

The United States formally took possession of the Marshall Islands in 1944 after ousting the Japanese, who had controlled them since World War I. The nominal provisions that America has made to repay the people whose lives were destroyed in service of this imperial project - the same provisions that the Joe Biden administration is quietly trying to do away with - have never come close to addressing the horrors of the islands’ colonial past or guaranteeing its people a survivable future.

The Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI) is no exception. The maintenance of the United States’ imperial project requires the subjugation of less powerful nations all over the world. According to a statement written by several concerned members of Congress in late January, the State Department is trying to shirk the economic and infrastructural obligations that America promised to this tiny island nation after its nuclear onslaught. Known as Castle Bravo, the test ignited a four-mile-wide fireball, vaporized entire islands, contaminated more than seven thousand square miles of ocean, and spread radioactive fallout across continents.Īlmost seventy years later, the fallout from this explosion and dozens of others conducted nearby is still doing damage to the health and livelihood of the Marshallese people. Early in the morning of March 1, 1954, the United States detonated what was then the most powerful nuclear bomb in history at Bikini Atoll, part of the Marshall Islands.
