http://english.pravda.ru/main/2001/08/23/13138.html



12:09 2001-08-23

ADAM YOUNG: DOOMSDAY BLUEPRINTS

In Time magazine's August 10, 1992, issue, Ted Gup reported on newly
disclosed plans that the federal government had developed for salvaging the
state in the event of a nuclear attack on the United States by the Soviet
Union.

"Though the Soviet Union is gone," the story went, "Washington was once
convinced that World War III could break out without warning . . . and in
case of nuclear attack the U.S. government hoped to save the President and
keep the country running by relying on THE DOOMSDAY BLUEPRINTS."

If "doomsday" had arrived, a president running the country from the top down
would have added mass starvation and social extinction to the mass
devastation of nuclear war.

The doomsday planners of the '50s envisioned a post-apocalyptic urban America
largely in ruins and darkened under the breakdown of private-sector and
governmental services and the imposition of martial law, food rationing,
price controls, censorship, and the curtailment of individual liberties. They
also envisioned outright federal dictatorship, too.

In a 1955 top-secret memo to advisers, then-President Eisenhower wrote: "We
would have to run this country as one big camp -- severely regimented." Later
on, he asked, "Who is going to bury the dead? Where would one find the tools?
The organization to do it? We must not assume that we are going to handle
these problems with calmness. . . . We will be running soup kitchens -- we
are going to be taking care of a completely bewildered population."

It was estimated that tens of millions of people would be dead, with the
major cities of the United States in ruins or in ashes. But in addition to
the millions of civilian casualties, there would be another, more prominent
casualty: the pretense of constitutional government.

The Doomsday Blueprints were developed during the Eisenhower administration
with a single-minded mission: to save the federal government, preserve and
restore law and order, and prime the pump of the devastated economy. To
achieve these ends, the doomsday planners labored to create a vast and secret
doomsday bureaucracy.

Mr. Gup described their plan's effects: ". . . they drafted detailed
contingency plans and regulations that . . . would have radically transformed
the U.S.'s political and social institutions." Indeed, nowhere in Mr. Gup's
piece -- and maybe not in the Doomsday Blueprints themselves -- are the state
and local governments mentioned. Presumably, they would be steamrolled over
in Washington's -- or, rather, the White House's -- drive to impose war
socialism on the ashes of American society.

The doomsday planners' secret bureaucracy planned and built a network of
relocation sites for the federal government in a ring around the capitol that
became known as the Federal Arc.

Amongst these were Raven Rock, code-named "Site R" -- or the "Underground
Pentagon," as it was more commonly called -- an 81,000-square-foot complex
located near Gettysburg, Pennsylvania; and Mount Weather -- code-named "High
Point" -- a 61,000-square-foot mountain bunker near Berryville, Virginia,
where the president, the cabinet, and the Supreme Court justices would be
relocated. The director of Mount Weather was given a simple commission
directly from President Eisenhower: "I expect your people to save our
government."

Buried underneath the five-star Greenbrier resort in White Sulphur Springs,
West Virginia, was built the relocation center for the entire United States
Congress. Built with its own replicas of the House and Senate chambers -- and
a vast hall for joint sessions of Congress -- this site was code-named
"Casper." Only a half dozen members of Congress at any one time knew it even
existed.

Of course, the Federal Reserve Board had its own relocation site: a
43,000-square-foot radiation-proof facility dug out of Culpeper, Virginia,
and stocked with a thirty-day supply of freeze-dried food to be served up on
fine bone china. This facility was not mothballed until July 1992.

Several plans were hatched on how best to evacuate the president and the
first family from the White House. The plan that was implemented -- and that
was in effect until 1970 -- was code-named "Outpost Mission." The 2857th Test
Squadron, an elite unit of helicopter pilots and crewmen, was organized and
stationed at Olmsted U.S. Air Force Base in Pennsylvania, disguised as a
search and rescue team. Stationed just outside the blast range of Washington,
only the pilots and base commander knew their real purpose. When the time
came, the unit's helicopters would swoop in and whisk the president and other
officials and family off the White House lawn.

And every year the government conducted elaborate test drills with thousands
of bureaucrats in mock nuclear strike exercises. As it happened, it was
during one of these annual drills, as Eisenhower and the cabinet were meeting
in Mount Weather, that Eisenhower was presented with a note that the Soviet
Union had just shot down a U-2 spy plane. (Eisenhower exclaimed: "I'll be a
son of a bitch.")

During one doomsday drill, a presidential convoy to Mount Weather was halted
on the narrow road by the sudden appearance of a farmer's truck loaded with
pigs. The farmer was forced to laboriously inch his truck in reverse back up
the road until it passed the entrance to the bunker. Such are the best laid
plans of central planners overturned. Yet these doomsday planners still
believed they could work miracles.

On doomsday, the Doomsday Blueprints would have come into full effect. Before
leaving the White House, the president would have removed from the vault the
executive orders, already signed and authorized long before, that would
impose martial law. Once the attack commenced, the top-secret Bomb Alarm
inside Mount Weather would register impacts from nuclear strikes from
coast-to-coast.

The Bomb Alarm's network of sensors and copper pressure wires that
crisscrossed the country and registered heat, light, and pressure changes
would display these changes on a giant map of the continental United States.
Hundreds of tiny red lightbulbs would light up to mark the sites of atomic
impacts. Washington. New York City. Chicago. Los Angeles . . .

Using the Emergency Broadcast System, recorded messages from both President
Eisenhower and entertainer Arthur Godfrey would be broadcast to the people.
The message would be stark: "The country has come under nuclear attack, but
the government continues to function." In an attempt to sooth the psyches of
a shattered people, celebrity newsmen who had agreed beforehand to accompany
the president in retreat would lend their voices and names to the effort to
calm the survivors, testifying to the heroism of the fourth estate.

Later, the presidential address would most likely inform the people on how
the government was going to work to improve their quality of life through
martial law, state-planned production, and rationing. "Plan D," the new
dictator's options for responding to the surprise attack -- without a
congressional declaration of war, of course -- would be decided on almost
immediately.

From nuclear exile, the surviving bureaucracy would swing into motion. The
Emergency Federal Register -- which would inform survivors of the emergency
laws and regulations now in effect, including martial law -- would be
published and distributed to the public. The Civil Service Commission would
enact a regulation to designate government employees who were reported dead
to be "on administrative leave until the reported date of death."

The Post Office would announce that postage stamps would no longer be needed
to send letters and postcards to the recently depopulated areas. Special
delivery would be phased out except for medicines and surgical dressings.

The Treasury Department would order surviving banks to remain open during
normal hours of business, but would confiscate property by imposing
withdrawal limits "to prevent hoarding." The Treasury would move to oversee
private-sector price and wage controls for rent and salaries. Following an
agreement with private companies "in non-critical target areas," they would
begin printing checks. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation would order
surviving bank examiners to report at once to the nearest surviving Federal
Reserve Bank "where they can assist in the reconstruction of the banking
system."

The Federal Reserve governors, from the safety of their Culpeper hideout,
would continue their function as the central counterfeiting agency. Deep
inside the Fed's bunker, forklifts would begin moving out a mountain of the
government's stored worthless paper currency. Inside the Fed's vault sat tons
of five-, ten-, fifty-, and one-hundred-dollar bills in shrink-wrapped
packages forming a wall of preprinted fiat money standing almost nine feet
tall. This gigantic vault still housed this wall of the government's currency
into the late 1980s -- ready at a moment's notice to prime the pump of the
hollowed-out post-nuclear economy.

The Federal Highway Administration would fan out to attempt to protect
motorists from nuclear fallout. The Department of Agriculture would act to
implement its national food-rationing program, establishing decrees on what
every person what be allowed to consume. Each civilian would be restricted to
a maximum caloric intake of 2,000 to 2,500 calories a day. Among the weekly
rations for civilians were six eggs and three and a half quarts of milk. (Not
mentioned was any plan for confiscating surplus food to facilitate rationing
and "prevent hoarding," but this would seem, given everything else planned, a
sure likelihood.)

The Department of Housing and Urban Development would enact its regulations
to relocate and house the surviving population. These regulations were
code-named "Asp," "Bear," "Cat," and "Dog," and contained elaborate plans for
how HUD planned on housing millions of displaced Americans -- defacto
refugees. (Mr. Gup makes no mention of the possibility of resorting to forced
labor to bury the dead or to build temporary housing for the survivors, but
this would also seem like a likely eventuality.)

Regulations established long ago would come into effect for producing goods
and services deemed to be vital to national survival. The upper management of
major companies from their bunkers -- where regularly updated company records
were stored and rooms were available for the executives and their families,
along with dining halls, security vaults and radio-communications equipment
-- would put into effect their "unified emergency plans."

Private producers would be shackled with controls (the plans would prevent
outright nationalization of surviving industry) that would subordinate
private production to the production dictates of the doomsday bureaucracy.
All distribution, production, and prices would be determined by the state.

And coordinating all of the Doomsday Blueprints' activities would be the
Wartime Information Security Program, or WISP (as in Whisper) -- the national
censorship office. Then-CBS Vice President Theodore F. Koop agreed to act as
the national censor, with a staff of forty civilian executives in a secure
facility located well outside Washington and stocked with censorship manuals
and regulation codes.

The site was equipped with its own communications and broadcasting center.
(Although the existence of the censorship office was exposed to the public in
1970 and the public was told that it had been shut down, its duties were
transferred to yet another arm of what an internal memo referred to as "the
shadow government.")
What is striking is the enormous waste of it all: the resources, manpower,
and time; the unknown lost potential that was destroyed by the statism that
the cold war so vividly represented; and the absurdity of the government's
assumptions and elaborate planning. It demonstrates a callous disregard for
liberty and property that treats people like cattle and clay.

And although some of the doomsday sites are being converted into document
storage and office space, and some procedures have been rendered obsolete,
Mr. Gup winds up his cover story with an admonition from the doomsday
planners themselves: "that new dangers abound -- nuclear proliferation, the
resurgence of ethnic nationalism, and the renewed threat of terrorism -- and
that only the dead have seen the last of war." Obsolete bureaucracies, as we
all know, are only really productive in inventing new reasons for their own
continued existence.

How different the twentieth century might have been if people had understood
the arguments for peace and freedom. Sacrificing human liberty at the cost of
state power has had only disastrous results. The antidote to war -- and total
war and the total war mentality -- is liberty, not slavery. But of course,
this goes entirely against the grain of statist thinking. The goal of the
doomsday planners -- like all central planners and bureaucracies -- was the
continued survival of the government and its rule over the survivors of the
very same holocaust that it brought about.

Adam Young


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