Saul Landau

The Lesson Unlearned

"We

have contained the spread of radiation from last week’s nuclear accident,"

Japanese authorities assured their citizens. They blame the chain reaction on

improper handling of materials by low level workers. As if that explanation will

sedate the Japanese public! The Japanese know all too well the long term effects

of radiation on human health – thanks to their experience with atomic bombs

dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945. More recently, we have the Chernobyl

nuclear plant explosion in the Ukraine. Ukranian children still suffer from

radiation sickness and people in the path of the fallout for thousands of miles

learned the horrible lessons of a nuclear "accident." Then came the

Three Mile Island miscue in the United States. Remember how authorities there

swore they had contained the damage when they had not?

Last

month a Hanford Washington reactor developed a scary radioactive bubble.

Authorities assured the public no danger existed. Mention Marion, Ohio, Paducah,

Kentucky two of many memory triggers that recall nuclear mishaps.

In

the 1970s Cincinnati General Hospital doctors used a Pentagon grant to

"treat" cancer patients with whole body radiation. The Pentagon wanted

to find out how people would respond in nuclear battlefield conditions. From

1945-1971, the nuclear gang dumped radioactive waste in barrels into the ocean.

The barrels have leaked. Recall the above ground tests at the Marshall Islands

and other Pacific Atolls, causing terrible human suffering–in the name of

National Security, under the façade of fighting the Cold War. The nuclear gang

classified information that would have alerted the public to health dangers.

Forty

odd years ago my friend Paul Jacobs went to the Nevada Test Site to investigate

the claims of the Atomic Energy Commission.. Jacobs took a geigercounter to the

areas the AEC had deemed safe. Jacobs’ geigercounter went bonkers. The AEC’s

safe places registered much higher radiation than they had admitted.

Jacobs

also discovered that when winds changed just before or after atomic tests, the

nuclear gang didn’t inform the downwinders as they called them to take their

clothes to the cleaners, hose down their houses and bury their top soil.

Instead, they sent lecturers and films to those communities doused with fall out

and assured residents that the AEC would not allow harm to come to them. Jacobs

stole a classified document from a government office that revealed that the AEC

knew damned well about health dangers from low level radiation. Jacobs also

exposed the lack of safety in nuclear installations bought by third world

countries that couldn’t afford to pay for the expensive safety features. In 1979

Paul Jacobs submitted to lung cancer. His doctors believed that Paul, who didn’t

smoke, had inhaled a plutonium particle at the atomic testing ground. Paul

became just one of many victims of a technology that shouldn’t have happened.

The nuclear secret — think of Goethe’s Dr. Faust — has put humanity at risk.

How many more accidents before a global movement arises to put an end to this

nuclear gang and their dangerous toy?

The

Senate’s Refusal to Sign the Test Ban Treaty

"The

Senate refused to sign the test ban treaty, daddy, what does that mean?" my

teenage daughter asked. Go back to 1945, I said. The world’s leading scientists

had converted Goethe’s literary metaphor into ugly reality. A scientist who

wanted the ultimate secret of knowledge offered his soul to the Devil for it.

The scientists of 1945 rationalized. They needed the A bomb to beat Hitler – a

veritable devil. But by Spring 1945 Germany surrendered. But they didn’t stop

the project. Some said we should provide the world with cheap, safe and clean

energy. But when US planes dropped two nuclear bombs on Japanese cities,

international relations and military strategy changed — forever. The US

government refused to submit its nuclear monopoly to international control as

some wise people counseled. Before long our allies and the Soviets broke our

nuclear monopoly. Ironically, nuclear weapons didn’t intimidate our non-nuclear

foes — like the rulers of North Korea, China, Vietnam, Iran or Iraq. So,

nuclear weapons became symbols of power. "I don’t get it Dad. If they’re

only symbols, who cares if the Senate signs or not?"

Think

of the danger for your generation! The collapse of the Soviet armed forces

leaves Russia with only a nuclear defense. "How do you use nuclear weapons

to defend a country," she asked. No one has yet explained that, I said. But

our refusal to sign the treaty could lead corrupt officials to sell nuclear

weapons and conduct dangerous tests with them You see, the test ban treaty held

back the nuclear arms race – especially in South Asia. I said. And think ahead.

150 plus nations have signed on to it.

More

than 40 countries want to acquire nuclear weapons. They haven’t signed the

treaty. The US senate’s vote will hardly convince them to do so. Then, came the

military coup in Pakistan, which raises fears of nuclear war with India – both

nuclear powers.

"So,

what should we do?" she asked." A treaty doesn’t get rid of these

weapons." No, I agreed. It’s hard to put the nuclear genie back in the

bottle. But without abolition of nuclear weapons, the next best step is to

prevent their proliferation by restricting testing. That’s why the Senate

Republicans behaved so irresponsibly, as if we should test weapons and that will

defend us. "The newspapers said they did it for narrow political

reasons," she said. "Is that true?"

Yes,

it’s a paradox. The brilliant scientists invented nuclear weapons to bring

peace, and safe energy. But they left that power in the hands of rather mediocre

people, who can’t think ahead – at least not past the 200 election

"Depressing," she concluded. "I guess my generation will have to

maturely control over this horrible creation."

Saul

Landau is the Hugh O. LaBounty Chair of Interdisciplinary Applied Knowledge at

California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, 3801 W. Temple Ave. Pomona, CA

91768 tel – 909-869-3115 fax – 909-869-4751

 

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Saul Landau(January 15, 1936 - September 9, 2013) , Professor Emeritus at the California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, an internationally-known filmmaker, scholar, author, commentator and Fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies. His film trilogy on Cuba includes FIDEL, a portrait of Cuba's leader (1968), CUBA AND FIDEL, in which Castro talks of democracy and institutionalizing the revolution (1974) and the UNCOMPROMISING REVOLUTION, as Fidel worries about impending Soviet collapse (1988). His trilogy of films on Mexico are THE SIXTH SUN: MAYAN UPRISING IN CHIAPAS (1997), MAQUILA: A TALE OF TWO MEXICOS (2000), and WE DON'T PLAY GOLF HERE AND OTHER STORIES OF GLOBALIZATION, (2007). His Middle East trilogy includes REPORT FROM BEIRUT (1982), IRAQ: VOICES FROM THE STREET (2002) SYRIA: BETWEEN IRAQ AND A HARD PLACE (2004). He has also written hundreds of articles on Cuba for learned journals, newspapers and magazines, done scores of radio shows on the subject and has taught classes on the Cuban revolution at major universities.

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