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.