OPINION
This case arises from the government’s alleged negligence in protecting workers at the Nevada Nuclear Testing Site. The government appeals the district court’s motion denying summary judgment on the basis of the discretionary function exception to the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA). We affirm.
I
These consolidated actions under the FTCA seek damages for injuries allegedly sustained by 220 individuals in the course of the Government’s nuclear weapons testing program in Nevada. All worked at the United States Nevada Test Site and claim to have suffered radiation injuries as a result of the government employees’ alleged negligence in conducting nuclear tests at the site between 1951 and 1981. The plaintiffs claim that their alleged injuries were the result of the following tor-tious acts by the United States:
*698 1. .Failure to establish or supervise the establishment of adequate procedures to monitor and determine the amount of radiation in a given geographic area or the amount of radiation to which an individual has been exposed.
2. Failure to instruct and advise workmen at the Nevada Test Site as to the possible detrimental health effects of radiation exposure.
. 3. Failure to provide protective clothing or other apparatus to eliminate, reduce, or minimize the radiation exposure and consequent adverse health effects.
4. Continuing to expose or to allow the exposure of workmen to radiation contamination well knowing or having reason to believe that said continued exposures were actually or potentially unsafe.
5. Failing to take reasonable and necessary precautions in the conduct of the tests which in many instances resulted in unnecessary and undesigned radiation exposure.
6. Failure to advise the individuals exposed to the extent of their exposures and possible detrimental health effects.
7. Failure to properly train, supervise, and inform its employees, agents, contractors, and subcontractors in matters concerning radiation containment and radiation health procedures.
8. Failure to advise workers that because of their exposure to radiation they should have medical check-ups and follow-up medical observations in order to diagnose as early as possible any cancers which might develop.
Prescott v. United States,
The government moved for summary judgment, claiming that plaintiffs’ actions were barred by the discretionary function exception to the FTCA. The FTCA authorizes suits against the United States for damages for personal injuries when a private person would be liable under the law of the place where the act or omission ' causing the injury occurred. See 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(b), 2674. Such a suit is not available, however, when the act or omission complained of is “based upon the exercise or performance or the failure to exercise or perform a discretionary function or duty on the part of a federal agency or an employee of the [government.” 28 U.S.C. § 2680(a).
In support of its summary judgment motion, the government proffered no evidence that the alleged acts of negligence flowed from choices grounded in political, social or economic policy, instead, the government relied on
In re Consolidated United States Atmospheric Testing Litigation,
The district court denied the government’s motion on the ground that
Atmospheric Testing
has been effectively overruled by
Berkovitz v. United States,
II
We need not reach the question whether Atmospheric Testing has been effectively overruled by Berkovitz because we disagree with the government’s broad reading of Atmospheric Testing as providing blanket immunity to all actions related to the nuclear testing operations. Contrary to the government’s view, Atmospheric Testing does not say that the discretionary function exception immunizes every act or omission of government employees in carrying out the nuclear testing program.
*699
In
Atmospheric Testing,
civilian and military participants in the government’s nuclear testing program sued the United States on two categories of claims. The first rested on alleged negligence in failing to take adequate safety precautions at the test site; the second was based on the government’s alleged duty to warn participants of the dangers to which they had been or would be exposed. The district court granted summary judgment to the United States on the basis that the claims were barred by the discretionary function exception. We affirmed on the basis of
Dalehite v. United States,
In
Dalehite,
the Supreme Court held that specific acts of negligence came within the purview of the discretionary function exception because they were “performed under the direction of a plan developed at a high level under a direct delegation of plan-making authority from the apex of the Executive Department.”
Id.
at 40,
The need to balance risks against test objectives was particularly acute in tests involving troop maneuvers.... It was recognized that the desire of the military to expose troops to realistic combat conditions could interfere with the AEC’s weapons testing objectives. The arrangements ultimately incorporated in the Operations Plans represented an accommodation of these divergent requirements by the AEC and military officials. In later tests, involving large scale military maneuvers under battlefield conditions, these considerations led to delegation of responsibility for radiological and physical safety of troops to the military commanders.
Id. at 986 (emphasis added).
In further holding that the government’s failure to issue warnings was also covered by the discretionary function exception, we also relied on the fact that the decision whether to issue warnings involved the weighing of competing policy consideration. Quoting
Dalehite,
we said, “ ‘Where there is policy judgment and decision there is discretion.’ ”
Id.
at 998 (quoting
Dalehite,
As we read
Atmospheric Testing,
then, it did not, as the government contends, provide blanket immunity to all aspects of nuclear testing;
1
rather, it provided immu
*700
nity solely to those acts resulting from policy choices that were expressly delegated to test site officials.
See id,.; see also Roberts v. United States,
Were we to adopt the government’s expansive reading of
Atmospheric Testing,
we would find ourselves in conflict with the discretionary function exception caselaw of both the Supreme Court and the Ninth Circuit.
See, e.g., Berkovitz v. United States,
B
Having determined that the United States was not entitled to summary judgment on the basis of Atmospheric Testing, we now consider whether the record gives rise to an alternative ground for awarding the government summary judgment. This *701 question turns on the allocation of the burden of proving (or disproving) the applicability of the discretionary function exception. If the plaintiffs bear the burden of disproving the applicability of the discretionary function exception, then the government would be entitled to summary judgment if plaintiffs fail to come forth with sufficient evidence to establish that there are genuine issues of material fact on the discretionary function issue. However, if the government bears the burden of proving the applicability of the exception, then the government would be entitled to summary judgment if it has adduced sufficient evidence to establish that no genuine issues of material fact remain for trial with respect to the discretionary function exception.
As an initial matter, then, we must decide whether the plaintiff or the government has the burden of proving whether a certain act or omission comes within the purview of the discretionary function exception. This appears to be an issue of first impression in our circuit. Although the answer has been implicit in many of our cases, we have never explicitly addressed the question.
We first note that plaintiff bears the burden of persuading the court that it has subject matter jurisdiction under the FTCA’s general waiver of immunity.
See
28 U.S.C. § 1346(b). This follows from the general principle that “[t]he party who sues the United States bears the burden of pointing to ... an unequivocal waiver of immunity.”
Holloman v. Watt,
Only two circuits have decided this question.
See Carlyle v. United States,
[A] plaintiff can invoke jurisdiction only if the complaint is facially outside the exceptions of § 2680. This does not mean, [however,] that the plaintiff must disprove every exception under § 2680 to establish jurisdiction • pursuant to the FTCA. What it does mean is that a plaintiff may not invoke federal jurisdiction by pleading matters that clearly fall within the exceptions of § 2680. Only after a plaintiff has successfully invoked jurisdiction by a pleading that facially alleges matters not excepted by § 2680 does the burden fall on the government to prove the applicability of a specific provision of § 2680.
Carlyle,
*702
The Sixth Circuit rule — that the government bears the ultimate burden of proving the applicability of an exception to the FTCA — is consistent with the results our circuit has reached in FTCA eases. We have declined to affirm a dismissal of an action on the basis of a discretionary function issue when the evidentiary record was insufficient to entitle the government to summary judgment on the question whether the alleged acts of negligence resulted from choices grounded in social, economic or political policy. In
Seyler v. United States,
Because an exception to the FTCA’s general waiver of immunity, although jurisdictional on its face, is analogous to an affirmative defense, we believe the Sixth and Seventh Circuits correctly placed the burden on the United States as the party which benefits from the defense. Today, we follow these two circuits and adopt the rule as set forth by the Sixth Circuit in
Carlyle.
We thus hold explicitly that the United States bears the burden of proving the applicability of one of the exceptions to the FTCA’s general waiver of immunity. As the Seventh Circuit reasoned in
Stewart,
placing the burden on the plaintiff would “impose upon the plaintiff the burden of proving [thirteen] negative aver-ments. Such a result would border on the preposterous.”
Stewart,
Having determined that the United States bears the ultimate burden of proving the applicability of the discretionary function exception, we reach the question whether the evidentiary record before us establishes the non-existence of a genuine issue of material fact with respect to the discretionary function question. It is undisputed that “nuclear tests themselves and all decisions and planning made in the preparation and carrying out of the tests and in the evaluation of the test results are clearly within the discretionary function exception and thus immune from suit.”
Prescott,
We have previously mentioned the particularized and fact-specific inquiry applicable
*703
to FTCA cases raising the discretionary function exception issue.
See supra
page 699. “In accordance with the Supreme Court’s decision in
Berkovitz,
this court utilizes a two-step test to determine whether the FTCA discretionary function exception applies in a given case.”
Summers v. United States,
In its motion to the district court, the government did not come forth with evidence to prove that the alleged acts of negligence by test site officials “involvefd] an element of judgment.” Id. Nor did the government put forth evidence that the judgment (if any) was grounded in social, economic, or political policy. Instead, having shown that these actions were carried out in the course of the nuclear testing operations, the government relied exclusively on Atmospheric Testing, which it read as providing a blanket immunity to all government operations related to nuclear testing. Implicit in the government’s summary reliance on Atmospheric Testing is the view, in the context of nuclear testing, that the government need not prove that particular acts and omissions resulted from choices grounded in social, economic and political policy because Atmospheric Testing has brought all such acts and omissions within the purview of the exception. In essence, then, the government interprets Atmospheric Testing as holding that a complaint based on a government employee’s negligence in carrying out a nuclear test necessarily constitutes a pleading outside the FTCA’s waiver of general immunity. We have already rejected this expansive reading of Atmospheric Testing.
Ill
In sum, we affirm the district court’s order denying summary judgment because the government failed to adduce any evidence that the specific acts of negligence flowed directly from the policy choices of on-site officials who had been explicitly entrusted with the responsibility of weighing competing policy considerations.
5
There remains a genuine issue of material fact whether “the [applicable government officials] had the degree of discretion ... that the
Atmospheric Testing
court found in that case.”
See Roberts,
*704 In light of the foregoing, we affirm the district court’s order denying the government’s motion for summary judgment on the ground that there are triable issues of fact as to whether the acts certified for trial flowed from choices grounded in social, economic or political policy.
The order of the district court denying the government’s motion for summary judgment is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Just as we do not read
Atmospheric Testing
as providing blanket immunity to all aspects of nuclear testing, we decline the government’s invitation to read the Tenth Circuit’s opinion in
Allen v. United States,
. The only other circuit to have discussed the same issue is the First Circuit.
See Hyrdrogen Technology Corp. v. United States,
.. Two district courts have applied the Sixth Circuit’s rule in
Carlyle
that the government bears the burden to prove the applicability of an exception to the FTCA in order to defeat jurisdiction.
See Martinez v. United States,
. In its petition for rehearing, the government argues that our holding that the United States bears the ultimate burden of proof is inconsistent with
United States v.
Gaubert,-U.S.-, -,
The government also argues that the plaintiffs' claims should not survive dismissal on their face. As we explained above, this argument is foreclosed by Roberts, 887 F.2d at 901.
. The government, of course, need not necessarily prove that a government employee actually balanced economic, social, and political concerns in reaching his or her decision.
Kenne-wick,
. We express no opinion with respect to the first prong of the
Summers
inquiry, i.e., whether the government’s actions in this case are not shielded by the discretionary function exception because the government officials acted in contravention of a federal statute, regulation, or policy. The district court’s opinion suggests that this case shares certain similarities with another FTCA case arising from nuclear testing and cur
*704
rently pending in a Nevada district court.
See Prescott,
