Technology
US Army’s most SECRET bases around the world revealed on Google Maps
INTERNET sleuths have used open source intelligence to locate over 600 Army bases around the world.
From remote Nevada to the Marshall Islands the US Army blankets the world in military outposts – and secrets.
The US Military has the most global reach of any military entity on EarthGoogle
In 2013, data artist Josh Begley developed a project that sought to pull back the curtain on what some of the censored bases look like.
In the years since, more and more bases have been photographed and pasted to the internet.
While they don’t always reveal a suspicious Army plot, the aggregation of bases show the sheer vastness of the military’s reach.
Google Maps has comprehensively scanned 10million miles of the world – including the miles owned by the military.
Read More in Google Maps
Bucholz Army Airfield
This site in the Marshall Islands is sinking into the sea with 96% of the land mass at risk of floodingGoogle
Bucholz Army Airfield looks like a tropical vacation site.
But the site was actually host to some of the most explosive nuclear tests in history – the 67 nuclear bomb tests have caused many environmental problems for the small patch of islands.
Most read in Tech
Naval Communication Station Holt
This trippy geometric pattern is actually a base in AustraliaGoogle
This image gets its iconic kaleidoscope pattern from the wires strung across the communication towers.
Each line extending to and from a point is a line of transmission wire, making a spiderwebbing pattern visible from above.
Mount Weather
Mount Weather’s existence only came into public knowledge when a commercial plane crashed nearby the base in 1974FAS.ORG
Mount Weather is the government’s apocalypse getaway.
The site is designed to house just 2,000 Army personnel, with private sleeping quarters designated for the president, the president’s cabinet and the Supreme Court.
Yucca Lake Airfield
The single airstrip leaves viewers with an eerie vibeGoogle
The lack of buildings and accommodations doesn’t make this Nevada site less lethal.
Reporting from FlightGlobal found that Yucca Lake Airfield is a home for unmanned air vehicle (UAV) testing – drones like the Pilatus PC-12 were suspected to be analyzed at this remote airstrip.
Hawthorne Army Depot
This base is situated in an abandoned corner of the Nevada desertGoogle
In the sandy expanse of the Nevada drylands, US Military personnel train for desert combat.
Resorting to Hawthorne is an indication of a military conflict reaching scale – the site stores ammunitions that are to be deployed 30 days after a war has started.
Volkel Air Base
Not every site in Begley’s project was posted with full clarityGoogle
The Volkel Air Base in the Netherlands was once controlled by the Nazi regime’s Luftwaffe.
Now in friendly hands, both Dutch and US forces are stationed on site.
Abu Ghraib
Abu Ghraib is near Iraq’s capital city of Bagdad and was a crucial outpost during the conflict in the Middle EastGoogle
This prison was the site of a horrific torture against suspected terrorists by US Military guards.
The photos from inside the prison tell the real story of Abu Ghraib while the outside shows how intensely walled the site is.
Raven Rock Mountain Complex
Raven Rock features an impenetrable underground bunkerWhite House
Vice President Dick Cheney was taken to Raven Rock during the chaos of 9/11 to keep him separate from then-President George W. Bush.
The site is featured as the new emergency government quarters in the video game series Fallout – tracking with its true purpose and “little Pentagon” monicker.
Read More on The US Sun
Google has voluntarily provided location data on hundreds of Army bases within US borders an effort to be transparent.
But satellite monitors like Begley and others were able to compile scores of images that the wider public wasn’t looking for – or meant to be aware of.
We pay for your stories!
Do you have a story for The US Sun team?
Email us at exclusive@the-sun.com or call 212 416 4552.
Like us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/TheSunUS and follow us from our main Twitter account at @TheSunUS