Area 51’s Underground Realms (Part 2)

Area 51 The Revealing Truth of Ufos, Secret Aircraft, Cover-Ups & Conspiracies

As for the Mount Kosvinsky installation, that is equally almost impenetrable. Built well into the heart of the mountain—which is located in the northern Urals—it is protected by around twelve hundred feet of granite and, just like the Yamantau base, is designed to provide housing for the elite in the event of a nuclear attack—and also to allow for some form of continuation of the government, presuming, of course, that anyone is left to be governed after a major nuclear exchange between the most powerful nations on the planet. All that’s really known for sure is that the construction of the base was completed by the mid-1990s and that it, like Yamantau, can house thousands of people with a near-indefinite supply of food, water, medical supplies, and all the provisions needed to survive underground not just for months but for years. Some intelligence estimates suggest that this living situation can go on possibly even for decades.

Moving away from the Urals but still focused on Russia, Kapustin Yar is situated in Astrakhan Oblast. Construction of the installation began back in the 1940s with the intention being to create the ultimate facility for building and testing new and novel rockets. The first such rocket launch took place in October 1947; it was a test using a captured Nazi A-4 rocket, one of a number that the Russians got their hands on when the Nazi regime collapsed in 1945. As the base grew in size and scope, yet further rocket tests were undertaken, and by the early 1950s, atomic bomb tests were carried out in close proximity. Spy satellites of the U.S. National Reconnaissance Office have noted that in the last few years, massive digging has been afoot at Kapustin Yar, all of which suggests that the base is no longer just used for rocket and missile tests but that it may be being refurbished on a gigantic scale to essentially turn portions of it into a huge, underground bunker, one designed to withstand the terrible effects of a nuclear war.

Now let’s take a look at China. The most visible of the various installations that U.S. intelligence suspects have converted into massive, bunker-style facilities is the Sanya installation, as it has become known, although its official title is the Yulin Naval Base—Sanya being a nearby city that is home to around seven hundred thousand people. Essentially, the installation, located on Hainan Island, is one of China’s most important submarine bases, but it’s far more than that.

The National Interest website states: “The island faces the South China Sea (SCS), over which Beijing has proffered expansive historical claims, such as the famous nine-dash line that encompasses nearly all of this maritime zone.

Maritime incidents between China and its neighbors, especially Vietnam and the Philippines, are increasingly frequent. The People’s Liberation Army’s Navy (PLAN) is undoubtedly moving to buttress its presence on the island. On Yalong Bay near the island’s southeastern tip, China’s recently constructed Longpo naval base is a deep-water port complete with submarine piers, an underground submarine facility with tunnel access, and a demagnetizing facility to reduce the magnetic residuals on ship hulls.” The Diplomat notes: “Open-source intelligence tools provide an informative glimpse of Hainan Island’s busy, fortified, and increasingly vital base.

All told, Yulin-East encompasses over 25 square kilometers of military infrastructure lying within a protected, man-made harbor … the base accommodates surface and subsurface vessels (and most of the necessary accouterments thereof), theater and point defense weapons systems, munitions transport vehicles and depots, and administrative buildings for military commanders.” Not only that, U.S. military spy satellites, using ground-penetrating radar systems, have been able to confirm evidence of huge excavating within the hills that surround the base. In other words, while the submarine base certainly still exists, it is being expanded on, specifically with the creation of fortified facilities buried deep within the depths of the local landscape.

What all of this demonstrates is that two of the world’s most powerful nations—Russia and China—are taking careful, rapid, and secret steps to create huge, underground installations that may provide some degree of survival for the elite. All of this now brings us to the matter of the United States. Is it, too, constructing such secure bases in the event that nuclear war erupts? The answer is a decisive yes.

Then there is the matter of a certain secret base located in Utah. The name of this rival to Area 51 in the secrecy and conspiracy stakes is the Dugway Proving Ground. Situated less than ninety miles from Salt Lake City, the DPG covers a massive amount of Utah’s Great Salt Lake Desert. The origins of the facility date back to the 1940s. It was in early February 1942—and in the wake of the events at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii—that then-President Franklin D. Roosevelt passed a degree that effectively handed over to the War Department more than one hundred thousand acres of Utah land, on which what is now the Dugway Proving Ground would be built.

The War Department set about not just constructing the base itself but significantly sized underground bunkers and facilities, too. The goal was to create for the U.S. government the ultimate base for the study and development of chemical warfare agents. As the years progressed, so did the size of the Dugway Proving Ground. Thirteen years after President Roosevelt gave the go-ahead, close to three hundred thousand additional acres of Utah land were handed over to the military. Today, the figure is in excess of eight hundred thousand acres, and the work of the DPG has expanded, too—yes, chemical warfare is still a big part of the base’s mandate, as is research into biological warfare and deadly viruses.

https://scienceandspace.com/ufos/area-51s-underground-realms-part-1/