Just the words Top Secret conjure up images of intrigue, conspiracies, and clandestine operations. These off-limits sites exist all over the world with the various governments keeping activities hidden from public knowledge…safely ensconced behind those closed doors and security fences. It's a given that most of the secrets probably have to do with research for new weapons and defense systems.
A while back, I came across an article listing 12 top secret locations, certainly not the total number of these sites…not even close…but an interesting list.
Cheyenne Mountain Complex
This
bunker near Colorado Springs, Colorado, is a relic from the days of the Cold
War. Located literally inside Cheyenne
Mountain, it was originally designed as a combat operations center with its own
water, electricity, air filtration system and built to withstand a nuclear
blast [a 1960s size nuclear blast]. This
facility has been given new vitality as a result of the 9-11 attack on the
World Trade Center and the Pentagon. It
currently participates guarding against ballistic attack, supports space
operations, and assists in keeping American and Canadian airspace safe. The U.S. Strategic Command, Air Force Space
Command, Defense Intelligence Agency, National Security Agency, and Missile
Defense Agency all maintain a presence at the Cheyenne Mountain Complex…and
that's a lot of organizations devoted to secrecy. But the secrecy of the location? Well…there is a picture of it on NORAD's
website and I recall seeing a kind of mini-tour several years ago on a television
documentary. But, with that many secrecy organizations involved, there's
probably a lot more going on there than meets the eye.
And an usual function the NORAD facility at Cheyenne Mountain performs? Every year at Christmas the facility uses its radar to track Santa's sleigh as it makes its annual toy delivery to children everywhere. This started as the result of a typographical error in a newspaper ad that listed a phone number children could call to talk to Santa. The number printed in the newspaper was only off by one digit…but a very important digit. The phone number printed turned out to be the direct line to the commander of the Cheyenne Mountain facility.
Area 51
Undoubtedly
the most famous…or infamous…secret
facility in the world. Even though its
location in the Nevada desert was known far and wide and a topic of much
speculation, the government refused to even acknowledge its existence until
1995. And anything that secret is ripe for all kinds of
conspiracy theories, some going back to Roswell, New Mexico, 1947 and the
alleged alien spacecraft crash with the alien bodies supposedly taken to Area
51. With many of the stealth technology
aircraft tested there in secret, it must have looked like strange alien craft
flying overhead. And now you can see
Area 51 via Google Earth. Sort of takes
away some of that mystique.
Site R
It's
official name is Raven Rock Mountain Complex and it's an underground relocation
facility for the Department of Defense, sometimes referred to as the underground Pentagon. It's located in Pennsylvania about 6 miles
from the Camp David presidential retreat.
There's speculation that a tunnel connects Camp David and Site R. Like Cheyenne Mountain, this was a cold war
era bunker given new purpose and life following 9-11.
The Capitol Visitor Center
Located on
the east side of the Capitol, as the name implies its purpose is to welcome
visitors to Washington, D.C. But there
is a theory that within or beneath the 580,000 square-foot building is a
top-secret area for Congress to use in emergencies. Giving credence to this theory are four
bomb-proof skylights, a tunnel system large enough for vehicles to move around
and a sophisticated IT infrastructure with thousands of feet of fiber-optic
cable.
National Security Agency/Stellar Wind
According
to Wired Magazine, the NSA is
building the largest spy center in the country in Bluffdale, Utah. This is where the NSA will intercept and
inspect billions of calls, email, Google searches, travel itineraries, book
purchases, and other miscellaneous digital information. Stellar Wind is the codename for this
surveillance program. The NSA created a
supercomputer of almost unimaginable speed to look for patterns and unscramble
codes. While the CIA is better known as
an intelligence gathering agency, the NSA is three times its size and costs
more. The NSA is considered the most
powerful intelligence agency in the world today.
This program resulted in public disclosure by whistle blower William Binney in 2002 and more recently Edward Snowden in 2013.
Pine Gap, Australia
This is
considered by many to be the Australian Area
51, the ground station for a network that intercepts telephone, radio, and
data links from around the world.
Camp Peary
Located
near Williamsburg, Virginia, Camp Peary (known as The Farm) is an area of 10,000 acres said to be where CIA agents
receive covert training.
Mount Yamantau
Located in
the Ural Mountains, the U.S. suspects this Russian site of being a large secret
nuclear facility. It's near one of
Russia's last remaining nuclear labs and is part of their Dead Hand nuclear retaliatory command structure.
Liberty Crossing
Based in a
complex in McLean, Virginia, this is home to the National Counterterrorism
Center. It utilizes experts from the
CIA, FBI, Pentagon, and other agencies, to avoid large scale terror plots. Each office is essentially a vault.
RAF Menwith Hill
This Royal
Air Force station located near Harrogate, North Yorkshire, England, is said to
be the largest electronic monitoring station in the world. It is operated by the U.S. National
Reconnaissance Office and is part of ECHELON, created during the Cold War.
Negev Nuclear Research Center
Located in
Israel's Negev Desert, the facility was built in 1958 and is widely assumed to
be a manufacturing site for nuclear weapons.
Porton Down
This is a
government and military science park
located near Wiltshire, England.
Although the term science park
makes it sound more like a children's learning-can-be-fun
type of place, that's not even close. In
World War I, it studied chemical warfare.
With the passing decades, studies changed from mustard gas to nerve
agents in the 1940s. It continued to
study biological warfare.
Planet Earth might be a global society out of necessity, but we obviously are not a harmonious global society. And if the headlines on the daily news are any indication, we're a long way from achieving that goal.
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