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Political Fallout: The Failure of Emergency Management at Chernobyl'
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 January 2017
Abstract
Ever since the accident that destroyed unit 4 of the Chernobyl’ Nuclear Power Plant on April 26,1986, became public knowledge, the Soviet government's response to this catastrophe has been the subject of bewilderment and withering criticism. The exact sequence of events that unfolded in the days following the disaster and the forces that shaped it have, however, remained obscure. While the USSR's civil defense organization urged prompt and decisive measures to inform the population of the accident and move people out of harm's way, other Soviet institutions, such as the Communist Party and the KGB, feared the accident's threat to their legitimacy more than its implications for public health. Drawing on declassified archival documents from Ukrainian archives and memoir literature, I explore the political and institutional logic that prevented the USSR from acting appropriately to protect citizens from the consequences of the nuclear accident.
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References
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3. Since the early 1950s, some Americans had argued that the USSR possessed a vast, well-resourced civil defense organization that was far more capable than its American counterpart. This concern swelled into a major political controversy in the 1970s, when critics of detente such as Harvard historian Richard Pipes and Sovietologist Leon Gouré charged that Soviet civil defense proved that the Kremlin was a dangerous, expansionist power fully willing to resort to nuclear aggression if it appeared advantageous. See Pipes, Richard, “Why the Soviet Union Thinks It Could Fight and Win a Nuclear War,” Commentary 23, no. 7 (July 1977): 1–34;Google Scholar and Leon Gouré, War Survival in Soviet Strategy: Soviet CivilDefense (Coral Gables, 1976). Some western analysts concluded that the shortcomings of the USSR's disaster response at Chernobyl’ proved that the USSR's much-discussed civil defense investment was either useless or illusory. See, for example, Potter, William and Kerner, Lucy, “The Soviet Military's Performance at Chernobyl,” Soviet Studies 43, no. 6 (1991): 1039.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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43. As the functional ratemeters at the plant were sensitive only up to 1000 microroentgens an hour (0.001 R/hr), the KGB reports state that “at the immediate point of the accident, the radiation is up to 1000 microroentgen an hour.” In reality, this was a mere l/10,000th of the actual ambient radiation at the plant. Furthermore, they state that the maximum radiation in Pripiat’ was 14 microroentgens an hour on the morning of the 26th—when in fact there were places in the city where radiation levels were hundreds of times higher. “Povidomlennia UKDB URSR po m. Kyievu ta Kyivs'kii oblasti do KDB SRSR ta KDB SRSR pro vybukh 4-ho enerhobloka Chornobyl's'koyi AES. 26 kvitnia 1986r.,” DA SBU, f. 64 op. 1, spr. 34, ark. 2-3 (KGB report on conditions around ChNPP, April 26,1986); “Povidomlennia KDB URSR do KDB SRSR pro vybukh 4-ho enerhobloka Chornobyl's'koi AES. 26 kvitnia 1986r.,” DA SBU, f. 64, op. 1, spr. 33, ark. 2-4 (KGB report on conditions around ChNPP, April 26,1986).
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67. Valentina Shevchenko, head of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the Ukrainian SSR in 1986, insisted in a 2011 interview that the Kiev May Day parade went ahead at Moscow's insistence. Lina Kushnir, “Valentina Shevchenko: ‘Provesty demonstratsiiu 1 travnia 1986-ho nakazali z Moskvy,” Istorichna pravda, April 25,2011, at www.istpravda. com.ua/articles/2011/04/25/36971/ (last accessed November 10, 2014). Radiological conditions in Kiev began deteriorating sharply on April 30. See “Obstanovka i meropriiatia po likvidatsii posledstvii avarii na Chernobyl ‘skoi AES po sostoianiiu na 12 iiunia 1986 goda,” TsDAHO, f. 1, op. 25, spr. 2995,11.12-13 (report to Ukrainian CP Central Committee on Chernobyl’ liquidation effort, June 12,1986).
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79. A 1989 book for propagandists about the disaster exemplifies the government's defensive position on this topic. It maintains that the radiological conditions in Pripiat' “did not objectively require evacuation” on April 26, and it ignores the fact that GO officers protested the delay. Vozniak, Ignatenko, Kovalenko, and Troitskii, Chernobyl', 121. For an overview of Soviet media accounts of the disaster in 1986-87, see Marples, David R., TheSocial Impact of the Chernobyl Disaster (New York, 1988).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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81. On the construction of the sarcophagus, see Baranovs'ka, Chornobyl's'ka trahediia, 207-39, and on state measures to provide housing and employment to evacuees, see ibid., 182-85.
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