I keep a medal in my desk at
home. I didn’t earn it; it is only an eBay purchase, but it has a lot of
philosophical value for me. It is constructed of brass with enameled areas and
a cloth ribbon on the hanger. The central detail shows the Greek symbols for alpha, beta,
and gamma radiation over a drop of blood, and the Cyrillic script around the
central device reads “uchastnik
likvidatsyi posledstviy avarii” or roughly “participant in
the liquidation of accident consequences.” (Apologies to those readers whose
Russian is certainly better than mine!) As any watcher of Cold War spy movies
will now, in Soviet parlance to ‘liquidate’ something meant to eliminate,
mitigate, or clean up the consequences of something, whether it was a spy or an
enormous environmental disaster.
The story behind this medal is
one not commonly known in the United States.
The specific term ‘liquidators’ (ликвида́торы or ‘likvidátory’ in
Russian) was coined in 1986 to refer to the Soviet soldiers, scientists and
others who responded to the Chernobyl disaster—the April 26, 1986 explosion at
Reactor 4 of the V.I. Lenin Nuclear Power Plant in Chernobyl, Ukraine that blew
a 1,200 ton reactor cover into the air and spread radioactive fallout, from
dust to basketball size chunks of the reactor core, across the surrounding countryside.
The first clue the world outside the USSR had that something had happened was when radiation alarms started going off....in Sweden. I remember being very upset when the news of the Chernobyl explosion broke,
because the news broadcast interrupted the Transformers cartoon I was watching
– I was seven years old at the time and my priorities were in line with my age.
The Soviet Union being what it
was, most large civil projects, from construction programs to disaster response
efforts, were run more or less along the lines of military campaigns, for reasons of authoritarian pragmatism (there wasn't really another means to get anything done), Soviet ideology and the heroic nature of collective work, and institutional culture, since most of the Soviet leadership were old men who had come of age during the Great Patriotic War, and who tended to see everything through the prism of a national war effort. The head of the Ministry of Medium Machine Building, which managed most of the USSR's nuclear program, was Efim Slavsky, a nearly 90 year old veteran of the 1917 October Revolution who had fought in Bolshevik cavalry during the Civil War. By 1986, having run the ministry since 1957, Slavsky was nearly senile but still held his position thanks to these impeccable credentials.
As the Chernobyl disaster progressed, the
military element of the response became more pronounced, as the Soviet leadership spoke in
wartime terms, of “mobilizing” and “sending troops to the front” —Mikhail
Gorbachev himself usually referred to the Chernobyl cleanup as a “frontline
action.” At one point, workers hoisted a red flag on top of the reactor
building as a symbol of ‘victory’ after finishing a particularly difficult
phase of the work. In light of the militarized character and massive resources
devoted to the operation, one BBC documentary on the topic subsequently dubbed
the Chernobyl cleanup “the Soviet Union’s last battle.”
A view into the interior of the
exploded reactor - potentially deadly even to fly over in a helicopter.
Memorial to the Pripyat firefighters
As the scope of the disaster
cleanup expanded, the Soviet government called in tens of thousands of men-- recent
military draftees, army reservists, and thousands of specialists from many fields,
including firefighters, oilfield drilling crews, heavy construction workers, hundreds
of engineers and scientists, medical personnel, helicopter crews from the
Afghanistan war, coal miners, police and even janitors. Most of these people not only had no
experience or training in radiation matters or even in disaster response work,
and the vast majority did not even know what they had been brought in to
do. Working conditions were harsh and
most of the safety equipment was improvised on the spot, with lead aprons and
trucks hastily plated over with hand-beaten lead panels.
The scale of the crisis was
unbelievable- by one estimate it cost 18 billion rubles, when the value of a
ruble was nominally equivalent to a dollar-- and the atmosphere was one of
desperate improvisation. The immense steel and concrete sarcophagus that
encloses the reactor was designed and built in less than six months, but that
was only the tip of the iceberg. The entire population of an area of nearly a
thousand square miles—120,000 people—had to be evacuated in a matter of
days, although this vital measure was deliberately delayed for nearly a week in order to avoid disrupting the politically important May Day celebrations. The entire Red Forest, a four square mile area which
earned its nickname from the color the trees had turned after being struck by
fallout, was clear cut in order to bury the trees in massive concrete-lined
pits, and to allow dust suppressants to be applied to the soil. Whole villages were demolished and the debris buried in concrete-lined pits.
Relays of army helicopters
airdropped bags of lead, sand, and boric acid into the shattered reactor
building to bury the burning core and extinguish the fire, the pilots accumulating dangerous doses of radiation with every flight. One civilian helicopter pilot,
Mykola Melnyk, received the two highest awards of the USSR – the Order of Lenin
and Hero of the Soviet Union-- for daring precision flying to install radiation
sensors on the reactor, flying for hours at a time through the radioactive
cloud leaking from the ruptured reactor.
Mr. Melnyk passed away in 2013.
Massive geoengineering projects were launched,
including construction of underground slurry walls around the plant to limit the migration
of contaminated groundwater, and a crew of coal miners spent months tunnelimg out space for a
massive cooling system –sadly never actually needed-- beneath the exploded reactor
itself, in order to prevent the molten reactor mass from melting its way
through the building's foundation and the underlying soil, where it could potentially reach the water table and trigger a steam explosion—the “China
Syndrome’ in US slang.
The Sarcophagus under
construction
The most dangerous part of the
work, the shoveling of radioactive debris from the roof of the power plant
building back into the reactor crater to allow construction of the sarcophagus,
was done by army reservists in improvised protective clothing, working in
relays for shifts less than a minute long, on what was still accounted a
virtual suicide mission. A previous attempt to use bomb disposal robots to
remove the debris had failed when the radiation levels destroyed the robots’
electronics, and the gallows humor of the Soviet military gave their human replacements the
morbid nickname of “bio-robots.” Sadly, the reason the bomb disposal robots failed was that the Soviet government's representatives had tried to conceal the severity of the disaster and had given the German robot manufacturer a bogus estimate of the radiation the robots would have to endure, with the result that the robots were brought into an environment they were not designed to operate in, and promptly failed.
“Bio-Robots” at work on the roof
of the reactor building. The distortion in the image is due to radiation affecting the photographic negative, a typical thing for photographs in 'hot' areas during the 'liquidation.'
In all, an estimated 600,000 men
and women served as liquidators at one point or another, mostly in the summer
and fall of 1986, and about a quarter million of them were exposed to their
theoretical lifetime safe limit of radiation—or far more. Tens of thousands
have already died, and tens of thousands more are disabled by health problems. In
recognition of their services, liquidators were awarded the status of military
veterans and were granted government benefits such as medical care, though these
vary according to how badly the individual was exposed for and for how long,
and these allotments may be more or less forthcoming at times, especially given
that most of the disaster area and many of the former liquidators are now
Ukrainian, and part of the exclusion area is now in Belarus, and the strained or outright hostile state of affairs between the three countries can lead to disruptions in the process.
The “Sarcophagus” today, slowly rusting away.
Next year, 2016, will be the 30th
anniversary of the Chernobyl disaster; I don't know what kind of memorial
services are planned, but it damn well deserves something- particularly hope that it never happens again.
And yes, I already checked-- the
medal isn't radioactive.
Also-- I once had a professor of Russian History named John Windhausen. That man could teach you everything you needed to know about the crazy world of the USSR. Ваше здоровье, doc!
Also-- I once had a professor of Russian History named John Windhausen. That man could teach you everything you needed to know about the crazy world of the USSR. Ваше здоровье, doc!
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