mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-25 15:29:25 -05:00
231 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
231 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
<conspiracyFile>In the best-selling 1962 spy thriller SEVEN DAYS IN MAY, the
|
||
Joint Chiefs of Staff plot to overthrow the U.S. president. Their
|
||
conspiracy centers on a place called Mount Thunder, a secret
|
||
subterranean command post where government leaders would go in the
|
||
event of a nuclear attack.
|
||
On December 1, 1974, a TWA Boeing 727 jet crashed into a fog-
|
||
shrouded mountain in northern Virginia and burned, killing all
|
||
ninety-two persons aboard. Near the wreckage was a fenced
|
||
government reserve identified as Mount Weather.
|
||
Mount Weather is a real place; eighty-five acres located
|
||
forty-five miles west of Washington and 1725 feet above sea
|
||
level, near the town of Bluemont, Virginia. In the event of all-
|
||
out war, an elite of civilian and military leaders are to be taken
|
||
to Mount Weather's cavernous underground shelter to become the
|
||
nucleus of a postwar American society. The government has a secret
|
||
list of those persons it plans to save.
|
||
The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) runs Mount
|
||
Weather. When it has to talk about the place, which is rare, it
|
||
calls it the "special facility." Its more common name comes from a
|
||
weather station that the U.S. Department of Agriculture had
|
||
maintained on the mountain.
|
||
The authors of SEVEN DAYS IN MAY, Fletcher Knebel and Charles
|
||
W. Bailey II, were Washington journalists who learned a lot about
|
||
the then-quite-secret post. Few readers of Knebel and Bailey's
|
||
fiction could have imagined how close to the truth it was. The
|
||
novel gives detailed highway directions from Washington:
|
||
...the Chrysler wheeled onto Route 50,
|
||
heading away from Washington....
|
||
In the jungle of neon lights and access
|
||
roads at Seven Corners, Corwin saw Scott bear
|
||
right onto Route 7, the main road to Leesburg.
|
||
The two cars moved slowly through Falls Church
|
||
before the traffic began to thin out and speed
|
||
up....
|
||
At the fork west of Leesburg, Scott bore
|
||
right on Route 9, heading toward Charles
|
||
Town.... They began to climb toward the Blue
|
||
Ridge, the eastern rim of the Shenandoah
|
||
Valley....
|
||
West of Hillboro, where the road crossed
|
||
the Blue Ridge before dropping into the
|
||
valley....Scott turned left. Corwin followed
|
||
him onto a black macadam road that ran
|
||
straight along the spine of the ridge.
|
||
...Because of his White House job, Corwin
|
||
knew something about this road that few other
|
||
Americans did. Virginia 120 appeared to be
|
||
nothing more than a better-than-average Blue
|
||
Ridge byway, but it ran past Mount Thunder,
|
||
where an underground installation provided one
|
||
of the several bases from which the President
|
||
could run the nation in the event of a nuclear
|
||
attack on Washington.
|
||
Knebel and Bailey disguised the directions slightly. You
|
||
continue on Route 7 west of Leesburg, turning left on Route 601
|
||
just west of Bluemont. It's Virginia Route 601 that runs right up
|
||
to the gates of Mount Weather. Residents have long known there is
|
||
something funny about that road; it is always the first road
|
||
cleared after a snowstorm.
|
||
At one point, the government asked the local paper not to
|
||
print any articles about the facility. But it is all but
|
||
impossible to keep such a place secret. The Appalachian Trail runs
|
||
right by Mount Weather, and hikers can get close enough to see
|
||
signs and flashing lights. One sign reads: "All persons and
|
||
vehicles entering hereon are liable to search. Photographing,
|
||
making notes, drawings, maps or graphic representations of this
|
||
area or its activities are prohibited." In the late 1960s an
|
||
unidentified "hippie" is supposed to have stumbled upon the
|
||
facility and sketched it from a tree. His drawing turned up in the
|
||
QUICKSILVER TIMES, an underground newspaper in Washington.
|
||
Residents also tell of the time a hunt club chased a fox onto
|
||
the site and triggered an alarm. The club had to go to the main
|
||
gate to get the dogs back.
|
||
After the TWA crash, a spokesman "politely declined to
|
||
comment on what Mt. Weather was used for, how many people work
|
||
there, or how long it has been in its current use," the WASHINGTON
|
||
POST reported. The POST published a picture of the facility,
|
||
citing far-fetched speculation that Mount Weather's radio antennas
|
||
may have interfered with the jet's radar and caused the disaster.
|
||
You don't get into Mount Weather without an invitation. The
|
||
entrance is said to be like the door to a bank vault, only
|
||
thicker, set into a mountain made out of the toughest granite in
|
||
the East. It is guarded around the clock.
|
||
Mount Weather got more unsolicited publicity in 1975. Senator
|
||
John Tunney (D-Calif.) charged that Mount Weather held dossiers on
|
||
100000 or more Americans. A sophisticated computer system gives
|
||
the installation access to detailed information on the lives of
|
||
virtually every American citizen, Tunney claimed. Mount Weather
|
||
personnel stonewalled question after question in two Senate
|
||
hearings.
|
||
"I don't understand what they're trying to hide out there,"
|
||
Douglas Lea, staff director of the Senate Subcommittee on
|
||
Constitutional Rights, said. "Mount Weather is just closed up to
|
||
us." Tunney complained that Mount Weather was "out of control."
|
||
Mount Weather has been owned by the government since 1903,
|
||
when the site was purchased by the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
|
||
Calvin Coolidge talked about building a summer White House there.
|
||
In World War I it was an artillery range, and during the
|
||
Depression it was a workfarm for hobos. Mount Weather as an
|
||
alternate capital seems to have been the idea of Millard F.
|
||
Caldwell, former governor of Florida.
|
||
There is a fallout shelter under the East Wing of the White
|
||
House. No one believes it offers any real protection from a
|
||
nuclear attack on Washington, however. FEMA has elaborate plans
|
||
for getting the president and other key officials out of
|
||
Washington should there be a nuclear attack.
|
||
In that event, the president is supposed to board a Boeing
|
||
747 National Emergency Airborne Command Post ("Kneecap"). That is
|
||
presumed to be safer than any point on the ground. The president's
|
||
plane can be refueled in the air from other planes and may be able
|
||
to stay airborne for as long as three days. Then its engine will
|
||
conk out for lack of oil. That is where Mount Weather comes in.
|
||
Government geologists selected the site because it has some
|
||
of the most impregnable rock in the United States. The shelter was
|
||
started in the Truman administration, and it took years to tunnel
|
||
into the mountain.
|
||
There is a whole chain of shelters for leaders and critical
|
||
personnel. The Federal Relocation Arc, a system of ninety-six
|
||
shelters for specific U.S. Government agencies, sweeps through
|
||
North Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland, and
|
||
Pennsylvania. A duplicate of the Pentagon is located at a site
|
||
called Raven Rock in Maryland. The administrative center of the
|
||
whole system, and the place where the top civilians would go, is
|
||
Mount Weather.
|
||
Mount Weather is much more than a fallout shelter; it is a
|
||
troglodytic Levittown. In the mid-1970s Richard Pollack, a writer
|
||
for PROGRESSIVE magazine, interviewed a number of persons who had
|
||
been associated with Mount Weather. According to them, Mount
|
||
Weather is an underground city with roads, sidewalks, and a
|
||
battery-powered subway. A spring-fed artificial lake gleams in the
|
||
fluorescent light. There are office buildings, cafeterias, and
|
||
hospitals. Large dormitories are furnished with bunks or "hot
|
||
cots" -- hammocks intended to be occupied in three eight-hour
|
||
shifts. There are private apartments as well. Mount Weather has
|
||
its own waterworks, food storage, and power plant. A "bubble-
|
||
shaped pod" in the East Tunnel houses one of the most powerful
|
||
computers in the world.
|
||
The Situation Room, a circular chamber, would be a nerve
|
||
center in the time of war. The Mount Weather folks set great store
|
||
by visual aids and retain artists and cartographers at all times.
|
||
A futuristic color videophone system is the basic means of
|
||
communication within Mount Weather's subterranean world. "All
|
||
important staff meetings were conducted via color television as
|
||
far back as 1958, long before it was generally available to the
|
||
public," one former staffer bragged.
|
||
The most surprising of Pollack's revelations is that Mount
|
||
Weather has a working back-up of U.S. Government EVEN NOW.
|
||
Undisclosed persons there duplicate the responsibilities of our
|
||
elected leaders, making Mount Weather an eerie doppelganger of the
|
||
United States.
|
||
An Office of the Presidency is ensconced in an underground
|
||
wing known as the White House. The elected president or survivor
|
||
closest in the chain of command would make his way there and take
|
||
over the reins. Until then, a staffer appointed by FEMA would be
|
||
carrying out duties said to simulate those of the real president.
|
||
Installed at Mount Weather are nine federal departments,
|
||
their very names ironic in the context: Agriculture, Commerce,
|
||
Health and Human Services, Housing and Urban Development,
|
||
Interior, Labor, State, Transportation, and the Treasury.
|
||
Miniature versions of the Selective Service, the Veteran's
|
||
Administration, the Federal Communications Commission, the Post
|
||
Office, the Civil Service Commission, the Federal Power
|
||
Commission, and the Federal Reserve are there, too.
|
||
"High-level government sources, speaking under the promise of
|
||
strict anonymity, told me that each of the federal departments
|
||
represented at Mount Weather is headed by a single person on who
|
||
is conferred Cabinet-level official," Pollack reported. "Protocol
|
||
even demands that subordinates address them as 'Mr. Secretary.'
|
||
Each of the Mount Weather 'Cabinet members' is apparently
|
||
appointed by the White House and serves an indefinite term. Many
|
||
of the 'secretaries' have held their positions through several
|
||
administrations."
|
||
What do all these people DO? Twice a month, Mount Weather
|
||
stages a war game to train its personnel and explore various dire
|
||
scenarios. Once a year they pull out all the stops and have a
|
||
super drill in which REAL Cabinet members and White House staffers
|
||
fly in from Washington.
|
||
General Leslie Bray, director of the Federal Preparedness
|
||
Agency, FEMA's predecessor, told the Senate that Mount Weather has
|
||
extensive files on "military installations, government facilities,
|
||
communications, transportation, energy and power, agriculture,
|
||
manufacturing, wholesale and retail services, manpower, financial,
|
||
medical and educational institutions, sanitary facilities,
|
||
population, housing shelter, and stockpiles." Additional
|
||
information is kept in safekeeping at other shelters in the
|
||
Federal Relocation Arc.
|
||
There is a body of opinion that considers Mount Weather
|
||
obsolete. Mount Weather is a non-movable target, and a very
|
||
strategic one if the relocation works. The "toughest granite in
|
||
the East" may have offered some protection in Eisenhower's time,
|
||
but multiple strikes could blast the mountain away. It was
|
||
reported that the TWA jet crash knocked out power at Mount Weather
|
||
for two and a half hours. What would a bomb do?
|
||
The Soviet Union knows exactly where Mount Weather is -- and
|
||
almost certainly knew long before the Western press did. The
|
||
Soviets tried to buy an estate near Mount Weather as a "vacation
|
||
retreat" for embassy employees. The State Department stopped the
|
||
sale.
|
||
The Survivor List
|
||
In 1975 General Bray told the Senate that the Mount Weather
|
||
survivor list had sixty-five hundred names on it. Who might be
|
||
included?
|
||
The president, of course, provide he survives his Kneecap
|
||
command. The vice-president and Cabinet members are on the list
|
||
because they take part in the annual dry runs. Beyond that, little
|
||
is known and the few existing accounts conflict.
|
||
For instance, what about Congress? General Bray said that his
|
||
responsibilities included the executive branch only, not Congress
|
||
or the Supreme Court. But in an interview in 1976, Senator Hubert
|
||
Humphrey insisted that he had visited the shelter as vice-
|
||
president and seen "a nice little chamber, rostrum and all," for
|
||
postnuclear sessions of Congress.
|
||
Furthermore, Earl Warren is said to have been invited when he
|
||
was Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. Warren refused because he
|
||
was not allowed to take his wife. The protocol for ordering
|
||
persons to Mount Weather specifies that messages not be left with
|
||
family members answering the phone.
|
||
The vast majority of the persons on the list are believed to
|
||
be ranking bureaucrats from the nine federal agencies with
|
||
branches at Mount Weather. Pollack said he heard stories that some
|
||
construction workers were on the list "because, the Mount Weather
|
||
analysts reasoned, excavation work for mass graves would be needed
|
||
immediately in the aftermath of a thermonuclear war." General Bray
|
||
admitted that some others such as telephone company technicians
|
||
are included.
|
||
Each person on the survival list has an ID card with a photo.
|
||
The card reads: THE PERSON DESCRIBED ON THIS CARD HAS ESSENTIAL
|
||
EMERGENCY DUTIES WITH THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT. REQUEST FULL
|
||
ASSISTANCE AND UNRESTRICTED MOVEMENT BE AFFORDED THE PERSON TO
|
||
WHOM THIS CARD IS ISSUED.
|
||
</conspiracyFile> |