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  • 2021-03-15 (xsd:date)
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  • Did the Mickelsen Safeguard Complex Close After One Day? (en)
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  • On March 12, 2021, TikTok user @benben.son published a video about an abandoned military base. It documented the Stanley R. Mickelsen Safeguard Complex in Nekoma, North Dakota. The site partly resembled the shape of a pyramid. In the video, @benben.son said that the site cost $6 billion to make but was only operational for a single day: Let's take a look at all of the points that @benben.son made. The Stanley R. Mickelsen Safeguard Complex was the first of 12 planned sites in the Safeguard Program. According to the Panama City News, the site was named for General Stanley R. Mickelsen, a pioneer in the Army's guided missile program. The El Paso Herald-Post reported that it was an antiballistic missile system that was supposed to protect American missile and bomber bases from nuclear attack. A November 1975 story from The New York Times shed light on the purpose of the ominous buildings pictured in many archival photographs. It reported that the large pyramid structure was built to be a radar system. Other tall buildings held air-intake vents. According to The Palm Beach Post, the military base thrived for a short period of time. There was a year or so in the mid-'70s during which the base had its full complement of personnel — 500 military and 1,200 civilians, the Post reported. Its 200-unit subdivision was full of military people and their families. Its commissary was running. Its all-faiths chapel was planning an addition. The article also mentioned that the site was equipped with a gymnasium, bank, and filling station. The site was approved in 1969 and construction began in 1970. It opened on Oct. 1, 1975. However, on the next day, the U.S. House of Representatives voted to close the military base. Discussions revolved around when to close the site in the following year. In the end, a decision was made to cease operations around Feb. 10, 1976. The Safeguard Program was a collaborative effort of 20 years of research. However, not everyone believed in its mission, or even the idea that the program had one. The 1975 article from The New York Times reported that its Senate critics came to charge that it was 'a system in search of a mission.' The story mentioned that it was technically infeasible to provide an area-wide defense for American cities against a missile attack. Further, there were concerns about the balance of power, in terms of one country perhaps having a nuclear advantage over others. Various sources reported that the cost of the site was about $5.7 billion. The idea that all of the $5.7 billion was perhaps wasted doesn't line up with past reporting, though. On Nov. 24, 1975, the El Paso Herald-Post published that the first of 12 planned bases was essentially used as a bargaining chip with Russia. That country was purportedly impressed with the base in North Dakota. (In this article, the figure was cited as $5.8 billion instead of $5.7 billion.) This was also used as a talking point by former U.S. President Richard Nixon's administration. In the course of our research, we found some publications that referred to the Mickelsen Safeguard Complex as Nixon's Pyramid. The story in the El Paso Herald-Post also argued that nearly half of the $5.7 billion spent was for research and development. The R&D would purportedly prove useful in future endeavors and would have occurred anyway: In the TikTok video, @benben.son claimed: Many people have theorized that this could be a possible headquarters for the illuminati. Casting aside a number of points that could be made about this statement, put very simply ... the base largely appeared to be abandoned. On YouTube, videos exist that show urban explorers walking around the damp, littered, and graffiti-filled site. According to @benben.son's TikTok video description, don't click on the website. Despite the warning, we clicked on the website. It led to mickelsendefense.ml. Domains ending in .ml reference the African country of Mali. It redirected to a basic placeholder page about girls and webcams. We corrected the link to end in .mil, which is for U.S. Department of Defense domains. The website mickelsendefense.mil did not appear to be real either, nor did we find any archives of either website. In sum, the Stanley R. Mickelsen Safeguard Complex was part of a costly, missile-defense program by the U.S. government. Some money spent on the overall project was perhaps effective for research and development. The site in North Dakota may also have been helpful as a bargaining chip with Russia. However, it was operational for less than a year, and appeared to have since been abandoned. (en)
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