The basement that keeps war secrets
For years, what goes on under the White House has been a sealed mystery. But a court fight by Donald Trump over building a ballroom—yes, you read that right—ended up leaking data about a bunker dating back to 1942.
The project costs $400 million and includes a 90,000-square-foot dance space where the East Wing used to be. The National Trust for Historic Preservation stopped it, but a federal appeals court has just given a partial green light: it allowed underground safety-related work to continue.
“Leaving the project unfinished could compromise presidential security,” defends the administration.
The shelter that saw crisis
That bunker is not new. Franklin D. Roosevelt ordered it to be built in the middle of World War II. Since then it has been the emergency hiding place: during the 9/11 attacks they took Dick Cheney there, and in the 2020 protests, Trump himself.
Now the work includes reinforcing bomb shelters and a medical center. Experts say it’s part of the plan to keep the government running if everything blows up.
Who pays?
Here’s the funny thing: taxpayers cover security, but the ballroom is funded by private donations. The key hearing will be in June.
Meanwhile, one wonders: how many other secrets does that basement hold?




