MOSCOW, RUSSIA: Nuclear bunker plans are displayed in a wall. HAVE YOU ever wondered where Russians would go if WE dropped nuclear bombs on THEM? Thanks to pictures provided by a Moscow construction worker, we in the West can now see the grim 650-feet underground welcome that 2,700 Russian citizens would receive if nuclear war became reality. The only problem is the bunker’s power and water supplies would fail after just two days, leaving refugees with no choice but to venture into the nuclear wasteland their city would have become. While being far from the luxury many modern day Muscovites mi


MOSCOW, RUSSIA: Nuclear bunker plans are displayed in a wall. HAVE YOU ever wondered where Russians would go if WE dropped nuclear bombs on THEM? Thanks to pictures provided by a Moscow construction worker, we in the West can now see the grim 650-feet underground welcome that 2,700 Russian citizens would receive if nuclear war became reality. The only problem is the bunker’s power and water supplies would fail after just two days, leaving refugees with no choice but to venture into the nuclear wasteland their city would have become. While being far from the luxury many modern day Muscovites might expect, the life support system does include two-foot thick steel reinforced doors, diesel generators, water pumps, chemical and radiation proof suits, gas masks, post-nuclear transport and wooden bunks to sleep on. Other features of Moscow’s Site 1 includes enough non-radioactive water in the tanks for three-liters per person per day, food for three meals a day, automatic fire extinguishers, air-con, 75 toilets and bathroom capacity for 200 people to wash at any one time. Moscow resident Mikhail Bratza (42) ventured to his city’s Refuge number 09731 SUE SPNU (Site 1), to take his eye-opening pictures.


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Keywords: attack, haven, moscow, nuclear, russia, russians, safety, security, shelter, war