Explore newspaper articles, headlines, images, and other primary sources below. 127160). Dolgikh reports: The situation at the NPS is catastrophic. May 20th, 1983 Colonel A.I. "Deputy head of the 6th department of the KGB administration Liet. The posting today begins with Yaroshinskayas essay (written exclusively for this publication) reviewing the Chernobyl story and her own efforts dating back to 1986 to document and expose the lies and the secrecy that surrounded the disaster. December 19th, 1978 Director of the Chernobyl District Department of the Ukr. If you experience a barrier that affects your ability to access content on this page, let us know via ourContact form. It is part of the Wilson Center's History and Public Policy Program. (HDA SBU, Fond 9, Sprava 73). These excerpts from the official working copy of Politburo sessions were published by Rudolph Pikhoia. Turko, Director of the 6th Department of the KGB Administration, to the Director of the Pripyat City Department of the Ukr. The Western world was largely dissatisfied by the lack of detail in Moscows statement. He notes the complete paralysis of local authorities who were unable to do anything without orders from Moscow. Suite 701, Gelman Library The decision is made to evacuate the town of Pripyat. The following is how the Deputy Prosecutor-General of the USSR V.I. Todays publication also contains declassified reactions from the U.S. State Departments intelligence bureau, the CIA, and the National Security Councils Jack Matlock, as well as reporting from the Ukrainian KGB. This report discusses to violations of reactor design plans and the disintegration of load-bearing concrete due to extreme temperatures and improper wall insulation. Instead, the radioactive materials had come from 900 miles away in Ukraine (Browne 1986). A more popularized and novelistic treatment may be found in Serhii Plokhys account, Chernobyl: A History of a Nuclear Catastrophe (2018). ], The Kremlin went to great lengths to hide the scale of the radiation debacle. Samoilov, Head of the 3rd Department of the 6th Service of the KGB Administration of the USSR for the City of Moscow, 'Information about Several Problems in the Use of Atomic Energy Stations in the USSR' (HDA SBU, Fond 11, Sprava 992, Tom 6). Present: members of the Politburo of the CC CPSU Comrades N.I. In April 2019, Higginbotham published an extremely useful selection of these documents on the Sources and Methods blog of the History and Public Policy Program at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. Chernobyl is a wonderfully written, beautifully acted masterpiece which tells the story of the terrible nuclear accident which occurred at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant in the USSR in 1986. The report said despite the high rate of cancer, only 15 fatalities in these 7,000 cases have occurred.THE DOCUMENTS - Chernobyl Primary DocumentsCIA FILES215 pages of CIA files dating from 1971 to 1991.The files cover the Soviet Union's atomic energy program; The effect of the Chernobyl accident on the Soviet nuclear power program; and the social and political ramifications of the accident in the Soviet Union.A 1981 report covers the less publicized Soviet nuclear "accident" near Kyshtym in 1957-58.Media reporting of the nuclear accident near Kyshtym first appeared in 1958. It is emphasized that this is purely speculation as inside details are unknown. A report on how military personnel involved in the response to the Chernobyl accident are being improperly managed at the site, leading to inefficiencies in the cleanup process. Churchill and India: Manipulation or Betrayal? Importantly, it also acknowledges that the potential impact zone includes approximately 4.5 million residents of Ukraine, Belarus, and Russia, which was, at that time, not widely known. Col. Aksenov, 'Notice of Emergency Incident', Notice: Information from Places of Evacuation, Memo Report from the Head of the KGB Administration under the Ukr. This translation of a French brochure about the nuclear accident at Chernobyl was provided by an undercover KGB agent. This working copy ofa Politburo session provides details from the first discussion ofthe Chernobyl accident. 29. July 3rd, 1986 Gordienko, 'Notice on "OS" [Environmental Conditions]'. Milk from California and imported vegetables were also analyzed for radioactivity.Other report titles include: An Analysis of the Alleged Kyshtym Disaster; Workshop on Short-term Health Effects of Reactor Accidents; Preliminary Dose Assessment of the Chernobyl Accident; Internally Deposited Fallout from the Chernobyl Reactor Accident; Report on the Accident at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Station; Radioactive Fallout from the Chernobyl Nuclear Reactor Accident; Radioactivity in Persons Exposed to Fallout from the Chernobyl Reactor Accident' Radioactive Fallout in Livermore, CA and Central Northern Alaska from the Chernobyl Nuclear Reactor Accident; Projected Global Health Impacts from Severe Nuclear Accidents - Conversion of Projected Doses to Risks on a Global Scale - Experience From Chernobyl Releases; The Chernobyl Accident - Causes and Consequences; Chernobyl Lessons Learned Review of N Reactor; Reconstruction of Thyroid Doses for the Population of Belarus Following the Chernobyl Accident; The characterization and risk assessment of the Red Forest radioactive waste burial site at Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant; Estimated Long Term Health Effects of the Chernobyl Accident; and Environmental Problems Associated With Decommissioning the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant Cooling Pond.DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE REPORTS816 pages of reports dating from 1990 to 2010 produced or commissioned by the Department of Defense.The reports include: Chernobyl Accident Fatalities and Causes; Biomedical Lessons from the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant Accident; Nuclear Accidents in the Former Soviet Union Kyshtym, Chelyabinsk and Chernobyl; Retrospective Reconstruction of Radiation Doses of Chernobyl Liquidators by Electron Paramagnetic Resonance; Neurocognitive and Physical Abilities Assessments Twelve Years After the Chernobyl Nuclear Accident; Simulating Wet Deposition of Radiocesium from the Chernobyl Accident; and Radiation Injuries After the Chernobyl Accident Management, Outcome, and Lessons Learned.GAO REPORTS184 pages of reports from the United States General Accounting Office, whose name was later changed to the Government Accountability Office. The tasks delineated in this protocol include management of radiation levels in the European territories of the USSR, cleanup by the Ministry of Defense, and monitoring of international students studying in Ukraine at the time of the accident. SSR KGB Administration for the City of Kiev and Kiev Oblast, Lieutenant Colonel Comrade Iu. Two weeks after the accident, an unnamed KGB officer from the Ukrainian SSR reports on the situation in evacuation sites, the sentiment of local people, the situation in transportation hubs and at key industrial facilities in Kyiv, as well as about the measures taken to prevent foreign journalists from gathering information about the case. Secret. Matlock describes the Soviet response to the Chernobyl disaster as a PR fiasco, and predicts that it will make the Soviets testy. He cautions that the issue of Chernobyl and the Soviet failures should not be excessively exploited as it might backfire with the European publics and could also drive Gorbachev into a corner in terms of further negotiations. The Union collapsed. National Security Archive. Ron DeSantis was in Japan on Monday to meet with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and other officials as part of his four-nation trade mission seen . Abramowitz, M. (1986, May 2). (HDA SBU, Fond 11, Sprava 992, Tom 29). This note describes the levels of radiation around the reactor, decontamination techniques, the number of troops involved in the cleanup process. The document lists the extent to which various information related to Chernobyl which should be classified, and for what reasons certain items may be shared. An Explosion Occurred in Power Unit No. It is known that from the very beginning of everything, the nuclear accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant (NPP) was completely classified, and the communist regime repeated its deceitful mantra: Nothing threatens peoples health. (I write about this in detail in my nonfiction books.) (HDA SBU, Fond 11, Sprava 992, Tom 29). () In the course of slaughtering large cattle and pigs, it is established that washing the animals with water and also the removal of their lymph nodes results in obtaining meat suitable for consumption. It is interesting, what did they do with the removed lymph nodes? [Authors Note- ! 2023 The Wilson Center. Adding to these anxietiesstemming from the lack of information about the nuclear disasterwas the backdrop of the Cold War and fear of a nuclear war. This note explains the processes of localizing the effects of the accident, lead deposits in the area, and the evacuation of collective farms and the city of Chernobyl. This document discusses the violation of technical rules of reinforcement and concrete work in the construction of the Chernobyl plant, concluding that these deficiencies will diminish the quality of the energy output. This document relays a conversation with a specialist in nuclear energy who explains how gaps at the joints of pipes are causing problems in the blocks at both the Chernobyl and Kursk plants. The first protocol reviews necessary measures to combat the damage done by the explosion in energy block 4. In the morning the leadership formed a State Commission headed by Boris Shcherbina, which departed for Chernobyl later in the day. Gubarev recommends that the central leadership should move quickly to award several liquidators who dont have long to live, in particular Major L. Telyatnikov, Lieutenants V. Pravik, and V. Kibenkov, with the rank of Hero of the Soviet Union and take priority care of other people working on eliminating the consequences of the explosion. Secret. In all, 50 million curies of radiation were. (HDA SBU, Fond 11, Sprava 991, Tom 1). The Nuclear Proliferation International History Project and the Cold War International History Project, both part of the Wilson Centers History and Public Policy Program, have published new translations of 28 documents about the Chernobyl nuclear accident from the archives of the Ukrainian Security Service, or the Ukrainian KGB. The new accessions include technical memos on the construction and operation of the Chernobyl plant in its early years, immediate post-disaster reports, as well as discussions of societal views of and responses to the 1986 accident. The authors conclude that the entire intelligence community believes that the fatality figure of two is preposterous. Intelligence analysis estimates the number of people in the immediate vicinity of the reactor at the time of the accident to be around 100. For help citing interviews such as Voices from Chernobyl (below), click here. A full list of the new translations available on DigitalArchive.WilsonCenter.org is provided below. Read more, One Woodrow Wilson Plaza1300 Pennsylvania Ave. NWWashington, DC 20004-3027, Nuclear Proliferation International History Project. Yakovlev () as of 09:00 hours on May 6th, the total number of the hospitalized amounted to 3,454 peoplethe number stricken with radiation sickness amounted to 367 people. According to the protocols, the number of the sick is growing every day. This routine KGB report features information about the number of foreigners who visited the Ukrainian SSR, rumors of military training of OUN fighters in Southern England, the suspected murder of a Soviet ship captain in international waters, and an accident at the Chernobyl Unit 1 reactor. Is the leak continuing? (Schmemann and New York Times Service 1986). Vorotnikov, V.L. Similarly, Finlandanother country that had measured abnormally high radiation levelsrefrained from condemning the USSRs failure to release detailed information. See also the Digital Archive collection on Ukrainian Nuclear History. This protocol of the second session of the Politburo Operational Group Chernobyl focuses on tasking representatives of government agencies with various emergency management duties. The National Security Archive is committed to digital accessibility. Secret. Protocol No. Draft Collective European Statement on Chernobyl Implications, National Security Council Jack Matlock Memo on Strategy for US-Soviet Relations, Letter from Science Editor Vladimir Gubarev to the CC CPSU About His Trip to Chernobyl, Minutes of CC CPSU Politburo Session (Anatoly S. Chernyaev notes), FOIA Advisory Committee Oversight Reports. Many news sources pointed to the Three Mile Island nuclear accident in the USA, and both the USA and the USSR aimed to de-emphasize their nuclear technology failings. The George Washington University Archive of the President of the Russian Federation. The Nuclear Trojan Horse drawing by Arthur H. Purcell calling for increased, international safety measures to the nuclear power industry (Purcell 1986). Washington, D.C., August 15, 2019 Documents from the highest levels of the Soviet Union, including notes, protocols and diaries of Politburo sessions in the immediate aftermath of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster in 1986, detail a sequence of cover-up, revelation, shock, mobilization, individual bravery, and bureaucratic turf battles in the Soviet reaction, according to the Top Secret Chernobyl e-book published today by the National Security Archive. According to Soviet data, the energy released was, for a fraction of a second, 350 times the rated capacity of the reactor. . The brochure discusses the reasons for the accident and compares Chernobyl and Soviet-style plants to those in the West, concluding that the French and American reactors possess superior safety standards. The Chernobyl Collection contains 70 maps and over 150 documents, and features full page-level digitization, complete original graphics, and searchable text, and is cross-searchable with numerous other East View digital resources. Vorotnikov, V.I. CLICK the image or the link below to watch a short abcNEWS segment from April 28, 1986 about the Chernobyl accident. On April 29, 1986, the International Herald Tribune ran a front-page headline Nuclear Accident At Soviet Plant Causes Injuries. Much of the article described what was known about the Chernobyl accident, but the concluding paragraph shifts the narrative to the Three Mile Island accident, termed The worst commercial nuclear accident in the United States (Compiled by Our Staff from Dispatches 1986). Historic disaster. According to the report from the Ministry of Energy, the fire was extinguished by 3:30 a.m. and the reactor core was being cooled down. 4. Secret. 4: The Story of Chernobyl in Documents. On April 26, 1986, an explosion at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant in Ukraine led to the radioactive contamination of the surrounding countryside and to radioactive fallout throughout Eastern and Western Europe. SSR KGB Klockko, 'Information about Violations in the Construction of the Chernobyl Atomic Energy Station'. Excerpt from May 2, 1986 International Herald Tribune (Schmemann and New York Times Service 1986). Picador. He alleged that thousands of casualties and widespread, long-term radioactive contamination occurred as the result of an explosion involving nuclear waste stored in underground shelters.The general consensus today is that a combination of events, rather than a single isolated incident at Kyshtym nuclear energy complex caused the radioactive contamination in the area. The reactor is practically destroyed. The Higginbotham documents particularly detail the reaction of the Kiev authorities, ranging from the Council of Ministers to the Ukrainian Communist Party Central Committee to the Ministry of Health to the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences. The disastrous meltdown in the 4th reactor of the Chernobyl (Chornobyl) Atomic Electrical Station occurred on April 26th, 1986. Excerpts from this amazing document are available to us thanks to the extraordinary work by the first Director of the Russian state archival agency (Rosarchiv), Rudolph Pikhoia, who published them in his book on the history of the Soviet government. Virginia Gewin. This document discusses the violation of technical rules of reinforcement and concrete work in the construction of the Chernobyl plant, concluding that these deficiencies will diminish the quality of the energy output. This memoreviews early Soviet informationreceived through U.S. intelligence and speculates about the number of fatalities on the day of the explosion. The archival location data is transliterated from Ukrainian, while titles, locations, and descriptions are transliterated from Russian, the language of the original source material. The conclusion about the possibility of the return of children and pregnant women to the areas where the radiation levels fall within the limits of 2 to 5 mR/hr. Obtained through FOIA from the Central Intelligence Agency. Chernobilsky Dossier KGB. This document discusses weaknesses in the technical designs of nuclear power plants in the USSR and their potential consequences, concluding that the Leningrad, Kursk, and Chernobyl plants are dangerous. National Security Archive. (HDA SBU, Fond 65, Sprava 1, Tom 34). The laboratory used gamma-spectroscopy to analyze air filters from the areas around Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California. Large amounts of radioactive material were released into the atmosphere, where it was carried great distances by air currents. Another richly documented account that begins with the trial of the Chernobyl plant operators in 1987 and analyzes the entire rise of the Soviet nuclear power industry is Sonja D. Schmids Producing Power (2015). Volume 2. The Chairman lists a series of directives and responses to the Chernobyl incident, addressed to different levels of KGB cadre, discussing ways to strengthen standards at nuclear power facilities, calling for increased responsibility for the failure of local KGB staff to inform the central command on plant issues, recommending that specialists be pulled in to ensure the safety of nuclear facilities going forward, and implementing more intense oversight at all nuclear plants and scientific research facilities to ensure that issues which may lead to accidents are known. February 3rd, 1987 Intelligence Message on the Chernobyl Accident. In my journalistic archive are stored pounds of secret Chernobyl documents from the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CC CPSU) and the Soviet government. Materials from non-English language sources are translated into English.The reporting includes firsthand accounts of experiences during all points of the Chernobyl disaster. The Chernobyl disaster, the worst nuclear disaster in history, forced change upon the Soviet government as it was not possible to disguise the damage. Secret. Andreyev answered my official inquiry 5 years after the accident: in the period of 1986 to 1989, in the specified zones 47,500 tons of meat and 2 million tons of milk over the limit of the level of contamination were produced.These circumstances put around 75 million people in dangerous living conditions (Authors Note- ! Samoilov, Head of the 3rd Department of the 6th Service of the KGB Administration of the USSR for the City of Moscow, 'Information about Several Problems in the Use of Atomic Energy Stations in the USSR'. Thirty-three years ago, on April 26, 1986, a series of explosions destroyed Chernobyl's reactor No. A monument dedicated to the liquidators stands in front of the Chernobyl New Safe Confinement that covers reactor No. This statement comes from the leaders of seven industrialized European countries and expresses sympathy and offers aid to the USSR and the town of Pripyat. Chernyaevs notes from the same Politburo session as Document 14 are less detailed than those made by official stenographers, but they capture the heated emotional atmosphere of the meeting and they cover the entire Chernobyl discussion. Among those measures are assignments to accurately measure radiation, evacuate citizens from Pripyat, and deploy chemical troops and other emergency management services. The report states that according to Ministry of Health representatives, adoption of special measures, including evacuating the population from the city, is unnecessary.. April 2nd, 1973 Memo Report from the Head of the KGB Administration under the Ukr. Filters were also analyzed from Barrow and Fairbanks, Alaska. A blog of the History and Public Policy Program. August 1986 Lieutenant-General S. N. Mukha to Army General V. M. Chebrikov, 'On Inadequacies in the Organization of the Use of Military Personnel involved in the Elimination of the Consequences of the Accident at the Chernobyl Atomic Energy Station'. April 24, 2023 / 9:56 AM / AP. On the rest of the territory of the station it is up to 15-200 microroentgens per second, and at the city limit it is up to . Former Adviser to the President of the Russian Federation Boris Yeltsin. 4 of the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant on April 27, 1986. May 2nd, 1986 Deputy Head of the 6th Department of the KGB Administration Lieut. He also sharply criticizes scientists for their independence and lack of party oversight of the institutes. (HDA SBU, Fond 11, Sprava 992, Tom 29). Learn more about the Chernobyl Disaster through historical newspapers from our archives. student, Erasmus Mundus Joint Masters Degree in Central and Eastern European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies, University of Glasgow. When the accident occurred the Soviet Union was using 17 RBMKs and Lithuania was using two. INR information memorandum from Morton Abramowitz to the Secretary of State: Estimate of fatalities at Chernobyl reactor accident. July 24th, 1973 Memo Report from Tiutiunnik, Chief of the Kiev-Sviatoshinskii District Department of the KGB Administration, to the Acting Director of the KGB Administration, Comrade G.I. In this document, an unnamed KGB agent reports on the situation two weeks after the incident, including transportation and journalist suppression methods. Top Secret. Soon, the world realised that it was witnessing a historic event. (HDA SBU, Fond 11, Sprava 991, Tom 1). This book presents personal accountsof what happened on April 26, 1986, when the worst nuclear reactor accident in history contaminated as much as three-quarters of Europe. Col. Aksenov, "Notice of Emergency Incident', Notice: Information from Places of Evacuation, Political Fallout: The Failure of Emergency Management at Chernobyl'.