
11 and has been pretty dramatically expanded over the last 15 years, and today could hold as many as 5,000 people in the event of an emergency.

The dining facility serves four meals a day, it's a 24 hour facility, and it was sort of mothballed to a certain extent during the 1990s as the Cold War ended and then was restarted in a hurry after Sept. It has everything that a small city would - there's a fire department there, there's a police department, medical facilities, dining halls. with individual buildings, three-story buildings, built inside of this mountain. Raven Rock is this massive, hollowed-out mountain. "If you're trying to preserve and restart the government after an attack, becomes this very existential question about what is America? Are you trying to preserve the presidency? Are you preserving the three branches of government? Or are you preserving even the historical totems that have bound us together across generations as Americans?" this idea of what you're going to save for America," Graff explains.

"Part of what makes these plans so interesting is thinking through. Based in part on recently declassified documents, it describes the bunkers designed to protect government leaders, lines of succession to replace officials who are killed, and the roles for various agencies in the event of catastrophe. Government's Secret Plan to Save Itself – While the Rest of Us Die. The result of that curiosity is Graff's new book Raven Rock: The Story of the U.S. "It just made me so curious to go back and understand what the history of these plans were, and what they are in modern times as well."

"It was a facility that I had never heard of, that wasn't on any map.
