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Chernobyl Nuclear Accident Congressional Hearings Transcript

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215 pages of CIA files dating from 1971 to 1991.The files cover the<br />

Soviet Union's atomic energy program; The effect of the <strong>Chernobyl</strong><br />

accident on the Soviet nuclear power program; and the social and<br />

political ramifications of the accident in the Soviet Union.<br />

A 1981 report covers the less publicized Soviet nuclear "accident" near<br />

Kyshtym in 1957-58.<br />

Media reporting of a nuclear accident near Kyshtym first appeared in<br />

1958. It was not until 1976, when the writings of Soviet dissent Dr.<br />

Zhores Medvedev began to appear, that wider attention was given to this<br />

subject. Medvedev, an exiled Soviet geneticist, claimed in several<br />

articles and books that a "disaster" occurred near Kyshtym in 1957/58. He<br />

alleged that thousands of casualties and widespread, long-term<br />

radioactive contamination occurred as the result of an explosion<br />

involving nuclear waste stored in underground shelters.<br />

The general consensus today is that a combination of events, rather than<br />

a single isolated incident at Kyshtym nuclear energy complex caused the<br />

radioactive contamination in the area. A study of the claims by Medvedev<br />

can be found in the Department of Energy section, in the 1982 report "An<br />

Analysis of the Alleged Kyshtym Disaster"<br />

U.S. GOVERNMENT FOREIGN PRESS MONITORING<br />

900 pages of foreign media monitoring reports from 1986 to 1992, produced<br />

by the U.S. government's National Technical Information Service's U.S.<br />

Joint Publication Research Service. They contain information primarily<br />

from Russian and Eastern Block news agency transmissions and broadcasts,<br />

newspapers, periodicals, television, radio and books. Materials from non-<br />

English language sources are translated into English.<br />

The reporting includes firsthand accounts of experiences during all<br />

points of the <strong>Chernobyl</strong> disaster. Topics covering the accident and its<br />

aftermath including domestic and international politics, sociological<br />

affairs, nuclear plant fire, evacuations, sealing the reactor,<br />

cleanup mobilization, health implications, and people returning to<br />

region.<br />

DEPARTMENT OF ENGERY REPORTS<br />

1,244 pages of reports dating from 1982 to 2009 produced or commissioned<br />

by the Department of Energy.<br />

The agencies and institutions contributing to these reports include Los<br />

Alamos National Laboratory, United States <strong>Nuclear</strong> Regulatory Commission,<br />

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Savannah River <strong>Nuclear</strong> Solutions,<br />

Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Argonne<br />

National Laboratory, and the Pacific Northwest Laboratory.<br />

Highlights include:

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