A 007-feeling in Lithuania | |
Ventspils (Latvia), July 16th 2013
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You probably know the typical James Bond cold war stories from the 007 movies. The Russians have nuclear weapons that they can launch from an underground base. Deep in a forest they constructed underground silos with moveable roofs from where they can launch missiles to destroy the world. Russian soldiers are sitting in bunkers behind electronic control panels, waiting for the order from Moscow to turn on the system with the well-known key, and pushing the red button to actually launch the rockets. That these 007 stories were partly based on the real situation, is proved by a former Soviet nuclear missile base in Lithuania, which is nowadays open to curious visitors.
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Domed roof of a missile silo |
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It was also this base who deployed the missiles to Cuba during the Cuban crisis in 1962. Secretly, the missiles were transported to the black sea, where they were loaded on a civilian ship that brought the missiles to Cuba. Another important moment of the base was in 1968, during the Warsaw Pact invasion in Czechoslovakia. This was probably the only moment in the history of the base that it was actually on code ‘red’, the highest alarm code. There were never any incidents or accidents on the base; there was never a James Bond kind of guy who entered the base to destroy it. So, not the whole 007 story is based on reality. The Soviets dismantled the base as a response on the agreement with the Americans to bring back the number of nuclear weapons in the world. But what actually happened with the missiles that were positioned here, it still a mystery.
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Peek into the missile silo |
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The duration of the tour is an hour, and it takes you through several rooms and hallways of the base. Unfortunately, nothing of the actual equipment is present. So don’t expect old electronic equipment and machines in the control rooms, radio stations, storage rooms and generator quarters. One of the highlights is the peek from above in one of the round concrete silos in where the missiles were actually positioned. But the main highlight is the feeling that you visit a once very secret place in the oh-so-powerful Soviet Union, a base constructed with the goal to maybe destroy a huge part of Europe. Several rooms in the bunkers have information panels (also in English) but you won’t get enough time to read them. The ladies who lead the tours are interested in only one thing: to end the tour within the one hour time span. And they aren’t also very friendly. They lead the group like if the visitors are a class of annoying teenagers, so if you do something ‘wrong’ or you take too much time at an information panel, expect to get a ‘punch-up’. It’s like how a fellow-visitor from Belgium said: “The communist regime might have disappeared here, but they haven’t said goodbye to the Soviet culture yet”. |
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Radio room |
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Generator room |
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Anti-NATO propaganda |
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A maquette of a nuclear missile |
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