What happened at Bikini
Atoll?
After the war, in December
of 1945, President Harry S. Truman issued a
directive to Army and Navy officials that
joint testing of nuclear weapons would be
necessary "to determine the effect of atomic
bombs on American warships." Bikini, because
of its location away from regular air and
sea routes, was chosen to be the new nuclear
proving ground for the United States
government.
In February of 1946
Commodore Ben H. Wyatt, the military
governor of the Marshalls, traveled to
Bikini. On a Sunday after church, he
assembled the Bikinians to ask if they would
be willing to leave their atoll temporarily
so that the United States could begin
testing atomic bombs for "the good of
mankind and to end all world wars." King
Juda, then the leader of the Bikinian
people, stood up after much confused and
sorrowful deliberation among his people, and
announced, "We will go believing that
everything is in the hands of God."
While
the 167 Bikinians were getting ready for
their exodus, preparations for the U.S.
nuclear testing program advanced rapidly.
Some 242 naval ships, 156 aircraft, 25,000
radiation recording devices and the Navy's
5,400 experimental rats, goats and pigs soon
began to arrive for the tests. Over 42,000
U.S. military and civilian personnel were
involved in the testing program at Bikini.
The nuclear legacy of the
Bikinians began in March of 1946 when they
were first removed from their islands in
preparation for Operation Crossroads. The
history of the Bikinian people from that day
has been a story of their struggle to
understand scientific concepts as they
relate to their islands, as well as the
day-to-day problems of finding food, raising
families and maintaining their culture
amidst the progression of events set in
motion by the Cold War that have been for
the most part out of their control.
The two atomic bomb blasts
of Operation Crossroads were both about the
size of the nuclear bomb dropped on
Nagasaki, Japan. Eighteen tons of
cinematography equipment and more than half
of the world's supply of motion picture film
were on hand to record the Able and Baker
detonations, and also the movement of the
Bikinians from their atoll.