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#7 - RW 268
COMMENTARY:
CLOSED TOWNS OPEN THEIR DOORS TO EVERYONE
MOSCOW, 7 August, 2003. /RIA Novosti analyst Anatoly Korolyov/ Russia is
making increasingly energetic attempts to integrate into the modern global
community and is therefore lifting the veil of secrecy from many of its
classified facilities. The formerly closed towns of Novouralsk, Snezhinsk,
Angarsk, Zelenogorsk, Zheleznogorsk and others have already appeared on ordinary
maps. Moreover, these towns are now open to visitors, though they need the
appropriate authorisation. Sarov and Los Alamos, nuclear centres of Russia and
the US, are twin towns today, something which could only be dreamed about only
relatively recently.
However, Sarov has not been opened up completely. The town recently hosted
the festivities dedicated to the 100th anniversary of the canonisation of
Seraphim of Sarov, the most revered saint of the Russian Orthodox Church. Few
pilgrims were allowed into the town to pray in the church built where St
Seraphim's monastic cell once stood.
Sarov, formerly Russia's classified town Arzamas-16, is home to 86,649 people
the majority of whom are nuclear specialists working for the Russian Nuclear
Centre, one of the country's top secret facilities. The town is still surrounded
by a barbed wire fence, while you have to present a special pass at one of the
several checkpoints to enter or leave it. The locals, however, do not feel like
changing the status quo, as the town's closed status is a guarantee of comfort
and security.
The pilgrims were aware that Sarov was a closed town. They patiently waited
in a field near Sarov for the procession with its holy relics in a cedar coffin
to pass by.
Closed towns (and there are ten of them in Russia) are a fact of life in any
civilised society.
The US has classified towns of its own, for example, Los Alamos in New
Mexico. This is, probably, the most impressive example of secrecy. An ordinary
cattle ranch lost in cornfields was a good disguise for the first underground
laboratory for atomic physicists. Construction began during WWII. It would have
never occurred to anyone that a simple shed was a disguised entrance to a super
secret elevator, taking future Nobel Prize winners to brightly lit underground
labs.
The fact that the existence of such classified monsters and their inmates is
being brought into the open somewhat eases international tension. Atomiad, or
the all-Russian Games for athletes from Russia's closed towns, is held near
Moscow every autumn. In 2002, Novouralsk launched an international campaign, the
Young Generation Against a Nuclear Threat, which involved over 100 students and
professors from American closed towns.
Moroever, Russia's Nuclear Energy Ministry has repeatedly promised to
gradually ease secrecy around such towns, and eventually lift the classified
status from major nuclear centres completely. Russia makes no secret of the
amount of plutonium and enriched uranium it possesses. A total of 192 tons of
the substances are stockpiled in 115 well-guarded facilities.
Openness pays off.
It was Baghdad's closed position and lies that gave the Bush administration
formal grounds to start the war. Indeed, North Korea's closed position is
provoking a new conflict today.
CDI Russia Weekly #268 ~ Contents Next
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