Thirty years ago this
month, France conducted an act of state-sponsored terror on a Western ally, and
other members of this free, democratic non-communist alliance would eventually
turn a blind eye to the deed and help France escape with impunity.
The tale is well
commemorated in the report published recently in the New Zealand Herald, Rainbow Warrior—30 Years
On. Some of the highlights are listed below:
- Evidence shows that the operation was ordered at the highest level by Francois Mitterand.
- Greenpeace photographer Fernando Pereira drowned when the boat sank.
- The French had long been antagonized by New Zealand and Australia’s protests against nuclear testing in the South Pacific, and especially by New Zealand prime minister (1984-89) David Lange’s principled and vocal opposition.
- The operation was clumsily executed, tripped up by the agents’ inability to operate in a calm and orderly environment where people noticed outsiders and took down license plate numbers when they saw suspicious people.
- The French were caught red-handed, and blame quickly passed up the chain of command. France paid compensation and had to accept the convictions for manslaughter and other high crimes, but they would eventually keep their loyalty to their agents and extract them from their prison cells. The French used economic and diplomatic warfare to pressure New Zealand. When it became obvious that the French had muscled the EU into slapping a boycott on New Zealand agricultural products, New Zealand had to put priority on saving its economy, so the prisoners were all soon back in France. One of them is the brother of the current Minister for Ecology, Sustainable Development and Energy, Ségolène Royal. The perpetrators and the French intelligence and political establishment remain unapologetic, and have always maintained their attitude of an entitlement to impunity.
- From 1966-96, France conducted almost 200 nuclear tests at Moruroa and Fangataufa, some of them hydrogen bombs, some of them conducted above ground and some below—all for the sake of carrying out useless nuclear tests that destroyed the natural environment, and destroyed the health of the islanders and military personnel who had to participate in the blasts—damage which the French government has always steadfastly denied.
- By the time the Rainbow Warrior attack occurred, independent organizations and the governments of Australia and New Zealand had been aggressively protesting French nuclear tests in the South Pacific for two decades. The state-sponsored terror attack on New Zealand could be viewed as the culmination of this bitter dispute.
It would be tempting to
think that this is all in the past and things are different now, but the
chickens eventually come home to roost, and it is becoming clearer to French
citizens that they will be the ultimate victims of the nuclear establishment
that used to do its damage in far-away places.
As I have followed the
trials and tribulations of the French citizens who stand up to the French
nucleocracy, I have come to know the geologist Antoine Godinot who has been very
active in the struggle to make ANDRA, the French agency responsible for nuclear
waste, admit to the errors of its ways. An alliance of citizen groups has been
fighting a legal battle to make them stop denying that the massive nuclear
waste repository project in Bure has been sited over an aquifer that could be a future source of geothermal energy. In addition, it will likely be contaminated in the
distant future if the waste is buried. (Previous reports on the legal case can
be found here).
Recent correspondence
from Antoine Godinot points out the links between the military and civilian
nuclear establishment. Personnel from the old weapons program in French Polynesia
have ended up in Bure where they have been busy pushing the project ahead in
spite of whatever public opposition arises. Do French citizens have any reason to
feel they will be more respected than the crew of the Rainbow Warrior?
From Antoine
Godinot (with permission):
The world is small. Jacques Delay, our
present international secretary of ANDRA (still based in Bure where he was
originally scientific director) was in Moruroa at that time of the Rainbow
Warrior bombing to do some drilling. His boss there was Yves Caristan, the head
geologist for the “substratum” of Moruroa/Fangataufa where atomic bombs were
detonated underground. Yves Caristan later became Director of the CEA in Saclay
(overseeing 5000 personnel) from 2005 to 2012. He was also director of Material
Sciences at the CEA, and is involved in the creation of the
University of Paris-Saclay. In other roles, he was in the management of Bureau de Recherches Géologiques et Minières
(BRGM, the French geological survey) when he returned from Moruroa.
It was he, the direct superior of Jean-Claude Baubron, who intervened, at the
CLIS in Bure*, May 26, 2003, to answer Andre Mourot and affirm that, according
to him, there was absolutely no geothermic potential at the site. This was
similar to the way Yves Caristan said to the media in 1995 that the cracks in
Moruroa were not moving one iota, whereas the CEA acknowledges today that the
northeast of the atoll could collapse, and that the fractures have never moved
as much as they did in 1995. In Moruroa, one learned to lie.
Why did the little Greenpeace boat have to be
bombed, with people sleeping on board likely to be killed, if there was nothing
to hide in Moruroa/Fangataufa? Every detonation is an act of nuclear waste
burial, but officially only 1 in 3 leaked very quickly. As for the others,
probably none of them were totally contained (first of all, some
cables linked the bombs to the surface). The government refused access to
CRIIRAD, an independent laboratory (here) which made several requests to go to Moruroa/Fangataufa
. Yves Caristan and Jacques Delay were on the team that buried other radioactive
wastes from the surface in the karst coral aquifer of Moruroa.
Jean-Luc Kister, the agent who placed the explosives on the Rainbow Warrior, gave an interview to the French journalist who broke the story in 1985. He expressed his remorse, saying, "I have the blood of an innocent man on my conscience, and that weighs on me," but he also reproached the French government for having rejected less dangerous interventions that were suggested at the time. What President Francois Mitterand knew about the plan remains an unanswered question to this day.
*Comité
Local d'Information et de Suivi du Laboratoire souterrain de recherché sur la
gestion des déchets radioactifs de Bure
This is a public relations office of
the nuclear industry which was established to facilitate the flow of
information to citizens and involve them in issues concerning nuclear waste
disposal in Bure, France. In France, and elsewhere, opponents of nuclear energy
view such operations as charades that only create an illusion of public
involvement and consent.
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