According to journalists, the bunkers stretch from the capital of the Russian Federation to the Urals. Moscow diggers accidentally stumbled upon the presidential premises and were sentenced to prison terms.
For the Russian president, special secret bunkers were built throughout the country in case of nuclear threat or other serious danger. Journalists from the Russian edition of Sobesednik describe this in their investigations.
Some of the facilities were operational during the Soviet Union period, but some bunkers are currently under construction.
According to researchers, one of these facilities is located in the closed Ural city of Mezhgorye. There, in April last year, they began to dig underground tunnels, all related activities are supervised by the Main Directorate for Special Programs (GUSP) of the President of Russia. It is within the jurisdiction of this structure where all the bunkers of Vladimir Putin are located.
Officially, the reason why the entrance to Mezhgorye was possible only through special passes was never explained, but in 1992, Midkhat Shakirov, the former first secretary of the Bashkir regional committee of the CPSU, said that a bunker was being built locally. Mount Yamantau for the country’s top officials, journalists reported.
In 2003, this information was confirmed by a well-known nuclear safety expert, retired officer Bruce J. Blair.
Who is building bunkers for Putin?
At the beginning of the 90s of the last century, GUSP became part of the Presidential Administration. In fact, the department is the legal successor of the Fifth Directorate of the Administrative Department of the Cabinet of Ministers of the RSFSR, which is engaged in the construction and modernization of new checkpoints for the country and troops in case of war.
Since 2015, the head of the GUSP is state security officer Alexander Linets, who previously headed the Southern Military District Directorate of the FSB of Russia. The structure itself is directly subordinate to Putin.
Where are Putin’s bunkers?
Journalists learned that asylums for the President of Russia are at least in the following places:
- Tunnels called “Metro-2” in Moscow connect government buildings (primarily the Kremlin) to bunkers in the Russian capital, Balashikha, Chekhov and even Kaluga;
- bunker under the Putin palace in Gelendzhik;
- Shelter on Mount Yamantau in the Ural Mezhgorye.
Many bunkers are connected by tunnels separated by tens of kilometers.
All new bunkers for the head of the Kremlin are being built in the strictest secrecy and under serious protection. Objects are tracked even with the help of drones.
In 2014, several Moscow diggers accidentally broke into one of these secret bunkers and went to jail for it. One of the convicts, Pavel Sofronov, told reporters that he and his friends descended more than once into the tunnels of the capital, located 200 meters deep.
“There were halls that were 12 stories high and several kilometers long. For the money used to build it, I think it would be possible to build more than a million cities,” said Rus.
Apparently, these facilities were allocated directly to the Transingstroy company, which built bunkers for Putin in Moscow.
Sofronov himself was detained for three years, his comrade was sent to a strict regime colony.
Recall that on October 7, Russian President Vladimir Putin celebrated his 70th birthday. Focus Using the stable Diffusion and Midjourney neural networks, he presented how the president of the aggressor country celebrated his anniversary in a bunker.
Source: Focus
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