By: Eric Niiler

When the Pentagon Dug Ice Tunnels in Greenland to Hide Nukes

The Cold War-era underground facility was publicly touted as a 'nuclear-powered Arctic research center.'

W. Robert Moore/National Geographic/Getty Images
Published: January 09, 2026Last Updated: January 09, 2026

On a clear, cold day in May 1959, two U.S. Army officers clad in polar gear gazed through their aviator sunglasses at the endless white horizon before them. Standing in front of Arctic personnel carriers, Col. John Kerkering and Capt. Thomas Evans took measurements for a new military installation to be buried beneath Greenland’s ice cap. They called it “Camp Century.”

The proposed facility in northwestern Greenland was publicly touted as a “nuclear-powered Arctic research center” set in a wilderness of ice and snow. But the real reason for this Cold War base was to build and maintain a secret network of tunnels and missile silos connected by rail cars known as “Operation Iceworm.”

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It was the tense days of the Cold War when a rivalry between the nuclear powers of the United States and the Soviet Union had military leaders constantly devising new ways to outfox the other side. Pentagon planners thought that by shuttling as many as 600 nuclear-tipped “Iceman” missiles (a new moniker for the existing Minuteman) back and forth between 2,100 silos, they could keep their counterparts in the Soviet Union guessing. The concept amounted to a deadly game of atomic “whack-a-mole” spread out across roughly 52,000 square miles of northern Greenland.

“We needed a flat surface, a level with less than one degree of slope,” Evans says in a voice-over of a U.S. Army film, released in 1960, documenting the scout mission for the site. “This would minimize construction problems by enabling us to keep all of our tunnels on the same level.”

Once the location was settled, hundreds of military engineers and technicians trekked 150 miles from the existing Thule Air Base along Greenland’s northwest coast to the Camp Century site. From 1959 to 1961, they dug tens of feet into the compacted snow and ice, fashioning an underground city with sleeping quarters, laboratories, offices, a barber shop, laundry, library and warm showers for about 200 soldiers.

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The American public didn’t know about Project Iceworm until a Danish Parliament investigation published documents about the secret project in 1997, but they did know about Camp Century. Television crews and journalists from National Geographic and the New York Times visited as the camp took shape. So, too, were an unlikely pair of Boy Scouts, one from Kansas and one from Denmark. They won a contest to visit Camp Century, and their letters and diary entries sent home revealed much about daily life in their frozen, underground city, according to Kristian Nielsen, head of the Centre for Science Studies at Denmark’s Arhaus University.

Nielsen also found accounts that soldiers living underground worried about exposure to radiation from a nuclear reactor that powered the station. “We had a hard time finding out about this,” Nielsen says. “It was a concern for them.”

The underlying public message of Camp Century was to show how ordinary Americans (albeit soldiers) could live and work in a remote location, almost as a stepping stone to a space colony. Army researchers did perform some science, including drilling the first ice core to the base of the Greenland ice sheet, which provided information to scientists about the past climate. Meanwhile, planners back at the Pentagon were trying to figure out how to use Camp Century to coordinate a secret missile installation.

Despite the Cold War propaganda and impressive feats of engineering, the ice-bound underground installation ultimately didn’t work. Operation Iceworm was shut down because the walls of snow and ice kept moving, squeezing the tracks that carried the missile train. Problems with the nuclear reactor forced its removal in 1964 and by the mid-1960s, the Army had abandoned Camp Century altogether.

Nielsen says the experiment also failed because of politics. Danish officials had a policy of no nuclear weapons on Danish soil, even though they allowed the U.S. military to use Greenland as a staging area. And a Pentagon dispute erupted between Army generals—who wanted their own missile system at Camp Century—and Air Force and Navy officials who wanted control over the positioning of the nation’s nuclear missiles.

Building the ice walls of Camp Century, a Pentagon base in northwestern Greenland.

Pictorial Parade/Archive Photos/Getty Images

A crane loads an escape hatch onto a sled. The stairway fits inside the hatch to offer an exit from underground camp.

Pictorial Parade/Archive Photos/Getty Images

A view of the main trench entrance to Century Camp, Greenland.

Pictorial Parade/Archive Photos/Getty Images

A crane lowers a hatch into a lateral trench of Camp Century.

Pictorial Parade/Archive Photos/Getty Images

Men place a truss to support side walls of the camp.

Pictorial Parade/Archive Photos/Getty Images

In this May 1962 photo, specialists watch a control panel of the nuclear power plant that powered the camp.

W. Robert Moore/National Geographic/Getty Images

A crane positions the nuclear plant’s waste tank.

W. Robert Moore/National Geographic/Getty Images

Men stand outside barracks stationed in the Greenland outpost in May 1962.

W. Robert Moore/National Geographic/Getty Images

“It was a turf battle,” he says.

Camp Century was shuttered, and engineers figured that ice would eventually entomb the abandoned station. But decades later, warming temperatures linked to climate change presented a problem. In 2016, a team of scientists reported that the rapid warming of the Greenland ice sheet could lead to the exposure of radioactive, toxic and human waste that remains at Camp Century, possibly leaking into the streams that lead to the ocean.

“It’s just a matter of time,” says Mike MacFerrin, an author on the 2016 study that identified the problem. “When the water reaches these wastes and gets to the coast, then we’ve got a big problem.”

A NASA image showing radar detection of Camp Century from an April 2024 flight over Greenland.

NASA

A NASA image showing radar detection of Camp Century from an April 2024 flight over Greenland.

NASA

NASA Team's Unexpected Discovery

In April 2024, a NASA team of engineers flying aboard a Gulfstream III unexpectedly detected the buried underground complex with a new radar instrument as they traveled about 150 miles east from Pituffik Space Base in northern Greenland.

“We were looking for the bed of the ice and out pops Camp Century,” said Alex Gardner, a cryospheric scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), who helped lead the project. “We didn’t know what it was at first.”

The team's discovery suggests that the radar instrument (called Uninhabited Aerial Vehicle Synthetic Aperture Radar, or UAVSAR), could potentially help assess the risk that melting could re-expose the camp—and any remaining biological, chemical and radioactive waste that was buried along with it.

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About the author

Eric Niiler

Eric Niiler is a science/climate reporter at The Wall Street Journal. His work has also appeared in WIRED, National Geographic, The Washington Post and others.

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Citation Information

Article Title
When the Pentagon Dug Ice Tunnels in Greenland to Hide Nukes
Website Name
History
Date Accessed
January 15, 2026
Publisher
A&E Television Networks
Last Updated
January 09, 2026
Original Published Date
January 09, 2026

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