Navy
sailors have radiation sickness after Japan rescue
TEPCO
has found a record 1.9 million becquerels per liter of beta
ray-emitting radioactive substances at its No.2 reactor. Also
radioactive cesium was detected in deeper groundwater at No.4 unit’s
well, as fears grow of a new leak into the ocean.
22
December, 2013
Navy
sailor Lindsay Cooper knew something was wrong when billows of
metallic-tasting snow began drifting over USS Ronald Reagan.
“I
was standing on the flight deck, and we felt this warm gust of air,
and, suddenly, it was snowing,” Cooper recalled of the day in March
2011 when she and scores of crewmates watched a sudden storm blow
toward them from the tsunami-torn coast of Fukushima, Japan.
The
tall 24-year-old with a winning smile didn’t know it then, but the
snow was caused by the freezing Pacific air mixing with a plume of
radioactive steam from the city’s shattered nuclear reactor.
Now,
nearly three years after their deployment on a humanitarian mission
to Japan’s ravaged coast, Cooper and scores of her fellow crew
members on the aircraft carrier and a half-dozen other support ships
are battling cancers, thyroid disease, uterine bleeding and other
ailments.
“We
joked about it: ‘Hey, it’s radioactive snow!’ ” Cooper
recalled. “I took pictures and video.”
But
now “my thyroid is so out of whack that I can lose 60 to 70 pounds
in one month and then gain it back the next,” said Cooper, fighting
tears. “My menstrual cycle lasts for six months at a time, and I
cannot get pregnant. It’s ruined me.”
The
fallout of those four days spent off the Fukushima coast has been
tragic to many of the 5,000 sailors who were there.
At
least 70 have been stricken with some form of radiation sickness, and
of those, “at least half . . . are suffering from some form of
cancer,” their lawyer, Paul Garner, told The Post Saturday.
NY
Post: Snow falling on Navy ship caused by Fukushima radioactive
steam… “Is that aluminum foil I taste?”
- Sailor: People were defecating on themselves in hallways from excruciating diarrhea
- Officer: We saw radiation 300 times ‘safe’ levels
22
December, 2013
New
York Post,
Dec. 22, 2013: Navy sailor Lindsay Cooper knew something was wrong
when billows of metallic-tasting snow began drifting over USS Ronald
Reagan. [...] she and scores of crewmates watched a sudden storm blow
toward them from the tsunami-torn coast of Fukushima, Japan. The tall
24-year-old with a winning smile didn’t know it then, but the snow
was caused by the freezing Pacific air mixing with a plume of
radioactive steam [...] Senior Chief Michael Sebourn, a
radiation-decontamination officer, was assigned to test the aircraft
carrier for radiation. The levels were incredibly dangerous and at
one point, the radiation in the air measured 300 times higher than
what was considered safe, Sebourn told The Post.
Lindsay
Cooper, Navy sailor aboard USS Ronald Reagan during 3/11 rescue
operation:
“I was standing on the flight deck, and we felt this warm gust of
air, and, suddenly, it was snowing [...] We joked about it: ‘Hey,
it’s radioactive snow! I took pictures and video [...] Japan didn’t
want us in port, Korea didn’t want us, Guam turned us away. We
floated in the water for two and a half months [until Thailand took
them in] “People were s- -tting themselves in the hallways [All
the while crew members had been suffering from excruciating
diarrhea].”
Cooper
interviewed by EON,
published Dec. 20, 2013: (at
4:30 in)
“As soon as you step foot on the flight deck and went outside you
had this taste of like aluminum foil.”[...] (at
10:45 in)
We thought that we had felt a plume because there was kind of this
warm air that went past the ship and you could kind of tell the
differences between jet exhaust — we didn’t have any jets going
around at the time. It was like 20 degrees outside and you could feel
this warm air and you kind of enjoyed it at first and then you’re
like, ‘Is that aluminum foil that I taste?’
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