At the height of the Cold War in the 1950s, as the fear of nuclear Armageddon hung over American and Soviet citizens, ...
The thinking behind Project Iceworm was that the missiles would be moved regularly using railcars inside the tunnels. That way, it would never be clear to anyone outside where the missiles were ...
First created during the Cold War, Project Iceworm saw the US plan to store hundreds of ballistic missiles in a system of ...
The Cold War spawned some odd military projects that were doomed to fail, from atomic subways to a city under the ice.
By 1962, the site was a full-time hub for Project Iceworm, a plan to establish a "subsurface railway" servicing 600 buried ballistic missiles. At any given time, between 85 and 200 soldiers lived ...
During the Cold War, US Army scientists planned to hide hundreds of nuclear warheads underneath the Greenland ice sheet in a covert mission known as "Project Iceworm." It was 1960 and tensions ...
That playbook is Project 2025, a 900-page report developed by the Heritage Foundation and a large coalition of conservative groups to help a second Trump presidency hit the ground running.
By Simon J. Levien Former President Donald J. Trump has gone to great lengths to distance himself from Project 2025, a set of conservative policy proposals for a future Republican administration ...
For 20 years, Jeff has been a project and... Jeff Weide is the Academic Director of Health Informatics at University of Denver, Operations Manager for the COVID Rapid Response Program for CDPHE ...
Former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris have spent the last two months saying a great deal about each ...
The subway never happened. That didn’t stop the Army from proposing Project Iceworm—a top-secret plan that might represent peak weirdness. A network of tunnels would crisscross northern ...