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Why Did The Soviet Union Contribute To A Disaster

568 Words3 Pages

It is evident that the beliefs, or ideology, held by the Soviet Union contributed greatly to the disaster. An ideology is a belief or set of ideas about the world that people accept as natural. Many of the beliefs held by this government not only undermined the importance of transferring important information between organizations, but also discredited the importance of safety regulations and devalued the safety of the people. Government officials instead valued the appearance of being a strong, legitimate government. The Soviet nuclear energy sector viewed minor accidents as acceptable. Many years of propaganda established the USSR’s high level of technological mastery. The Soviet Union did not want to ruin that image with ideas that their facilities might threaten or harm citizens’ well-being. Furthermore, …show more content…

The water-graphite designs used at the Chernobyl nuclear plant made small accidents inevitable. (Geist 107) The USSR considered safety concerns a distraction from expanding the reactor fleet. And so, the natural response was to cover up any minor accidents that had occurred so as not to set back their plans for expansion.
Thirty- six hours after the explosion of the Unit 4 reactor at Chernobyl, people in the immediate vicinity of the plant began to be evacuated, originally from a 10- kilometer zone. In the following months more than 130,000 people were moved out of a 30- kilometer zone around Chernobyl. The people near the plant already were exposed to large amounts of radiation by the time they were evacuated. Prevailing winds

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