Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 31 – The Russian
government has proudly announced that it has bomb shelters for all Muscovites
in the event of a nuclear strike, but officials involved with maintaining these
facilities say that at best they would save only 50,000 to 100,000 of the 12
million residents of the capital and none at all if a nuclear strike hit the
city.
In today’s “Novaya gazeta,” Anna
Bessarobova spoke with some of these officials who told her that the bomb shelters
that do exist are mostly derelict structures or have been rented out to one of
another company, most often automobile firms or fitness centers (novayagazeta.ru/articles/2016/10/31/70362-skazhite-kak-proyti-v-bomboubezhische).
Mikhail Savkin,
head of the Center for Subterranean Research, told the journalist that the
situation is so bad that in some places local residents have been asked to make
contributions of 500 rubles (eight US dollars) each to try to bring the
facilities up to standard. But in many
places, there is no possibility that officials will be able to do that.
Most of the bomb shelters are so
old, so small and so out of date that they would provide little protection in
the event of a conventional attack and none at all in the case of a nuclear one
despite the official existence of a large number of such facilities and the
role of the FSB in overseeing them.
“The main bunker of Moscow is the
metro,” Savkin says. “A megalopolis under a megalopolis. An enormous territory.
Only know this: in the case of a nuclear strike, this sill save no one. And
during a non-nuclear bombardment it will be able to help only for a maximum of
two to three days.” To hope for more without major investment is absurd.
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