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US ends payments to Spain for 1966 nuclear accident

Eighty days after it fell into the ocean following the January 1966 midair collision between a nuclear-armed B-52G bomber and a KC-135 refueling tanker over Palomares, Spain, this B28RI nuclear bomb was recovered from 2,850 feet (869 meters) of water and lifted aboard the USS Petrel (note the missing tail fins and badly dented "false nose"). This photograph was among the first ever published of a U.S. hydrogen bomb. Left to right are Sr. Don Antonio Velilla Manteca, chief of the Spanish Nuclear Energy Board in Palomares; Brigadier General Arturo Montel Touzet, Spanish coordinator for the search and recovery operation; Rear Admiral William S. Guest, commander of U.S. Navy Task Force 65; and Major General Delmar E. Wilson, commander of the Sixteenth Air Force. The B28 had a maximum yield of 1.45 megatons.
by Staff Writers
Madrid (AFP) Aug 23, 2010
The United States has stopped annual compensation payments it has made to Spain for a 1966 accident in which two nuclear bombs fell on a village, a Spanish government source said Monday.

They said a bilateral agreement in force since the accident "expired" last year, the source at the ministry of science and innovation said.

In January 1966, a US Air Force B-52 bomber collided with a KC-135 tanker during a midair refueling over southern Spain.

Two of the four hydrogen bombs detonated near the small town of Palomares, dispersing radioactive plutonium.

Since then Washington has provided an annual compensation to Spain to monitor pollution levels and perform blood tests on more than 1,000 residents.

The Spanish newspaper El Pais said Monday the amount was 403,000 dollars (314,00 euros) per year. It added that the issue was discussed during a visit to Spain in May by US Vice President Joe Biden.

El Pais said "traces of plutonium and americium remain in about 20 hectares" and in 2007 Washington and Madrid signed an agreement under which the United States agreed to pay for the cleanup of the area.

Now the Spanish government "wants Washington to agree to remove the plutonium" as Spain has no appropriate disposal site, the newspaper said.

The US Department of Energy said in a statement on its website Monday that its "cost-sharing arrangement with the Kingdom of Spain, begun in 1966, ended in" financial year 2008.

"The final radiological survey was completed in 2009 and received a positive review by the International Atomic Energy Agency. Plans for final remediation are in preparation in 2010."



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