Christie Brinkley, Public Health Advocate, Warns of Radiation Dangers in Ukraine: 'Game of Russian Roulette'

Mar. 16, 2025

Christie Brinkley.Photo: Cassidy Sparrow/WireImage

Christie Brinkley

As Russian forces seize at leastone major nuclear power plantin theirongoing invasion of Ukraine, a surprising advocate has emerged with a warning.

Christie Brinkley, in a letter to the editor sent toThe New York Timesthat was published Tuesday, writes that radiation dangers in the war-torn country are “a game of Russian roulette the world can’t afford to play.”

Citing the recent seizure of a nuclear power plant in a southern-central region of Ukraine, Brinkley, the famed model and the vice president of theRadiation and Public Health Project, writes that it was “nothing short of a miraculous stroke of luck” that the region avoided a “massive meltdown” after a fire broke out due to the attack from Russian troops.

Dmytro Kuleba, the minister of foreign affairs of Ukraine,tweeted: “Russian army is firing from all sides upon Zaporizhzhia NPP, the largest nuclear power plant in Europe. … Russians must IMMEDIATELY cease the fire, allow firefighters, establish a security zone!”

That plant was later deemed safe — but, Brinkley, 68, notes in her letter to theTimes, the world hasn’t averted disaster just yet as Russian forces have reportedly seized a second plant in Ukraine.

“Will there be another near disaster? Will we be so lucky next time? We can’t afford to find out,” she writes.

She continues: “Every Ukrainian life lost in this unwarranted invasion would be for nothing if the land Ukrainians love is contaminated with radiation and uninhabitable. It would be an unthinkable loss for Russians, too, and a meltdown could result in mass evacuations in Europe, as radiation knows no boundaries.”

A screen grab taken from a surveillance camera footage the Zaporizhzhya NPP.Zaporizhzhya NPP/HANDOUT/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

A screen grab taken from a surveillance camera footage the Zaporizhzhya NPP

Late last month, Russian forces took control of that infamous power plant, too, causing concerns that the radioactive site could be damaged in the fighting.

As Dr. Lydia Zablotska, a professor of epidemiology and public health at the University of California, San Francisco, told PEOPLE in an earlier interview, “If it were to be damaged, that is very, very dangerous.”

“So if there was an explosion at that site, if those particles were released, they would disperse with prevailing winds,” Zablotska said. “This happened in 1986. Winds were blowing northwest and [radioactive particles] spread out all over Northern Europe.”

Brinkley writes in her letter to theTimesthat “an international expert panel is urgently needed to develop rules protecting nuclear plants during warfare.”

“We can’t just hope we’ll be so lucky next time; this is a game of Russian roulette the world can’t afford to play!” she writes.

Russia’sattack on Ukrainecontinues after their forces launched a large-scale invasion on Feb. 24 — the first major land conflict in Europe in decades.

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Putin insists Ukraine has historic ties to Russia and he is acting in the best security interests of his country.

With NATO forces massing in the region around Ukraine, various countries have also pledged aid or military support to the resistance. Ukrainian PresidentVolodymyr Zelenskyycalled for peace talks — so far unsuccessful — while urging his country to fight back.

source: people.com