- A SECURE UNDISCLOSED LOCATION
(AP) - There are secrets here in the countryside outside Washington, but
they are not well kept. In this verdant land, streams run clear, fish leap
and secrets leak.
At undisclosed locations far enough from the capital to survive a nuclear
blast, a hidden federal government is at work, scores of officials swallowed
up by the hills.
They toil in rocky warrens, micro-Washingtons stuffed into tunnels, with
communication links, emergency food rations and stale air.
The government won't say where they are.
The problem is, lots of other people are sure they know.
The government kept a tight lid on the locations of its bombproof emergency
centers outside the capital until the Cold War ended and everyone relaxed.
Now facing terrorist threats, Washington is trying to take these secrets
back.
But these installations have neighbors over the barbed-wire fence. Satellite
pictures are available. And how hush-hush can anything be when motormouths
talk about it online?
"It's simply a matter of connecting the dots," said Steven Aftergood
of the Federation of American Scientists.
An unofficial tour around one such site was provided by a civil servant
who works in an unrelated part of the government. He lives hereabouts and
is well-connected to hamlets in the vicinity.
He will be known as Deep Trout.
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- "It's an underground bunker," he says, pointing
to a hilltop on a horizon etched by radio towers. "Everyone knows
that. It's like trying to put the genie back in the bottle."
On Thanksgiving, he took his kids up a nearby hill that also has communications
equipment. Previous outings caused no trouble. This time, military police
confronted them in a hurry.
He asked one guard what was going on. "The guy said, 'If I tell you
I'll have to kill you.'
"He was smiling," Deep Trout added.
People grew up here knowing they had a mysterious federal installation
in their midst - the one up the slope where tunnels go straight into rock
and seem never to come out.
"Half the country knows about it," says Bobbi, a homeowner whose
yard borders the federal property down a winding lane.
If not half the country, then surely half the countryside.
"You hear more things than normal people up here," says Julie,
pausing in the stockroom of her family's grocery store.
But she's not too nosy when people come in from the mountain. "I don't
think that's fair that I ask them and put them in a predicament which they
shouldn't be in. Their job's secret."
People joke they expect to run into Vice President Dick Cheney, often said
to be hunkered down in secure undisclosed locations after Sept. 11.
Residents who were interviewed gave their full names and other particulars.
Those details, like Deep Trout's identity, are not being reported, to avoid
giving away the location.
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- The White House says up to 150 officials from every Cabinet
agency work in two sites, staying on the compounds 24 hours a day until
they rotate out and others replace them, under a plan tailored to the terrorist
threat.
Their basic needs are met. In Deep Trout's territory, there is no call
and perhaps no opportunity to venture to the local restaurant for the rustic
specialty, hog maw.
A citizen who has frequently delivered supplies inside said the facilities
are Spartan, with heavy desks the color of battleships and the air not
country fresh. "Typical '50s decor," the supplier said.
New furniture is being rushed in. The tunnel leading to the multistory
underground offices has a massive door, then another, and the two are never
opened at the same time, the supplier said.
The second site that national security experts believe is also home to
the hidden government is several hours away.
It's a hive of activity at the crest of a hill. A helicopter roars from
the pad, traffic flows past the gate. An officer questions two people taking
pictures by the road, checks their identification and encourages them to
move on.
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- Among the secure federal facilities arcing around Washington,
two have been documented as primary backups for the Pentagon and a cross-section
of federal agencies. They can house large numbers of officials indefinitely;
declassified plans for one of them, from 1951, called for office space
for 5,400 people.
"By refusing to identify the locations, the government may actually
be creating a mystique around the facilities and encouraging speculation,
curiosity," Aftergood said.
There was once plenty of mystique surrounding an elaborate bunker secretly
built for members of Congress under the Greenbrier resort in West Virginia.
After the Cold War, when the risk of a nuclear attack eased, it came to
be seen as a relic and its functions were detailed in the press. Now the
public can tour it.
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- In Deep Trout country, Jill steps out of the fragrance
of her quilt, birdhouse and curio store to look out on the secret mountain.
"It was a little scary being here when things went down in September,"
she said.
On Sept. 11, the skies thickened with fighter jets and helicopters, and
that has happened many times since. Roads were blocked and parents could
not immediately reach their kids at school.
The crisis in America's stricken cities had come to the quiet hills.
After that, everyone was jumpy.
When teen-age hikers and a teacher on a school field trip drifted off their
trail in October and too close to the federal site, camouflaged men with
guns stopped them.
Another teacher, watching from a distance, called police to say somebody
was holding his students at gunpoint. Everything was sorted out.
Then there was the "white van" incident.
"That was the day they spotted the Arabs," said Bobbi. "We
were out of here in five minutes."
Men in a van had raised suspicions, and authorities told residents to watch
for danger. It was apparently a misunderstanding of some sort and no more
was said about it.
"We never find out," Jill said. "We never know the results."
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