Radiation News Roundup May 22, 2016 Japan’s chief cabinet secretary called it “the devil’s scenario.” Two weeks after the 11 March 2011 earthquake and tsunami devastated the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, causing three nuclear reactors to melt down and release radioactive plumes, officials were bracing for even worse. They feared that spent fuel stored in the reactor halls would catch fire and send radioactive smoke across a much wider swath of eastern Japan, including Tokyo. sciencemag.org Russian president Vladimir Putin did some lobbying for state owned Rosatom in Sochi on Friday, telling southeast Asian countries there that it was time to go nuclear. forbes.com A group linked with the White House's efforts to promote the Iranian nuclear deal granted J Street over half a million dollars to advocate for the deal, according to a report by the Associated Press. haaretz.com Australia’s first registered Adnyamathanha storyline runs 70km from Hawker to Cotebina Spring through pastoral and indigenous lands between Lake Frome and South Australia’s picturesque northern Flinders Ranges, where it is emerging as a battleline between anti-nuclear activists and the federal government. theaustralian.com