Plokštinė missile base

Plokštinė missile base (Plokštinės raketų bazė) was an underground base of the Soviet Union. It was built near Plokščiai village, 13 km north of Plungė, in the sparsely populated Plokštinė forest near Plateliai Lake, Samogitia, Lithuania. This was the first nuclear missile base of the Soviet Union, built to house underground R-12 Dvina ballistic medium-range missiles. In 2012, a Cold War Museum was opened at the site.

The site appears to have been operated by the 79th Guards Missile Regiment, part of the 29th Guards Rocket Division.

Construction
When the United States started building underground military bases in the late 1950's, the Soviet Union felt the need to maintain its military capabilities. Therefore, in September 1960, the Soviets started the rapid construction of an underground military base. It was one of the first in the Soviet Union, near the village of Plokščiai in the Lithuanian SSR. The chosen location was 160 m above sea level, which meant that its missiles could reach all of the European NATO members and NATO member Turkey. In addition, the soil was easy to excavate and the local population was small. There were no bigger towns or villages nearby, just isolated houses whose inhabitants were paid 4,500 rubles to relocate.

In 1960, more than 10,000 Soviet soldiers started to secretly work in the Žemaitija National Park for over two years. The costs of construction were comparable to the costs of building a city district or a small town.

Operation
The base was regarded as one of the top Soviet military secrets, only to be revealed by U.S. reconnaissance in 1978. The Plokštinė nuclear missile launch site started operating around three years after it was established.

The base boasted of a network of tunnels and included four deep shafts that have a depth between 27 and 34 meters. They were covered by concrete domes that could be moved aside on rails in 30 minutes. The base could stay autonomous for 15 days, or for 3 hours if also hermetically sealed. The surrounding electric fence was normally connected to 220 V, with a possibility to raise the voltage to 1700 V in case of alert. The active team consisted of about 300 people, most of them military guards.

The base included four silos that housed R-12 Dvina missiles with nuclear warheads. These missiles were propelled using a medium-range liquid. They weighed more than 40 tonnes, including 1500 kg warhead. These surface-to-surface missiles had a range of a little less than 2500 km. No missiles, even for tests, were launched from the base. Thanks to USSR-USA agreements, launching a rocket required the near simultaneous turning of two different keys by two operators.

After decommissioning
After twelve years of operations, the site was shut down. Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, the site has been abandoned and not maintained. It has been visited by urban explorers and has suffered from numerous metal thefts. After reconstruction in 2012, the former base site now hosts the Cold War Museum, opening one of the four existing silos for visitors.