Veterans Exposed at Nevada Nuclear Test Sites Could Finally See a Benefits Fix
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Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said the Pentagon is reviewing whether to support legislation aimed at helping Veterans exposed to radiation during Cold War nuclear testing operations in Nevada gain access to VA benefits.
The issue affects Veterans who served at or around the Nevada Test and Training Range, including classified areas connected to atomic weapons testing and operations near Area 51. Federal programs already compensate many civilian workers who were exposed at or connected to the sites. Many Veterans who served there still face a different standard. Some can’t prove they were ever there.
Many Veterans involved say they later developed cancers and serious illnesses they believe were tied to radiation exposure during service. Decades later, some are still fighting to access records documenting where they served and what they were exposed to. Most are now in their seventies and eighties. Some are reconstructing assignments from memory because personnel files are incomplete, classified, or missing from VA systems entirely.
The issue drew renewed attention after Rep. Susie Lee pressed Hegseth during a congressional hearing on whether the Defense Department would support reforms for affected Veterans. “I’m not talking about a full review, I’m just talking about a familiarization,” Hegseth said. The exchange was one of the clearest public signs yet that Pentagon leadership may be willing to revisit long-standing complaints from veterans tied to Nevada nuclear testing operations.

Veterans Say the Hardest Part Is Proving Exposure
The Nevada Test Site, now part of the broader Nevada Test and Training Range, hosted 927 nuclear tests between 1951 and 1992, including 100 atmospheric detonations, according to federal historical records.
Military personnel cycled through the area for decades. Some supported weapons testing. Others worked in security, engineering, aviation operations, or classified programs tied to the site.
In many cases, the illness is easier to document than the assignment itself. Records tied to classified assignments can be difficult to access or verify. Some Veterans say the government effectively required them to document exposure while withholding the records needed to establish it.
Former Air Force Sgt. Dave Crete, who has advocated publicly for affected Veterans, described the problem bluntly in recent reporting by Military Times.
“The first thing that has to happen is to acknowledge that we were there.”
Delayed claims can mean years of uncovered cancer treatment costs, denied survivor benefits, and appeals that stretch deep into retirement.
Families often assume service near a known nuclear testing site automatically qualifies a veteran for presumptive VA benefits. That is not how the system currently works. Eligibility standards remain narrow and heavily dependent on documentation. In some cases, Veterans attempting to verify classified assignments are doing so more than 40 years after they served.
Congress Is Pressing For Two Separate Fixes
Lawmakers are now pushing two separate legislative proposals tied to the issue. One is the Forgotten Veterans Act, backed by Sen. Jacky Rosen and Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto. The bill is intended to address recognition and compensation barriers for Veterans exposed during classified or poorly documented operations connected to Nevada nuclear testing environments.
The second proposal, the PROTECT Act, was introduced by Rep. Susie Lee. The legislation would expand presumptive eligibility standards tied to radiation and toxic exposure claims connected to Nevada testing locations.
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Supporters argue the current system leaves Veterans trapped in a contradiction. The federal government acknowledges that contamination occurred at the sites. Civilian workers can qualify for compensation and lifetime medical monitoring through Department of Energy programs. Veterans assigned to the same locations may still fail to meet VA evidentiary requirements. Rosen called the disparity “unconscionable.”
The push follows years of political pressure surrounding toxic exposure policy after the passage of the PACT Act in 2022, which expanded benefits for Veterans exposed to burn pits and other environmental hazards. Advocates say Cold War-era radiation cases remain one of the unresolved gaps.

What Remains to Be Seen
The United States conducted hundreds of nuclear tests in Nevada. Military personnel served there over multiple decades. Radiation contamination occurred at testing locations. What we don’t yet know is what future legislation would define for eligibility and how broadly exposure occurred among military personnel stationed there.
Not every Veteran who served in Nevada was necessarily exposed to harmful radiation levels. Not every illness can be conclusively tied to military service there. Hegseth also has not endorsed either bill. He said only that the Pentagon is reviewing the issue. Many of the Veterans involved are now elderly, which has made already difficult records disputes even harder to resolve.
Witnesses die, units disappear, and in some cases, the paper trail barely exists anymore. Claims continue moving through a VA system that many Veterans believe was never designed to account for classified Cold War assignments tied to nuclear testing operations. The contamination itself was documented decades ago. For many Veterans, the harder fight has been proving their own government remembers they were there.
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BY NATALIE OLIVERIO
Veteran & Senior Contributor, Military News at VeteranLife
Navy Veteran
Natalie Oliverio is a Navy Veteran, journalist, and entrepreneur whose reporting brings clarity, compassion, and credibility to stories that matter most to military families. With more than 100 published articles, she has become a trusted voice on defense policy, family life, and issues shaping the...
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Natalie Oliverio is a Navy Veteran, journalist, and entrepreneur whose reporting brings clarity, compassion, and credibility to stories that matter most to military families. With more than 100 published articles, she has become a trusted voice on defense policy, family life, and issues shaping the...



