Explosion On April 11, 1958, French Prime Minister
Félix Gaillard ordered a nuclear test in the first quarter of 1960. President
Charles de Gaulle reaffirmed the decision after the
French Fourth Republic collapsed in the
May 1958 crisis. Initial plans were proposed to detonate a nuclear bomb on French territory in the Argentella mine on the island of Corsica. These plans were abandoned after widespread protests on the island. On 13 February 1960 at 7:04:00 UTC, the plutonium bomb was detonated on a steel tower 100 m tall. The command post was 16 kilometres away from the blast. In order to study the immediate effects, military equipment was placed at varying distances from the epicenter, while jets flew overhead to take samples of radioactive particles. No journalists were allowed on site; instead, an eyewitness account was given to the French press, saying "the desert was lit up by a vast flash, followed 45 seconds later by an appreciable shock-wave"; an "enormous ball of bluish fire with an orange-red centre" gave way to the typical
mushroom cloud. With
Gerboise Bleue, France became the fourth nuclear power, after the United States, the
Soviet Union, and the United Kingdom. Prior to this test, there had been no nuclear detonations for 15 months.
Gerboise Bleue was by far the largest first test bomb up to that date, larger than the American "
Trinity" (20 kt), the Soviet "
RDS-1" (22 kt), or the British "
Hurricane" (25 kt). The yield was 70 kilotons, bigger than these three bombs put together; In comparison,
Fat Man, the
Nagasaki bomb, was 22 kilotons, one-third as powerful. As the atomic yield of a new bomb design cannot be precisely predicted, the
French army planned an explosion between 60 and 70 kt.
Gerboise Bleue was a total success, yielding the full designed power. However, because of the bomb's irregularly high yield, some experts believe that the bomb may have been "overfilled with plutonium to assure success". Only two other A-bombs tested in the Sahara facilities were more powerful:
Rubis (−9
Ci/m3. However, persons present at the site have since stated that protection gear was extremely minimal at the time of testing. In addition, ex-military officers have come forward with stories of being used as test subjects to study the effects of nuclear radiation on humans. Immediately following the explosion of
Gerboise Verte (which yielded <1 kiloton), soldiers were sent within a 1 km radius of the explosion site, where they practiced combat exercises and drove tanks around the area. In total, these subjects were exposed to high levels of radiation for three hours. Following the exercises, the soldiers state that they were given showers as the only means of decontamination. == Subsequent tests ==