The Nuclear History
of Micronesia and the Pacific
by Richard N. Salvador*, Republic of Belau,
August 1999
"The first shot, Bravo, the largest single
nuclear explosion conducted by the United States, with a destructive
capability more than one thousand times that of the Hiroshima
bomb, was detonated on 1 March 1954. The explosion was so powerful
it vaporized several small islands …"
"...To this day, peoples of Rongelap, Bikini,
Enewetak, and many in the Marshall Islands continue to suffer
from cancer, miscarriages, and tumors."
While it is harrowing that Japanese cities became
the ultimate target, Micronesians (Marshallese) and French-Polynesians
have never really overcome the disastrous consequences of the
nuclear testings that made the destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
possible. In French-Occupied Polynesia, 180 tests were conducted
for over 30 years beginning with atmospheric testing in the Tuamotos
in 1966. Only sometime later did the testings move underground
in the atolls of Moruroa and Fangataufa; but unlike the Americans,
in the case of documentation of test results and effects on environmental
and human health, the French have always been and continue to
be secretive about their own tests in Polynesia. Tahitians and
Marshall Islanders who were exposed, including test site workers,
have been dying slow, excruciating deaths. Often they are unable
to receive proper medical treatment because French authorities
continue to deny officially that the nuclear tests did in fact
cause any significant environmental or human damage.
At the conclusion of World War II after Japan’s
defeat, Micronesia was taken by America. In January 1946, the
US Naval Military Government selected the Bikini Atoll in the
Marshall Islands chain for the first series of nuclear tests--known
as Operation Crossroads--which were intended to demonstrate the
destructive capacity of the atomic bombs on a fleet of wartime
ships (Robie 1989, p.142). In July 1947, the US Government became
our "Administering Authority," with the blessings of
the UN. Immediately after the war, eleven territories were under
UN supervision. Micronesia became administratively the "Trust
Territory of the Pacific Islands," and consisted of the Marshall
Islands, the Caroline Islands (which included the islands of Kosrae,
Pohnpei, Truck/Chuuk, Yap, and Belau), and the Marianas Islands
(which include Guam, Saipan and Tinian).
In Belau (Palau), where I come from, we were spared
the harrowing experiences of the atomic testings. Kwajalein, Bikini
and Enewetak in the Marshall Islands, however, were chosen for
a supply base and a smaller command center, respectively, and
which were used for the bomb testings. The Marshall Islands suffered
the most from these military occupations and tests. Kwajelein
also became a vital link in the supply route for American forces
during the Korean War as well as a base for missile tests later.
On Saipan, the main island of what is now the Commonwealth of
the Northern Marianas, the Central Intelligence set up a camp
which operated a secret training for Chinese nationalist guerillas
who were part of an unsuccessful plan to invade the Chinese mainland
(Robie p.144).
Micronesia, therefore, was where the beginnings
of important aspects of these US military activities took place.
These integral aspects of US military strategy in the western
Pacific were the beginnings of a strategic concept at work in
U.S. Asia-Pacific policy. Ever since, as Joseph Gerson has written,
Micronesia has been shaped and influenced by "the goal of
maintaining and increasing U.S. power and advantage in the region."
In the Marshall Islands, the US tested a total of 66 atomic and
hydrogen bombs between 1946 and 1958. Six islands were vaporised
by nuclear weapons and hundreds of people were irradiated. Today,
more than 40 years later, many islands are still uninhabited.
Many Bikinians and Rongelapese who were downwind of the bomb explosions
remain exiled peoples. (Alexander 1994, pp. 28,30).
In the book, Blood on their Banner: Nationalist
Struggles in the South Pacific, David Robie writes,
...the more than 2000 islands of Micronesia have
played a vital role in modern strategic history. Japanese aircraft
launched their attack on Peal Harbor from Micronesia, plunging
the United States into the Second World War. And it was from Tinian
Island in western Micronesia that the Enola Gay took off with
its deadly weapons for the attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki which
ended the war and ushered in the nuclear age. The islands of Micronesia
have been used by Washington ever since as pawns to enhance its
strategic posture (Robie, ibid, p.142).
This 'strategic posture' was largely the result
of a Cold War strategy that relied on massive military might.
It emerged as well from a rational calculation of the use of deadly
power. Cold War strategy, Alexander observed:
...required an assessment of both the political
and military potential of the atomic weapon in a strategic sense.
While the political assessment was made in the context of East-West
rivalry, the military assessment required taking note of both
the strengths and weaknesses of the new weapon. Two of these weaknesses,
the scarcity of bombs and the limited range of the only available
delivery vehicle, the B-29 bomber, served to govern US strategy
in the first years after World War II, and prompted an all-out
effort for research and development, including an ambitious testing
program. At the same time, US confidence in its ability to maintain
its nuclear lead was bolstered by a new-found strength, the efficacy
of which had been demonstrated by the Manhattan Project (Alexander,
ibid, p.18).
A comprehensive program of nuclear research appeared
necessary; however, there had been concerns within the US Congress
about safety issues. After considerations, the US Atomic Energy
Commission told Congress in 1953 that tests should be held overseas
until it (can) be established more definitely that continental
detonations would not endanger the public health and safety (Weisgall
1980, p. 76). Micronesia, which was captured from the Japanese,
seemed, to the AEC, as the most natural place. Bikini was chosen
as one of over 20 atolls scattered over close to 400,000 square
miles of ocean which make up the Marshall Islands to carry Operation
Crossroads, the first series of tests which were conducted near
the surface of the atoll, in July 1946. These first tests consisted
of two 23 kiloton detonations, one named Able and the other, Baker.
The explosions gouged out a crater 240 feet deep
and 6,000 feet across, melted huge quantities of coral, sucked
them up and distributed them far and wide across the Pacific.
The island of Rongelap (100 miles away) was buried in powdery
particles of radioactive fallout to a depth of one and a half
inches, and Utirik (300 miles away) was swathed in radioactive
mist. Also in the path of the fallout was a Japanese fishing boat,
Lucky Dragon No 5, and all 23 crew rapidly developed radiation
sickness. (Alexander 1994, pp.22,23,24). Jonathan Weisgall, in
an article titled "Nuclear Nomads of Bikini" noted that
according to one report, "Baker alone left 500,000 tons of
radioactive mud in the lagoon" (Weisgall, ibid, p.84.).
But the "US navy [only] sent ships to evacuate
the people of Rongelap and Utirik three days after the explosion.
These (and other) Pacific people were used as human guinea pigs
in an obscene racist experiment - a particularly sharp snapshot
of colonialism and the horrors wrought by the arrogant mindset
which goes with it," as a Peace Movement Aotearoa/New Zealand
Action Alert put it (Peace Movement Aotearoa, March 1999).
These two tests were just two of the total 66 nuclear
tests that the Department of Defense announced it conducted between
1946 and 1958, 23 of them at Bikini Atoll and 43 at Enewetak,
located in the northern Marshall Islands. Operation Sandstone
was the name of the series of tests conducted at Enewetak Atoll
between April and May 1948. A 49 kiloton blast code-named Yoke,
yielded "an explosion which was more than twice the size
of any prior atomic bomb detonation." There was something
significant about Operation Sandstone, as Alexander observed.
Partly quoting from Harvey Wasserman’s and Norman Solomon’s
book, Killing Our Own: The Disaster of America's Experience with
Atomic Radiation, Alexander wrote,
Operation Sandstone was significant in that the
tests, conducted jointly by the Department of Defense and the
Atomic Energy Commission, ‘evidently did result in substantial
improvements in the efficiency of use of fissile material,’
and according to Herbert York this ‘success’ ‘boosted
morale at Los Alamos and helped garner further support for the
laboratory in Washington. As a result, the construction of a new
laboratory, located nearby on South Mesa (New Mexico), was authorized
as a replacement for the wartime facilities which were still being
used.’ This response is an example of the way in which the
nuclear industry and nuclear strategists developed their own momentum.
Each successful explosion not only helped create the mystique
of American nuclear preeminence, but also spoke to the possibility
of the development of more and more powerful weapons, resulting
in greater insecurity not only for the people involved in the
tests, but for the entire world (Alexander, ibid., p. 24).
Other series of tests, Operation Greenhouse, for
example, were conducted at Enewetak in April and May 1951. On
November 1, 1952, Mike was exploded on the island of Elugelab.
Mike was the name of a cylindrical bomb measuring 22 ft in length
and 5-1/2 ft in diameter and weighing 23 tons. Mike's detonation
yielded a force of over 10 megatons, nearly one thousand times
that of the bomb dropped on Hiroshima. The island of Elugelab
completely disappeared.
The US Government listed the Mike explosion as
the first detonation of an experimental thermonuclear device (Wasserman
and Solomon, pp. 80-84). A total of six islands would simply vanish
as a result of further tests of similar magnitude. The Mike bomb
paved the way for the development of future hydrogen bombs. Operation
Castle tested these bombs between March and May 1954, using Bikini
and Enewetak Atolls. The operation included the following detonations:
Bravo (15 megaton), Romeo (11 megaton), Union (6.9 megaton), Yankee
(13.5 megaton), and Nectar (1.69 megaton).
Again, according to Alexander:
The first shot, Bravo, the largest single nuclear
explosion conducted by the United States, with a destructive capability
more than one thousand times that of the Hiroshima bomb, was detonated
on 1 March 1954. The explosion was so powerful it vaporized several
small islands and parts of islands in Bikini Atoll and left a
hole one-mile deep in diameter in the reef. Years later, some
Bikinian leaders would return to Bikini and weep openly at the
sight of the sandbars and open water, all that remained of the
islands destroyed by the Bravo shot. They would declare that the
islands had ‘lost their bones.’
Bravo coated Rongelap and Utirik Atolls with two
inches of radioactive fallout. (Alexander, ibid., 28).
To this day, peoples of Rongelap, Bikini, Enewetak,
and many in the Marshall Islands continue to suffer from cancer,
miscarriages, and tumors. Eighty-four percent of those who lived
on Rongelap who below 10 years old at the times of the explosions
have required surgery for thyroid tumors (Alexander, ibid., p.30).
Movement for a Nuclear-Free Belau (Palau)
As someone who is intimately involved in anti-nuclear
movements and know of the health consequences of radiation exposure,
I grieve today for my Marshallese sisters and brothers. By a kind
hand of fate perhaps, my island nation of Belau was spared the
harrowing nightmare of nuclear testings. However, we were not
spared the full brunt of what is described as nuclear colonialism.
By the end of the 1970s, over a decade after the official creation
of a larger Micronesian effort to decolonize (Congress of Micronesia),
it was clear to us what the monstrous legacy of nuclearism had
done just a few thousand miles to the east of us in the Marshall
Islands. (Subsequent nuclear catastrophes would contribute to
strengthening the anti-nuclear movement). Marshall Islands, the
French-Occupied Polynesia, and several places around the world
that had been unkindly dealt by nuclearism impressed themselves
strongly upon our minds, to say the least.
In our movement to decolonize, we wrote a Nuclear-Free
Constitution in April 1979. Overt and covert American efforts
to sidetrack issues and or at the least undermine Belau’s
position on anti-nuclearism were unconvincing; via various diplomatic
and not-so-diplomatic means, they failed initially to arrest what
was quickly becoming a popular movement against what was felt
to be outright colonial behavior. The history of the Constitutional
Convention that produced the world’s first nuclear-free
Constitution offered an explicit rejection of American demands,
which were to compel Belau to acquiesce to US military and nuclear
requirements. The increasing anti-base movement in the Philippines,
where the US maintained its largest foreign military base operation,
contributed to the tensions between Belau and America. Belau was
always seen as a potential fallback area in the event the Philippine
people did successfully evicted the US military. Belau, the Philippines,
Guam, Kwajelein and other parts of Micronesia were parts of the
network of what was described as a "forward military strategy"
which aimed to project US military strength as close as possible
to the Asian mainland and throughout the Pacific Ocean. This was
part of a grand strategic plan outlined in a US National Security
Action Memorandum No. 145 (NSAM-145), signed by John F. Kennedy
in April 1962, and designed to formally incorporate all of Micronesia
within US’s political and military network in the Pacific.
NSAM-145 provided the political context in which
Kennedy would, over a year later, send a mission to Micronesia
to plot the contours of a colonial conspiracy which had been faithfully
adhered to by subsequent US administrations. The mission was headed
by a Harvard University Business School Professor Anthony M. Solomon.
The mission’s report came to bear his name. The Solomon
Report, was the blueprint for US neocolonialism in the Pacific
[and] provides disturbing reading on American political ambitions
(Aldridge and Myers 1990, pp.22, 23). Resisting this grand colonial
scheme, we attempted to create a nation-state. The next 15 years
proved to be a painful period of radical political and social
transformations, as we struggled to preserve our nuclear-free
Constitution amidst aggressive US Pentagon attempts to undermine
it.
It is impossible to describe a 15-year movement
here in a page or two. I will only refer the reader to the extensive
report of the United Nations Visiting Mission to Belau in November
1993. The UN mission was sent there to observe the November 9th
1993 plebiscite on the Compact of Free Association, the treaty
negotiated by Belau and the US which details the economic and
military conditions of a treaty-relationship between the US and
Belau (for more details, refer to UN Trusteeship Council Document
T/1978, December 1993). This is the treaty that the United States
was adamant in compelling Belau to adopt, and which after 15 years
and seven attempts to say NO to it, was finally "approved"
in 1993. The treaty has essentially laid to rest the nuclear-free
provisions of Belau’s Constitution for 50 years; the US,
in return, will give Belau some economic assistance only for 15
years.
The crucial issues to consider here, or in similar
nation-building efforts, are those of democratic principles and
military imperatives. Between 1983 and 1993, Belau peoples exercised
their democratic right to freely express their common wishes in
founding a nuclear-free island nation. In all of these democratic
exercises, we said No each time. US military imperatives overrode
all of those No's and undermined democratic practice; but this
is not something new. Cultures of militarism and nuclearism are,
by nature, cultures of secrecy. They erode openness and democracy
and make indispensable a culture of death and terror which legitimizes
militarism and production and use of weapons of mass destruction.
The theory and practice of nuclear deterrence have been extremely
hostile to democratic practice. National military strategies have
often required the absence of free democratic thought while, on
the other hand, a commitment to nuclear disarmament and demilitarization
will allow communities to participate more fully in both the political
sphere and civil society" in working to ensure a world free
of the nuclear dangers that confront us.
Belau’s first popularly-elected president,
Haruo Remeliik, was assassinated, partly as a result of the intricate
web of Compact of Free Association politics and internal power
struggles shaped by America’s obstinate military policies.
As a result of the November 1993 plebiscite, the
Compact of Free Association was approved and came into force on
October 1, 1994, a day hailed as "Independence Day."
A year later, Belau joined the South Pacific Forum, an organization
of Pacific Island Governments. In December of 1995, Belau joined
the United Nations. As a result, in the South Pacific Forum and
within the United Nations, Belau will assume responsibilities
for keeping the issue of nuclear disarmament alive.
One of the stipulations of the Compact of Free
Association which made possible its passage in 1993 was that the
United States would only seek to exercise its right to militarize
(which implies the stationing of nuclear weapons) "during
periods of crisis or hostilities." To be sure, a May 6, 1993
Letter of Assurances from US Secretary of State Warren Christopher
failed to explicitly define what such crisis or hostilities would
be. In any event, the stipulations expressed in Secretary Christopher’s
letter were incorporated within and legislated into binding Belau
law. A greater portion of these assurances would rely on the "good
faith" of the United States and the Belau Government, in
accordance with the provisions of stated military objectives of
the Compact treaty (see Republic of Palau Public Law No. 4-9,
Sections 5, 6). Regional peace, we must then conclude, will depend
to a greater or lesser extent on the responsibilities of these
two nations to decrease (or de-escalate) the potential for actual
military conflict or violence.
It is worth noting that for the basic international
legal instrument mandating global nuclear disarmament is the 1968
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). The NPT forms the integrated
network of unilateral, bilateral, regional and multilateral treaties
and other standard-setting arrangements that seek to control/curb
the proliferation of nuclear and other weapons of mass destruction.
Nuclear disarmament is premised on the good faith efforts by nuclear
weapon states to take unilateral or multilateral initiatives to
achieve disarmament. Highlighted in Article Six of the NPT, such
a premise has been a controversial issue because of lack of action
to pursue good faith initiatives to disarm. That premise of good
faith, however, was reaffirmed by the International Court of Justice
in 1996 and remains vital to the trust that must be built within
on-going disarmament efforts.
The nuclear disarmament challenge in Belau would
be to compel a good faith compliance to US and Belau laws.For
Belau and the United States, respectively, Republic of Palau Public
Law No. 4-9 (signed by our president on July 16, 1993), US Public
Law 99-658 (approved on November 14, 1986) and US Public Law 101-219
(approved December 12, 1989) are the American legal mandates of
the Compact of Free Association. In addition to this July 1993
Belau law which merely restated some interpretations and positions
of the Belau Government vis-a-vis the Compact of Free Association
as well as subsidiary agreements to it developed in Hawaii and
Guam, and authorized what became the final Compact plebiscite,
for Belau’s part, we are bound as well by the legal imperatives
elaborated in the two US laws referenced above.
In January 1997, at its regional meeting in Moorea,
French-Occupied Polynesia, the Abolition 2000 network passed a
resolution denouncing the military/nuclear option of the Belau/US
Compact of Free Association, and the undemocratic process within
which it was "approved." More importantly, the Abolition
2000 resolution stated that any attempt to use the option for
nuclear purposes would violate the Pacific nuclear-free zone as
well as violating the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and would
risk adding to the genetic damage already perpetuated on the Pacific
peoples.
Not to be forgotten, there were British Tests in
Australia, Kiritimati (Christmas) and Malden Islands in the Line
Islands. Jacqui Katona (Gundjehmi Aboriginal Organization, Mirrar
peoples) from Australia has information on these.
In French-Occupied Polynesia, the French have conducted
a total of 153 nuclear weapons tests, in addition to those conducted
in 1995. There is a lack of official information about the tests,
so no comparison with how the Americans have done in Micronesia
is done. Again, Jacqui Katona may be able to provide information
about Moruroa and Fangataufa, and the Te Ao Maohi (French-Polynesians)
anti-nuclear movement. And Lysiane Alezard, from Le Mouvement
de la Paix in Paris, should also be able to share more information
about the French tests.
The French nuclear test site workers face similar
problems that all nuclear test site workers elsewhere face. Amidst
the difficulties in Tahiti however, Hiti Tau has worked along
with peoples from a university in Belgium to gather personal information
and testimonies of previous nuclear test site workers, now published
in the book Moruroa and Us: Polynesians’ Experiences during
Thirty Years of Nuclear Testing in the French Pacific (See De
Vries and Seur 1997). Theirs is a narrative of struggle as well
as a triumph of collective grassroots action. It speaks as well
to the role of networking within the international anti-nuclear
information infrastructure, of which this gathering is part.
What Can We Conclude From All of This?
Unfortunate as we Micronesians were for being
the unwilling hosts to preparations, testings, and launchings
of weapons of mass destruction against civilian populations, over
the years within our demilitarization and nuclear-free struggles,
we have been constantly reminded of our role within the world-wide
struggle for demilitarization and denuclearization. While we grieve
for the on-going legacy of human and environmental health resulting
from nuclear testings, a greater portion of our nuclear-free Pacific
struggles has been inspired by what Betty Burkes described in
her talk at an Abolition 2000 conference in Northern California
in 1997, that we are constantly making inquiry into the culture
of war and violence we inhabit, check out how we participate and
are organized to acquiesce in our own exploitation (Burkes 1997).
At least we have tried to work along with Japanese, Native peoples,
and other victims of the Nuclear Age in forging common struggles
of resistance against nuclearization and militarization everywhere.
We recognize the responsibility for tailoring our
struggles in ways that inspire peoples in comparable sites of
struggle. As far as we have been able, we have sought to wage
our struggles non-violently. Being witnesses to the violence and
brutality of nuclearism--and the colonialism which legitimizes
nuclear violations of our islands in the first place--Pacific
Islanders sensed early on that a struggle for genuine justice
had to reject the adoption of violence as a means to end the violence
we saw around us. Colonialism provided the ruthless infrastructure
from which we yearned to be free from political oppression.
It was owing partly to the nature of Pacific peoples
to reject the principle of violence. Violence killed all in its
path, and here we were struggling to survive. Instinctively, decisions
were made for a nuclear-free Pacific movement to respond accordingly.
A friend in Hawaii, Rolf Nordahl, recently reflecting on this
tendency, rejects violence as a means to achieving resolution
of the sovereignty movement there and commented to our Allies
group, "Violence begets more violence and the resulting desire
for revenge leads to twisted thinking such as Milosevic explaining
that the reason he can conduct ethnic cleansing is because of
what happened 600 years ago." We need to make the connections
between the violence of colonialism and a culture of militarism
which allows the militarization/nuclearization of colonial outposts,
and funnels resources away from more urgent social needs in Western
nations. Moreover, we need to constantly question the many justifications
for militarism and its role in economic affairs.
Writing about the role of weaponry in international
trade, John Ralston Saul says in his book Voltaire’s Bastards:
The Dictatorship of Reason in the West that "We are living
in the midst of a permanent wartime economy." He continues,
"The most important capital good produced in the West today
is weaponry. The most important sector in international trade
is not oil or automobiles or airplanes. It is armaments."
Saul does not necessarily add anything new to what we already
know about the trade in weapons; but he does reiterate the backwardness
or the lack or higher moral values that ought to influence the
trading of goods and services. Among many others, Seymour Melman
has been writing about these issues for 20 years; his book The
Permanent War Economy is recommended reading. John Stanley and
Maurice Pearton, Steven Lydenberg, Robert De Grasse, William Hartung,
Carol Evans, James Adams, and Martin Navias also have provided
compelling analyses of military spendings and economic waste (there
is a list of their books in the Works Cited section at the end).
The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute publishes
an annual accounting of arms sales, while The Council of Economic
Priorities in New York has addressed the subject in a number of
reports which hold to the old liberal approach--that arms are
a waste of money and that statistics prove it.
In the preface to their book Resisting the Serpent:
Palau’s Struggle for Self-Determination Bob Aldridge and
Ched Myers reflect that "For nowhere else are the concrete
mechanisms of the military-industrial-academic complex so sanitized,
so overlaid with official mystification. How else could the citizenry
of the world’s largest debtor nation continue to accept
and subsidize such huge levels of military spending? Militarism,
to extend the metaphor, has ‘colonized our minds...But our
domestication is most troubling when it deludes us to think that
militarism, apart from an overt foreign intervention and short
of nuclear war, is at best an economic boom and at worst a victimless
crime. The fact is, without a strategic missile ever being launched,
militarism is wreaking destruction upon human life and culture.
Perhaps North Americans might see this more clearly if we suspend
our scenarios of what might happen to our world in the event of
all-out war long enough to listen to the voice of those whose
worlds have already been ravaged" (Aldridge and Myers 1990,
p. xx-xxi)
Beginnings of the Nuclear Free and Independent
Pacific Movement
The grassroots Pacific anti-nuclear movement was
launched at the first Nuclear-Free Pacific conference at Suva
[Fiji] in April 1975, backed by the Against Tests on Moruroa (ATOM)
committee which had been formed in 1970. It consisted of people
from the Pacific Theological College, the University of the South
Pacific and the Fiji YWCA. The committee was merged into the Pacific
People’s Action Front in the mid-1970s and then the movement
went into decline. It surfaced again as the Fiji Anti-Nuclear
Group (FANG) in 1983. Other Pacific anti-nuclear groups existed
already but the Suva conference established a Pacific-wide network.
This movement proved to be a major factor in persuading Pacific
governments to take a stronger nuclear-free stand and shaping
public awareness and opinion throughout the region.
A draft People’s Charter for a Nuclear-Free
Pacific was produced at Suva and influenced the then New Zealand
Prime Minister Norman Kirk to call for a nuclear-free zone treaty
at the 1975 South Pacific Forum--an ideal that took a decade to
be realized. After the draft was reaffirmed at a second conference
in Pohnpei [the capital of what is now the Federated States of
Micronesia] in 1978, the third meeting two years later at Kailua
[O’ahu], Hawaii, expanded the group’s identity as
the Nuclear-Free and Independent Pacific (NFIP) movement. Resource
centres were set up in Honolulu and Port Vila [Vanuatu].
The fourth--and biggest--congress was held in
Port Vila during 1983 in recognition of the Vanuatu Government’s
support of a niuklia fri pasifik, as it is expressed in pidgin
(Robie, ibid, p. 146-147). At the opening of this conference in
Port Villa, Vanuatu, Deputy Prime Minister Sethy Regenvanu told
the delegates that, "We are seeking a Pacific...free of every
last remnant of colonialism... [F]reedom and independence will
have no meaning if our very existence is threatened by the constant
fear of total destruction" (Robie, ibid, p.147).
In Vanuatu, the People’s Charter for a Nuclear-Free
and Independent Pacific, adopted in Hawaii, was reaffirmed. The
Charter’s Preamble declared the following:
1. We, the people of the Pacific want to make our
position clear. The Pacific is home to millions of people with
distinct cultures, religions and ways of life, and we refuse to
be abused or ignored any longer;
2. We, the people of the Pacific have been victimised
for too long by foreign powers. The Western imperialistic and
colonial powers invaded our defenceless region, they took our
lands and subjugated our people to their whims. This form of alien
colonial political and military domination unfortunately persists
as an evil cancer in some of our native territories such as Tahiti-Polynesia,
Kanaky, Australia and Aotearoa. Our home continues to be despoiled
by foreign powers developing nuclear and other means of destruction,
oppression, and exploitation that advance a strategy that has
no winners, no liberators and imperils the survival of all human
kind;
3. We, the people of the Pacific will assert ourselves
and wrest control over the destiny of our nations and our environment
from foreign powers, including Trans-National Corporations;
4. We note in particular the racist roots of the
world's nuclear powers. We are entitled to and we commit ourselves
to the creation of a just and equitable society;
5. Our environment is further threatened by the
continuing deployment of nuclear arsenals in the so-called strategic
areas throughout the Pacific. Only one nuclear submarine has to
be lost at sea, or one nuclear warhead dumped in our ocean from
a stricken bomber, and the threat to the fish and our livelihood
is endangered for centuries. The erection of super ports, Nuclear
Testing Stations, may bring employment but the price is destruction
of our customs, our way of life, the pollution of our crystal
clear waters, and brings the ever present threat of disaster by
radioactive poisoning into the everyday life of the peoples;
6. We, the people of the Pacific reaffirm our intention
to extract only those elements of Western civilisation that will
be a permanent benefit to us. We wish to control our destinies
and protect our environment in our own ways. Our usage of our
natural resources in the past was more than adequate to ensure
the balance between nature and humankind. No form of administration
should ever seek to destroy that balance for the sake of a brief
commercial gain;
7. We, the people of the Pacific will strive to
be politically, economically, and spiritually self-determining.
This includes the right to secede from oppressing nations.
The Pacific anti-nuclear movement, like the movement
of indigenous peoples to assert their rights, was partly a response
to the West's persistent colonial domination in violation of the
United Nations Charter's call for decolonization at that time
and the West's Cold War pretext for use of the Pacific islands
for devastating nuclear testing. By that same year, the United
Nations Cobo Report [in Geneva] concluded that discrimination
against indigenous peoples was due to their lack of self-determination,
that imposed assimilation was a form of discrimination, and that
the right of indigenous peoples to cultural distinctiveness, political
self-determination and secure land resources should be formally
declared by the UN (Blaisdell 1998a).
As a result of previous work then on-going, the
UN created, under the Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination
and Protection of Minorities of the Human Rights Commission in
Geneva, the UN Working Group on Indigenous Populations, in order
to address, among other things, the continuing abuses of the world's
Indigenous peoples by existing Nation-states. That working group
completed, after 12 years of work and intense lobbying in Geneva,
the Pacific and around the world, a draft Declaration on the Rights
of Indigenous Peoples. Indigenous peoples are still working to
get it passed by the United Nations. More significantly, that
working group provided an additional forum wherein we attempted
to broaden discussions and debate regarding our anti-nuclear struggle,
hoping to develop international consensus for final cessation
of foreign domination in our homes. We look forward to the future
with hope when all the final vestiges of colonialism will have
been eradicated.
Our anti-nuclear movement has been inextricably
linked to our struggle to bring about an end to colonialism and
neocolonialism. Had Pacific Islanders been able to freely self-determine
their political futures--taking serious consideration of informed
consent in a climate devoid of fear and economic blackmail--there
would absolutely be no doubt we would have rejected hosting the
preparations and testing of other foreign countries’ dangerous
nuclear bombs in our island homes.
On July 9, 1999 which was Constitutional Day in
my island nation of Belau, we celebrated the full 20 years since
we wrote what was once a nuclear-free Constitution! A mere twenty
years have taught us much. A grassroots global nuclear abolition
movement has been created and continues to grow. Moreover, a campaign
to abolish nuclear weapons within the United States has been created
and will be formally launched in October 1999.
The International Court of Justice, the world’s
highest court, issued a legal advisory expressing the general
illegality of nuclear weapons. For us in Belau, the struggle was
long and painful. Assassinations, killings of innocent civilians,
and official involvements (of officials in both the Belau and
US governments) in the breakdown of law and order, now vindicate
the rightness of the nuclear-free idea, once radical and unrealistic
but now chic (See Butler, Edwards and Kirby 1988, "Palau:
A Challenge to the Rule of Law in Micronesia," for a description
of the systematic breakdown of law engaged in by "top government
officials"). Now a broad spectrum of mainstream organizations
and individuals are working to create a nuclear-free world, largely
because we have now come to understand the depth of the crisis
of relying on weapons of mass destruction to ensure "security."
For Micronesians generally, it made sense to do
the right thing. For Belau peoples particularly, we must have
either been ready and willing to pay the price or crazy enough
to stand up to the US Pentagon. Whatever the case may have been,
twenty years after we wrote that Constitution, on July 9, 1999,
the young peoples of Belau--many of them were the children of
those who authored the Constitution as well as our nation’s
Founding Fathers--hosted a Constitutional Forum wherein the surviving
members of the 1979 Constitution Convention spoke about their
experiences during the convention. The Forum addressed the challenges
now facing the island nation. With all that we have seen take
place in the last twenty years, it was encouraging to know that
we had been vindicated.
In July 1978 however, just a year before we authored
our own nuclear-free Constitution, the UN General Assembly was
scheduled to hold its 10th Special Session between May 23 to July
1, devoted to disarmament. Surprisingly, and by consensus, the
General Assembly adopted a Final Document about 20 days ahead
of schedule--something unheard of in current multilateral disarmament
forums.
That Final Document declared:
Mankind today is confronted with an unprecedented
threat of self-extinction arising from the massive and competitive
accumulation of the most destructive weapons ever produced. Existing
arsenals of nuclear weapons alone are more than sufficient to
destroy all life on earth. Failure of efforts to halt and reverse
the arms races, in particular the nuclear arms race, increase
the danger of the proliferation of nuclear weapons. Yet the arms
race continues. Military budgets are constantly growing, with
enormous consumption of human and materials resources. The increase
in weapons, especially nuclear weapons, far from helping to strengthen
international security, on the contrary weakens it. The vast stockpiles
and tremendous build-up of arms and armed forces and the competition
for qualitative refinement of weapons of all kinds to which scientific
resources and technical advances are diverted, pose incalculable
threats to peace. This situation both reflects and aggravates
international tensions, sharpens conflicts in various regions
of the world, hinders the process of detente, exacerbates the
differences between opposing military alliances, jeopardizes the
security of all States, heightens the sense of insecurity among
all States, including non-nuclear-weapon States, and increases
the threat of nuclear war... (United Nations Office of Public
Information 1978, pp.4-5).
An accompanying program of action identified several
key actions and proposals for disarmament work to proceed. I recount
that 1978 declaration on disarmament in order to highlight the
fact that nation-states cannot be trusted. Twenty years is a bit
too long to wait on a sincere promise made to halt development
of weapons of mass destruction. Arguably, since 1978, the world
has witnessed an increase of nuclear arsenals and the threats
now facing humanity have increased as a consequence of the arms
race conducted since that time. We now only have approximately
20 weeks before the new millennium comes, making it ever so crucial
that we join together as representatives of civil society to develop
a more progressive grassroots agenda for a nuclear-free world.
Envisioning/Ensuring Our Future -- Abolition 2000
This is the legacy of what we in the Pacific have
been witnesses to: the violence of colonial aggressions and nuclear
colonialism, and the resulting effort to re-think the whole basis
of planetary security. Thinking along shared responsibilities
of caring for our planet compels us to network far and wide with
sympathetic allies who inspire us and help us in a common effort
to bring sanity, every precious bit of sanity, to the way we live
on this planet. Genuine peace can come when we allow a sense of
justice to guide our affairs vis-a-vis one another, and more crucially,
in the way we relate with our precious Mother Earth. "We
are a culture organized around death, war, profit, and violence,"
Betty Burkes proclaimed, "where power is based on the principle
of power-over others." She explains that power over [another]
is the power of punishment, weapons, competition, the power of
annihilation that supports all the institutions of domination.
Nuclear weapons serve the preservation and continuance of that
culture.However, to realize a secure and livable world for our
children and grandchildren and all future generations, the stated
goal of Abolition 2000 requires that we make some inquiry into
the culture of war and violence we inhabit, check[ing] out how
we participate and are organized to acquiesce in our own exploitation
(Burkes, ibid.).
Describing what was at stake at a US nuclear disarmament
meeting in Chicago last year when the US Campaign to Abolish Nuclear
Weapons was being established, Jackie Cabasso, one of Abolition
2000's founders, wrote in Abolition 2000: Speaking Truth to Power:
"We had lots of questions: What exactly does abolition mean.
How long would it take?...We recognized that a nuclear weapons
free world must be achieved carefully and in a step by step manner,
and we spelled out the steps. But we were unyielding in our objective:
‘definite and unconditional abolition of nuclear weapons.’
From the basement of the United Nations in New York we faxed out
the Abolition 2000 Statement" (Cabasso 1998, pp.2-3). And
the rest is history! Abolition 2000 is now a global movement with
more than 1,300 organization members around the world.
Many individuals who were involved in founding
the global Abolition 2000 network have created a US campaign to
abolish nuclear weapons. Such a short history, less than 5 years--speaks
volumes to what a caring and active grassroots movement can do
in 5 years what more than 180 Nation-states cannot do in twenty!
But this disparity of action--and excessive amount of rhetoric--on
the part of nation-states, must also tell us something fundamental:
that there may be an unfortunate lack of concern and or sincerity
on the part of governments collectively to achieve anything to
reduce the increasing dangers humanity faces. It is up to us then,
including all concerned peoples and grassroots movements around
the world, to achieve a world free of nuclear weapons. Failing
to do so and remaining indifferent to this global effort to rid
the world of nuclear arms is to participate in a conspiracy of
silence that is ultimately deadly.
I take this issue very personally, as everything
that I and my brothers and sisters in Belau and around the Pacific
value politically, culturally, spiritually have been and continue
to be challenged in the extreme by the arrogance of power, maintained
by the ability to threaten to murder the mass of humanity. Threatening
to mass-annihilate peoples in order to defend a certain "way
of life" should be crimes against humanity. It is the same
logic that inspired colonial excursions across the globe in the
past 500 years.
The excessive amount of financial resources used
to sustain nuclear arsenals is a larceny of the mass of peoples
who toil daily in America to pay taxes that are then diverted
from urgent social needs to maintaining ever-increasing arsenals
of weapons of mass destruction. It is a moral bankruptcy that
is driving all these policies; the bankruptcy knows no boundaries
as we are all deeply impacted in many ways. We have, in essence,
all returned to the scene of a crime, and we do so largely to
find within ourselves the will to live as human beings.
* Richard Salvador is currently a doctoral candidate in political
science at the University of Hawaii at Manoa in Honolulu, where
he lives. He is writing a dissertation on the colonial history
of Micronesia and Micronesian decolonization movements. He is
also gathering research about Belau (Palau), with the goal of
writing about Belau's effort to produce a nuclear-free Constitution;
the American Government's counter-effort to strike down the nuclear-free
provisions of that Constitution; and the subsequent effects of
the anti-nuclear movement on society and people. Richard is also
active in international anti-nuclear work and currently serves
on the coordinating committee of Abolition 2000 representing the
Pacific Islands Association of NGOs.
Works Cited
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http://www.napf.org/abolition2000/index.html
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