ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: FRIDAY, June 2, 1995                   TAG: 9506020118
SECTION: NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL                    PAGE: A-2   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: Associated Press WASHINGTON
DATELINE:                                 LENGTH: Medium


SOLDIERS' MINDS TARGET OF '50S NUCLEAR TESTS

NEAR GROUND ZERO of nuclear bomb blasts, GIs sat in foxholes. Their `combat unfavorable psychology' needed correcting.

Troop exercises during nuclear bomb tests in the 1950s were designed to convince soldiers their fear of radiation was irrational and to give them ``an emotional vaccination,'' newly declassified Pentagon records show.

It has been known for decades that soldiers were deliberately exposed to radiation during exercises starting in 1951 at the Nevada nuclear test range. The newly available documents open a window into the reasoning of military leaders in secret discussions about how far to go in using GIs in the tests.

The basic judgment, as reflected in the government records, was that soldiers had an exaggerated fear of nuclear radiation after Hiroshima. The solution was to put GIs in foxholes near ground zero of nuclear bomb blasts and then move them even closer after the shock wave passed.

Little consideration was given to longer-term health risks to the soldiers. The focus was on the short term, to erase what one general in a 1951 report called a ``combat unfavorable psychology.''

In a newly declassified Pentagon briefing paper dated Feb. 27, 1953, the purpose of the indoctrination effort was described this way:

``To remove from the minds of the troops - and therefore to a degree from the minds of other persons in the services with whom they will later come in contact - the folklore and superstition regarding atomic explosions ... particularly effects connected with nuclear radiation hazards.''

Military leaders felt this psychological manipulation was essential because of their belief that nuclear war with the Soviet Union could begin at any time. The Army was then envisioning a war in which nuclear weapons would be used on the battlefield.

The formerly secret Pentagon papers are among thousands of pages of documents of the now-defunct Armed Forces Special Weapons Project that have been declassified by the National Archives at the request of The Associated Press. The Weapons Project coordinated the military's role in nuclear arms development.

Additional new documentation has been collected by the presidential Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments.



 by CNB