests at Bikini Atoll began his association with the matter as an attorney for displaced atoll inhabitants seeking to return home. His is a notably insightful and balanced treatment of a complex and controversial subject, individual aspects of which--e.g., the fates of individual ships and the radiation exposure of U.S. sailors--have been treated before. Weisgall, however, pulls everything together from a comprehensive base of research, and he adds a considerable amount of new material, such as the revelation that the second test was necessary largely because the air force had dropped the first bomb quite far off target. A highly valuable addition to nuclear affairs and postwar military studies.
Roland Green