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Fukushima Mon Amour

Is the crisis in Fukushima over or just beginning? You might be forgiven for scratching your head at that one. Nearly five years after the nuclear meltdown triggered by the Tohoku earthquake and subsequent tsunami, one of the planet’s worst radioactive catastrophes has almost completely faded from both the media and public consciousness. Amid that information void, the lethal history of those events has been swamped under pernicious myths being spread by nuclear hucksters.

In brief, the revised story of the Fukushima meltdown goes something like this: the Daiichi facility was struck by an unprecedented event, unlikely to be repeated; the failsafe systems worked; the meltdown was swiftly halted; the spread of radioactive contamination contained and remediated; no lives or illnesses resulted from the crisis. Full-speed ahead!

One of the first to squirm headlong down this rabbit hole of denial was Paddy Reagan, a professor of Nuclear Physics at the University of Surrey: “We had a doomsday earthquake in a country with 55 nuclear power stations and they all shut down perfectly, although three have had problems since. This was a huge earthquake, and as a test of the resilience and robustness of nuclear plants it seems they have withstood the effects very well.”

For Reagan and other atomic zealots, the Fukushima meltdown did not represent a cautionary tale, but served as a real time exemplar of the safety, efficiency and durability of nuclear power. Call it Fukushima Mon Amour, or How They Stopped Worrying and Learned to Love the Atom.

Such extreme revisionism is to be expected from the likes of Reagan, and other hired guns for the Big Atom, especially at a moment of grave peril for their economic fortunes. More surreal is the killer compact between the nuclear industry and some high-profile environmentalists, which reached a feverish pitch at the Paris Climate conference this fall. Freelance nuclear shills, such as the odious James Hansen and the clownish George Monbiot, have left carbon footprints that would humble Godzilla by jetting across the world promoting nuclear energy as a kind of technological deus ex machina for the apocalyptic threat of climate change. Hansen has gone so far as to charge that “opposition to nuclear power threatens the future of humanity.” Shamefully, many greens now promote nuclear power as a kind ecological lesser-evilism.

Of course, there’s nothing new about this kind of rationalization for the doomsday machines. The survival of nuclear power has always depended on the willing suspension of disbelief. In the terrifying post-Hiroshima age, most people intuitively detected the symbiotic linkage between nuclear weapons and nuclear power and those fears had to be doused. As a consequence, the nuclear industrial complex concocted the fairy tale of the peaceful atom, zealously promoted by one of the most devious conmen of our time: Edward “H-Bomb” Teller.

After ratting out Robert Oppenheimer as a peacenik and security risk, Teller set up shop in his lair at the Lawrence Livermore Labs and rapidly began designing uses for nuclear power and bombs as industrial engines to propel the post-World War II economy. One of the first mad schemes to come off of Teller’s drafting board was Operation Chariot, a plan to excavate a deep water harbor at Cape Thornton, near the Inuit village of Point Hope, Alaska, by using controlled (sic) detonations of hydrogen bombs.

In 1958, Teller, the real life model for Terry Southern’s character Dr. Strangelove, devised a plan for atomic fracking. Working with the Richfield Oil Company, Teller plotted to detonate 100 atomic bombs in northern Alberta to extract oil from the Athabasca tar sands. The plan, which went by the name Project Oilsands, was only quashed when intelligence agencies got word that Soviet spies had infiltrated the Canadian oil industry.

Frustrated by the Canadians’ failure of nerve, Teller soon turned his attentions to the American West. First he tried to sell the water-hungry Californians on a scheme to explode more than 20 nuclear bombs to carve a trench in the western Sacramento Valley to canal more water to San Francisco, the original blueprint for Jerry Brown’s Peripheral Canal. This was followed by a plot to blast off 22 peaceful nukes to blow a hole in the Bristol Mountains of southern California for the construction of Interstate 40. Fortunately, neither plan came to fruition.

Teller once again turned to the oil industry, with a scheme to liberate natural gas buried under the Colorado Plateau by setting off 30 kiloton nuclear bombs 6,000 feet below the surface of the earth. Teller vowed that these mantle-cracking explosions, marketed as Project Gasbuggy, would “stimulate” the flow of natural gas. The gas was indeed stimulated, but it also turned out to be highly radioactive.

More crucially, in 1957 at speech before the American Chemical Society Teller, who later helped the Israelis develop their nuclear weapons program, became the first scientist to posit that the burning of fossil fuels would inevitably yield a climate-altering greenhouse effect, which would feature mega-storms, prolonged droughts and melting ice-caps. His solution? Replace the energy created by coal and gas-fired plants with a global network of nuclear power plants.

Edward Teller’s deranged ideas of yesteryear have now been dusted off and remarketed by the Nuclear Greens, including James Lovelock, the originator of the Gaia Hypothesis, with no credit given to their heinous progenitor.

There are currently 460 or so operating nukes, some chugging along far past their expiration dates, coughing up 10 percent of global energy demands. Teller’s green disciples want to see nuclear power’s total share swell to 50 percent, which would mean the construction of roughly 2100 new atomic water-boilers from Mogadishu to Kathmandu. What are the odds of all of those cranking up without a hitch?

Meanwhile, back at Fukushima, unnoticed by the global press corps, the first blood cancers (Myelogenous leukemia) linked to radiation exposure are being detected in children and cleanup workers. And off the coast of Oregon and California every Bluefin tuna caught in the last year has tested positive for radioactive Cesium 137 from the Fukushima meltdown. The era of eco-radiation has arrived. Don’t worry. It only has a half-life of 30.7 years.

(Jeffrey St. Clair is editor of CounterPunch. His new book is Killing Trayvons: an Anthology of American Violence (with JoAnn Wypijewski and Kevin Alexander Gray). He can be reached at: sitka@comcast.net. Courtesy, CounterPunch.org)

2 Comments

  1. Rick Weddle January 29, 2016

    re: Fukushima’s ongoing nuclear tragedies (and our’s)…

    An urgently needed peek into the banal genesis of The Fukushima Event, and into its totally disregarded, extended and extending side-effects. Good, tough work. And tough reading. Big thanks to Mr. St. Clair and to this AVA outfit for running it.

    The ‘era of eco-radiation’ has, tragically, been with us for some time. Not to trivialize the vast magnitude of Japan’s and the Pacific Ocean’s grievous wounding at Fukushima, but the nature of ionizing radiation makes it (1)BOUNDLESS (can only be ‘contained’ in wildest imaginings…for a while…within concrete and lead-lined tomb-enclosures, which then BECOME ‘HOT’ THEMSELVES, requiring their own ‘containment’), and (2)DEADLY DESTRUCTIVE to living cells wherever it finds ’em…and that from the time you first dig it up. Radiation poisoning is a predictable, and long-predicted, long-proven result of ANY contact or proximity with ionizing isotopes, period. It kills. And it corrupts our politics, our economies, our lives. So, the time of eco-radiation has been with us awhile, doing its dirtywork, bragging about how much we ‘need’ it. Aside from the KNOWN troubles we’re familiar with at Three Mile Island, Chernobyl, Fermi, Yankee, Diablo Canyon, Humboldt, Novosibirsk, etc., etc., there’s this:
    *WITHOUT ‘accidents,’ each nuclear (for ‘peace’) reactor, in its 20-year design lifespan kills LOTS of people.

    *NOT ONE REACTOR (NONE of them) operates without ‘accidents.’…

    *see Dr. John W. Goffmann’s “An Irreverent, Illustrated View of Nuclear Power.” The Dr. was head of Lawrence Livermore RadLab (THE Big Goddam Deal in the Rad Biz) for seven (7) years. A medical Dr. as well as a radiology guy, he was tasked by the Feds to study and report on the medical implications among human populations of ionizing radio-isotopes being in close proximity. Read the book. See what Dr. Goffmann found. See what happened to Dr. Goffmann when he turned in his report.

    Know why nobody in this country has heard of the event of the Winter of ’57-’58, in Novosibirsk, southwestern Siberia? I’ll tell you. Between the secrecy exercised by Soviet ‘security/intelligence,’ and that wielded by ‘our own’ CIA and other info-whizzes (these efforts taken in aggregate working as protection for The Nuke Industry), that event was hidden so well from the U.S. public as to be an almost water-tight coverup. The dribbles of badly stepped-on announcements which did emerge claimed there’d been a ‘small reactor accident’…nothing to worry about…nothing to see here, move along, move along…

    There was no reactor there. What was there was a ‘state-of-the-art’ nuclear waste repository…a very model and manifestation of how the Great Powers handle the Waste Problem. The deal is, the place mysteriously went off explosively, totally unexpected. Indeed, the place was The Best They Could Do, Deliberately, With Big, Fat Budgets, FOR SAFETY of storage of nuke waste. It took out hundreds of villages, thousands of square miles, many watersheds and all their populations. Novosibirsk still isn’t one of those places you’d go house-hunting. Not for quite a while.

    An isotope can have a brief or very long half-life. Also, said isotope might be harmless (radio-roulette), or be deadly, and it might well remain deadly through the span of many of its half-lives. The nastiest can stay too hot for half a million years.

    The first thing we should have learned about nukes is the word, ‘wups.’ Einstein got it. Oppenheimer got it. Teller was a barking wackjob. Hm. Why did ‘our’ politics follow the wackjobs, and ignore the Smart Guys?

    • LouisBedrock January 29, 2016

      Plutonium, for example, has a half life of 24,000 years, is deadly for close to 500,000 years, and only a millionth of a gram can cause lung cancer.

      I hear they have tons of the stuff buried in barrels in Patucah, Kentucky.

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