Documents confirm soldiers were
                 exposed to nuclear tests in
                 Australia
 
                 By Margaret Rees
                 9 July 2001
 
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                 the author
 
                 Information recently unearthed in Australia has proven
                 that the British and Australian governments
                 intentionally used soldiers and civilians as human
                 guinea pigs in nuclear tests conducted during the 1950s
                 and early 1960s.
 
                 Surviving veterans of Britain’s tests in Australia are
                 using newly discovered documents in continuing efforts
                 to win compensation for their injuries. Just four years
                 ago, in 1997, the British government defeated a
                 damages case at the European Court of Human Rights
                 by insisting that there was no plan or intention to
                 expose the 16,000 Australian troops and civilians and
                 22,000 British servicemen involved to harmful
                 radiation.
 
                 In May this year, Sue Rabbitt Roff, an anti-nuclear
                 activist and researcher from the University of Dundee
                 in Scotland, challenged the official claim. She released
                 an October 1956 document she had found in the
                 Australian National Archives concerning the Buffalo
                 trials, conducted at Maralinga, 850km north west of
                 Adelaide. It listed 24 Australian servicemen who were
                 deliberately given excessive doses of radiation in
                 so-called protective clothing experiments.
 
                 “This puts the lie to the British government’s claim that
                 they never used humans for guinea pig-type experiments
                 in nuclear weapons trials in Australia—a claim they
                 made very strongly and ferociously in the court at
                 Strasbourg in 1997,” Rabbitt Roff commented.
 
                 For the 1956 Buffalo tests, the British military
                 established an “indoctrinee” force of 280 soldiers,
                 including 175 from Britain, 100 from Australia and five
                 from New Zealand, who were “indoctrinated” on the
                 effects of atomic weapons. For one test, known as the
                 One Tree explosion, they were stationed eight
                 kilometres from the blast, and then taken to the target
                 point over the next two days, to be covered in dust.
 
                 In response to her information, the British Ministry of
                 Defence eventually confirmed that trials had taken
                 place, involving 24 men wearing three different types
                 of protective clothing. Nevertheless, a spokesman
                 insisted that the men were not guinea pigs, offering the
                 absurd argument that the clothing was tested, not the
                 soldiers wearing it. “They were told of the purpose of
                 the experiment and were closely monitored to ensure
                 [they were not] exposed to dangerous levels of
                 radiation.”
 
                 Sheila Gray, secretary of the British Nuclear Test
                 Veterans Association, told ABC radio: “It is true, they
                 were not guinea pigs. They were sacrificial lambs. I
                 have about 500 death certificates in my house at the
                 moment. When you’re talking of 30, 40 and even 100,
                 with the same illness there is no coincidence. The only
                 thing they have in common is they all served at the
                 British nuclear tests. Every time we think we can’t
                 discover more, something else crawls out of the
                 cupboard.”
 
                 Following Australian media interest in Rabbitt Roff’s
                 information, another anti-nuclear activist, Ann
                 Munslow-Davies, released about 50 classified
                 documents given to her by a senior official in the
                 nuclear program. They revealed plans to expose up to
                 1,750 troops to atomic blasts from September 1959
                 onward in Operation Lighthouse.
 
                 One document, headed Operation Lighthouse, Secret
                 Guard, states: “The Australian Services are desirous
                 that during the Lighthouse series, an indoctrination
                 force of approximately 1,750 troops take part in an
                 exercise involving construction of a trench system
                 (upwind from ground zero) including command post,
                 troop accommodation and weapon pits and that the
                 system be occupied during the explosion. All
                 participating troops to be blood counted before arrival
                 on site.”
 
                 Munslow-Davies pointed to the significance of such
                 blood tests, which indicated medical experimentation.
                 Another document, the minutes of the working party
                 running the tests, stated that biomedical checks would
                 be included, to “study the effects of heat and blast on
                 men at rest and wrapped in a blanket designed for use
                 in the tropics”. The Lighthouse series did not proceed,
                 but the documents suggest that similar experiments
                 would have taken place in the earlier tests.
 
                 The Australian Department of Veterans Affairs is still
                 refusing the soldiers involved access to pensions and
                 health care given to war veterans, claiming that service
                 in the blast zone was not hazardous. The veterans must
                 not only have a radiation-linked cancer, but the onus is
                 on them to prove it was contracted during the blasts.
                 They have been consistently denied funding for medical
                 tests to determine the extent of their radiation exposure.
 
                 Typical of the health consequences suffered by victims
                 of the blasts is Rick Johnstone, a former airforce
                 mechanic and head of the Australian Nuclear Veterans
                 Association. After spending 11 years in the courts, he
                 became the only veteran to win a court case against the
                 Australian government. He has heart disease, vascular
                 disorders, leukaemia, numerous carcinomas, calcified
                 tendons and prematurely aged skin and sweat glands.
                 His sons had birth defects—one did not develop any
                 teeth and had chronic skin problems, while another had
                 a harelip and an irregular palate.
 
                 The British government now faces another legal action
                 from the widow of a pilot who flew through the
                 mushroom cloud from a nuclear test in 1958. Shirley
                 Denson, whose husband Eric committed suicide after
                 years of depression, has just won legal aid to sue the
                 government. Two New Zealand veterans are suing the
                 New Zealand government and 30 Australian veterans
                 are pursuing a compensation claim against the
                 Australian government.
 
                               Strategic interests
 
                 The British tests were conducted between 1952 and
                 1963, first at the Monte Bello Islands off Western
                 Australia and then at Emu Field and Maralinga in the
                 South Australian desert. At Maralinga, Britain secretly
                 moved from atomic explosions to detonating
                 thermonuclear devices.
 
                 The tests were a bid to catch up militarily with the
                 United States after World War II and with the Soviet
                 Union, after the USSR exploded its first nuclear
                 weapon in August 1949. Britain built test sites in
                 Australia after the US Congress passed the 1946
                 McMahon Act to outlaw the passing of classified
                 atomic information to any other country.
 
                 Australian Prime Minister Robert Menzies was willing
                 to provide whatever the British government wanted,
                 with virtually no questions asked. He gave permission
                 for the tests without even consulting his cabinet, let
                 alone parliament. Responding to a parliamentary
                 question in 1953, he declared that the tests would
                 produce “no conceivable injury to life, limb or
                 property” and that they were essential to the “defence
                 of the free world”.
 
                 One result of the tests was an amendment to the
                 McMahon Act, which enabled Britain to obtain access
                 to testing sites in Nevada. “Minor” tests, codenamed
                 Vixen, continued at Maralinga, however. These trials
                 have left almost 24 kilos of plutonium, with a half-life
                 of 24,000 years, scattered around a huge area.
 
                 In addition to troops and civilian workers, local
                 Aborigines suffered deliberate contamination. They
                 often went barefoot, wore few clothes, and slept on the
                 ground, making them even more susceptible to radiation
                 than clothed troops.
 
                 On one occasion in 1953, a blast known as Totem One
                 precipitated a poisonous cloud trailing fine, sticky dust
                 that drifted over Aborigines living around Wallatinna
                 and Wellbourne Hill stations. The cloud’s smell made
                 people vomit. It was so concentrated that air force
                 crews could locate it visually at night. Various
                 illnesses ensued and one boy went blind. Officials later
                 stated that scientific predictions had underestimated the
                 bomb’s contamination by a factor of three and its
                 power by a factor of two.
 
                 In 1957, Charlie and Edie Milpuddie and their two
                 children strayed into a bomb crater before a
                 decontamination team found them. The father and son
                 registered as radioactive. The mother and daughter
                 were not checked. They were simply showered in the
                 team’s caravan, put in a jeep and driven 200km away.
                 The Australian Minister of Supply ordered their hunting
                 dogs shot, as they had not been decontaminated. Edie
                 Milpuddie was pregnant. At Yalata, she gave birth to a
                 dead child. Her next child was born four years later,
                 and died aged two, of a brain tumour. No follow up
                 medical checks were performed on the family until
                 1985, 24 years later. By that time, Charlie Milpuddie
                 was dead.
 
                 Facing mounting evidence of harm to servicemen and
                 Aborigines, as well as long-term contamination of wide
                 areas, the Australian Labor government established a
                 limited Royal Commission in 1985, but even its
                 recommendations for decontamination of test sites and
                 some compensation for radioactivity victims were
                 largely ignored by successive Australian and British
                 governments.
 
                 An infamous 1956 letter by Alan Butement, an original
                 member of the Australian Atomic Weapons Tests
                 Safety Committee, summed up the government policy
                 toward the victims, Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal
                 alike. Denouncing an Australian native patrol officer
                 for raising concerns about the exposure of Aboriginal
                 people to radioactivity, Butement accused him of “a
                 lamentable lack of balance” in “apparently placing the
                 affairs of a handful of natives above those of the British
                 Commonwealth of Nations”.
 
                 The Cold War race for nuclear supremacy may have
                 ended, but this outlook—insisting that the strategic
                 military interests of Britain and the Western powers
                 must be protected at all costs—continues in the official
                 cover-up of what took place at Maralinga.
 
                   
                              
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