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Thursday, December 11, 2014

Nuclear Attacks Proof Bunker of Yugoslav leader Josip Tito

Inside the secret £3billion bunker dug 920-feet into a mountain to protect former Yugoslav leader Josip Tito from nuclear attacks

  • Bunker was dug into a mountain outside Konjic, 25 miles south of Sarajevo in modern-day Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • The complex was designed to allow 350 people to live and work for six months without ever coming up for air
  • Communist Yugoslavia's Josip Tito ordered the building of the bunker, spanning 6,500 square metres, in 1953 
  • The bunker was designed to safeguard the country's ruling classes in case of a nuclear attack 
Dug deep into a mountain which took 26 laborious years to construct at an astronomical cost of more than £3billion, this bunker is an abandoned relic of the former republic of Yugoslavia.
The extensive 920 foot-deep U-shaped complex is dug into a mountain outside Konjic, 25 miles south of Sarajevo in modern-day Bosnia and Herzegovina. 
Communist Yugoslavia's leader Josip Tito ordered the building of the bunker in 1953 to safeguard the country's ruling classes in case of a nuclear attack. 
The complex, spanning 6,500 square metres, was designed to allow 350 people to live and work for six months without ever coming up for air. It had its own generators, water supply and air-conditioning system.
The existence of this atomic shelter that could withstand a nuclear attack strength of 20 kilotons - far more powerful than ones that were dropped on Hiroshima - was known only to Tito, his closest confidantes and and the handful of soldiers guarding it.
Lights show a tunnel deep in the heart of Josip Tito's underground secret bunker that was built to withstand nuclear attacks 
Lights show a tunnel deep in the heart of Josip Tito's underground secret bunker that was built to withstand nuclear attacks 
A Bosnia and Herzegovina soldier heaves open a metal door in the bunker that was designed to allow 350 people to live in 
A Bosnia and Herzegovina soldier heaves open a metal door in the bunker that was designed to allow 350 people to live in 
The bedroom that was constructed for the former Yugoslav leader Josip Tito - he died in 1980, a year after the fortress was complete 
The bedroom that was constructed for the former Yugoslav leader Josip Tito - he died in 1980, a year after the fortress was complete 
Tito's en-suite private toilet in the secret bunker - he never got to see the finished works that took 26 years to construct 
Tito's en-suite private toilet in the secret bunker - he never got to see the finished works that took 26 years to construct 
Tito's office in the bunker in the 'presidential bloc' that was built to safeguard the country's ruling classes in case of a nuclear attack 
Tito's office in the bunker in the 'presidential bloc' that was built to safeguard the country's ruling classes in case of a nuclear attack 
The bunker was finally completed in 1979 - a year before the dictator's death. 
He never got to see the U-shaped complex dug into the mountain with 100 bedrooms and the 'presidential bloc' containing private quarters built just for him with a king-size bed and an en-suite bathroom. 
The secret bunker was revealed when Bosnia broke away from Yugoslavia in 1992. The new army took over and still owns the underground complex, which is now on show to the public. 
 A soldier maps out the details of the U-shaped complex that cost more than £3billion to build over a 26-year period 
 A soldier maps out the details of the U-shaped complex that cost more than £3billion to build over a 26-year period 
A soldier peers through a gap in the heavily fortified structure as he stands next to the water tanks - the bunker had its own water supply 
A soldier peers through a gap in the heavily fortified structure as he stands next to the water tanks - the bunker had its own water supply 
A meeting room in the bunker where people were expected to work for half a year without coming up for air 
A meeting room in the bunker where people were expected to work for half a year without coming up for air 
 A room with a television - the bunker could cater for 350 workers and was known only to Tito, his closest confidantes and the guards on duty 
 A room with a television - the bunker could cater for 350 workers and was known only to Tito, his closest confidantes and the guards on duty 
The bunker was full of portraits and busts of the former Yugoslav leader who helped maintain a period of peace in the federal state 
The bunker was full of portraits and busts of the former Yugoslav leader who helped maintain a period of peace in the federal state 
The bunker was built in case of a nuclear attack, and workers could help deliver and receive news via typewriters in the telefax office
The bunker was built in case of a nuclear attack, and workers could help deliver and receive news via typewriters in the telefax office
The office of Tito's Secretary, complete with a desk, sofa and telephone that was build to withstand a nuclear attack strength of 20 kilotons
The office of Tito's Secretary, complete with a desk, sofa and telephone that was build to withstand a nuclear attack strength of 20 kilotons
A soldier walks through one of the tunnels that snakes through the secret bunker that Josip Tito ordered to be built in 1953
A soldier walks through one of the tunnels that snakes through the secret bunker that Josip Tito ordered to be built in 1953
A label on one of the heavy doors in the complex - the metal doors were more than a metre thick to survive any potential attacks 
A label on one of the heavy doors in the complex - the metal doors were more than a metre thick to survive any potential attacks 
While Tito was viewed in some quarters as authoritarian, he was widely praised for developing a unique brand of socialism in his beloved Yugoslavia. 
He modelled his country on the Soviet Union, but after falling out with Stalin, chartered an independent course for the country. 
Yugoslavia became far more open than its communist neighbours, such as allowing visitors free travel to the west, and was seen by many as a paradise on earth. 
Tito also managed to maintain the peaceful co-existence of the nations of the six republics of Yugoslavia due to his internal policies. 
Although there was substance to Tito's Yugoslavia, much was illusion too. The economy was propped up by loans from the west and stirrings of discontent in Croatia and Kosovo were swiftly put down. 
Following his death in 1980, the state began to fall apart as the republics began to seek greater powers for themselves and the former federation disintegrated amid bloody fighting.   

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