Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/02/2015 17:30 -0400
It’s
after midnight. From this mountaintop perch, he can still see the
radioactive remains of what used to be Washington, D.C., illuminating
the horizon as he exits the helicopter. The nuclear glow serves as stark
proof that the intelligence community failed to foresee and prevent the
worst, but at least someone was smart enough to build this mountain
bunker in rural Virginia for him and his fellow spies to regroup and
survive. He opens the reinforced steel door and begins his descent.
This isn’t paranoid conspiracy fiction. This exact scenario was played out this week.
America’s Preparathon,
yesterday’s national pep rally—brought to you by the Department of
Homeland Security—tipped me off to this real underground bunker north of
Charlottesville, Virginia. The bunker’s purpose is completely secret,
though I was easily able to verify that it has been expanded and spiffed
up in the years since 9/11 at a cost of tens of millions of dollars. It
serves as a compact parable for everything that is wrong with
government.
Yesterday’s
Preparathon was described by its sponsor FEMA as “a grassroots campaign
for action.” Washington’s definition of action is lining up and
marching, saluting, and following orders. But there’s a secret
definition, written between the lines of the Constitution and public
laws: Officialdom evacuating from disorderly and disobedient America
before the citizenry catches up or catches on. Countless billions have
been spent on this endeavor over the years, a secret orgy of
preparedness going on behind the scenes, one that ensures Washington can
defend itself, take care of its own, and survive no matter what.
Its called continuity of government,
and it’s been refined over the years to anticipate foreign invasion,
nuclear war, catastrophic accident, rioting and citizen unrest, an
electromagnetic pulse above the capital, a catastrophic failure of
critical infrastructure, a malicious hacking of the electrical grid,
terrorist attack, hurricanes and earthquakes, an asteroid from space—you
name it. The spigot opened after 9/11, gushing tax dollars into this
subterranean world of never again, but just in case. If our
all-seeing, all-knowing national security establishment fails...well,
the White House and the Generals and the Departments large and small all
have plans to depart the capital city and recover.
But what about the spies?
And so as
it goes in Washington, the self-interested predictors of world events
decided after 9/11 that they, too, needed their own continuity
operation. That’s right: the very people who will fail to predict the
Big One will need somewhere to go and keep writing their reports.
Which brings us to Peters Mountain. This year, for the first time, the office of the Director of National Intelligence announced
that it would be participating in the Preparathon with something called
the National Intelligence Emergency Management Activity (NIEMA). The
DNI merely describes
NIEMA as providing “the framework, platforms, and systems to enable the
Director of National Intelligence to lead an integrated and resilient
[intelligence community] enterprise capable of sustaining the
‘intelligence cycle’ under any crisis or consequence management event, both at our headquarters and at our alternate operating locations” (my emphasis).
But job
descriptions, contracting documents, insider resumes, and furtive
discussions with Washington sources reveal that this little-known
“activity” is a $100-million-a-year disaster playpen. At its 24/7/365
Response Operations Center (at a classified location), watch officers
provide what’s referred to as “situational awareness and crisis support”
to the nation’s leaders; and when that fails, they evacuate to their
classified alternate facility, which sources say is in Albemarle County
in central Virginia.
There is
really only one candidate—a mysterious facility atop Peters Mountain,
roughly 16 miles east of Charlottesville—and it’s undergone a $61
million plus renovation since 2007.
For
decades, there’s been speculation about just what Peters Mountain is,
this Cold War artifact on the outskirts of Washington, part of a string
of “hardened” communications nodes built to survive nuclear war in the
1950s. It’s a favorite of internet conspiracy types, but no one seems to know what it is, other than the fact that the land it’s on is officially owned by AT&T.
And if that’s not clear, there’s an AT&T logo newly installed on
the top of the mountain itself, a helicopter pad built for this
don’t-pay-attention-to-us blank spot on the map.
“I always heard stories about how it was a Nuclear Missile base, or a super communications hub. But the coolest one was the rumor that on 9/12/2001 Anti-Aircraft Artillery went up the mountain and has not come down. There is a big paved road that goes to the top off of Turkey Sag Rd. [sic] which is a gravel road and tractor trailers are always going up the mountain with covered loads. There are all sorts of Gov’t signs about private property and no trespassing. From Gordonsville at night the top of the mountain is lit up like a Christmas Tree with a lot of blue lights which I thought was weird. and you can see vehicles driving around.”
I went down
a rabbit’s hole of research trying to confirm that this indeed is an
intelligence community bunker, scouring the records of Albemarle County
and pulling the planning, construction and tax records for the land
parcel, which is indeed described as belonging to AT&T, though it is
listed as “vacant residential land” of no value.
The
building permits that have been submitted to the county since 2007—
B200701545AC dated 07/03/07; B201302542ATWR dated 10/29/13; and
B201402314AC dated 11/12/14 — amount to $61,124,583.00 in interior and
exterior alterations, including the building of that helicopter pad, a
new bunker entrance, “alteration to interior spaces,” and installation
of two new satellite dishes.
So this
vacant residential land of no value, which has seen tens of millions of
dollars in construction activity, is obviously something other than its
cover. The county itself, in its useful GIS property viewer, shows the
“vacant” residential land clearly houses several buildings.
Google and
Bing each have satellite views of the mountain top, showing the same
structures and the progress of construction since 2007.
The two
large structures on top of the mountain, to the left of the helicopter
pad, are assumed to be vent stacks and hardened power and communications
antennae. Two satellite dishes added after 9/11 are also now apparent,
suggesting autonomous and enduring communications.
Nothing in
the federal budget or in the county records suggests any government
occupation, and nothing refers to NIEMA or the intelligence community.
That again comes from sources who have worked for the DNI and its
continuity activity. They describe the national Warning, Alert, and
Mobilization System (WAMS) which would alert a select group of civilian
executives from across the intelligence community to deploy to the
bunker. The alert would come from “The Communicator” Automated
Notification System and would take two forms: alerts for everyone and
alerts for the “core” participants. Because Washington is notorious for
traffic congestion, those so-called core participants, those who have to
move away from Washington within minutes of notification, would
congregate and board helicopters which would take them away.
We sent a
Gawker scout out to look at Peters Mountain Road this morning, to see if
indeed there were men with guns and U.S. government insignia warning
hikers to stay clear.
“Road
closed” to him meant road closed, and he declined to drive further.
County maps do not show the road as being closed or restricted in any
way (bottom left hand corner, parcel 36-11A SCC). I guess that’s the
prerogative of those who live in the shadows.
The bunker
is built. It’s regularly exercised. It’s ready to go, joining Mount
Weather and Raven Rock and the Olney bunkers that dot the west, north,
and east of the capital. As the government —and now the intelligence
community—button-up to protect themselves during a disaster, the
helicopter pilots and drivers and the guards and the rest of the
unchosen (even those who work for the same organizations) are supposed
to just stay outside, always a scenario I find difficult to imagine. How
would this exactly work, this glorious evacuation of a select few?
“Honey I’m off to a secret mountain to survive Armageddon, good luck?”
And as for
the local officials and people of Charlottesville, huddled in darkness
without electricity, staring up at the blue-lit mountain glowing in the
night on generator power? Well, they will just have to wait for the
report to be written that it’s all clear, or for the one that says it’s
all over, in which case Peters Mountain will be a lonely island,
prepared for a future of nothingness. And there’s a report on that too,
required to be submitted every 12 hours: It’s called the IC Health and Status report—health and status of the intelligence community, that is.
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