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Kai Bird and Martin J. Sherwin: Bush's Bad Idea for Los Alamos

Kai Bird and Martin J. Sherwin, in LA Times (6-27-05)

[Kai Bird and Martin J. Sherwin are coauthors of "American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer" (Knopf, 2005).]

Sixty years ago, J. Robert Oppenheimer, the World War II director of the Los Alamos National Laboratory, proved that there are some things that government-university partnerships can do better than any private-sector entity. In just 27 months — from April 1943 to August 1945 — Oppenheimer and his team of scientists produced a combat-ready atomic bomb. The military head of the Manhattan Project, Gen. Leslie Groves had awarded the contract for the new laboratory to the University of California because he understood that no private corporation was capable of attracting the talented scientists needed to meet this challenge.

Important lessons for our national security are implicit in this history, lessons the Bush administration ignores as it prepares to turn over much of the management of the Los Alamos lab to a private defense contractor. Everything we know about the Manhattan Project and the subsequent history of the lab suggests that this is a mistake and a lost opportunity...

...Astonishingly, the government's bidding criteria amounts to a corporate giveaway. You'd think that this administration would assume that the private sector could run this lab more efficiently and for less money than a nonprofit academic institution. Not so. The UC administrators have been operating the $2.1-billion lab for $8.7 million in management fees. By next year, according to the terms of the Bush administration bidding criteria, this management fee will escalate to between $63 million and $79 million a year.

All of this smacks of another corporate boondoggle. Worse, it is likely to destroy an institution that has the potential to extricate us from our growing environmental quagmire. To ensure that the work at Los Alamos continues at the highest level, the facility should be divided into two separate entities: a weapons laboratory run by a defense contractor and an unclassified environmental research complex managed by a university.

"Let's give it back to the Indians." Edward Teller always claimed that this is what Oppenheimer said of Los Alamos soon after the atomic bombing of Hiroshima. Unlike Teller, who never saw a weapons system he didn't like, Oppenheimer never worked on atomic weapons again. Instead, he chose to spend the rest of his career as the director of the Institute for Advanced Study, and its scholars over the years have given us important theoretical insights that led to such innovations as the first real computer. Oppenheimer understood how to encourage scientists to do their best work, and he would be appalled by the Bush administration's plans.

It is time to change Los Alamos' mission. Give the defense contractors the job of dealing with our arsenal of nuclear weapons. But let's invest in a new Manhattan Project committed to winning the race against pollution in the 21st century. Otherwise, perhaps we really should just "give it back to the Indians."