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In 1968, about 6,000 sheep
died near this government facility.
They were poisoned by a chemical weapon named VX.
The US hasn't been known to actively use VX in combat.
In fact, it's begun destroying its
stockpile of chemical munitions
as part of a UN treaty.
But it's just one of many strange and secretive
experiments that happened within these walls.
Experiments on sheep,
mosquitoes,
and even civilians.
About 85 miles southwest of Salt Lake City
is the US government's top-secret bioweapons lab.
It's called the Dugway Proving Ground.
The 77-year-old facility covers about 800,000 acres.
That's just a little larger than
the entire state of Rhode Island.
And it tests some of the deadliest chemical,
biological, radiological, and explosive
hazards on Earth.
Less famous than Area 51,
Dugway dates all the way back to 1942.
Right in the middle of World War II.
Clip: The decisive battle of war has begun.
Narrator: The government needed a large area
to test powerful weapons,
eventually settling on this stretch of land
in the Utah desert.
Back then, the site was used to test
everything from chemical sprays and flamethrowers
to various antidotes and protective equipment,
and even fire-bombing.
After World War II,
Dugway mostly shut down.
Until the Korean War began in 1950.
That's when the proving ground
turned into what it is today:
a permanent military base.
In Dugway's first few decades,
the base worked mostly on offensive weaponry:
biological and chemical munitions
designed to directly attack enemies.
Clip: Sampling devices,
positioned throughout the test area,
yield valuable information to chemical core researchers.
Narrator: The 1950s, for example,
saw the launch of Operation Big Itch,
an experiment that was testing weaponized fleas.
The fleas weren't infected with
any type of disease or agent,
but experimenters were working
with thousands of them.
And the fleas were dropped in cluster bombs,
to gauge if they would survive
the fall from an airplane.
And this was only part one.
Dugway launched a second experiment,
called Project Bellwether,
in the 1960s.
Only this time, mosquitoes were injected
with inert diseases,
inert bacteria,
and inert viruses.
But get this.
Those mosquitoes were released upon
several groups of human volunteers.
Who were bitten again and again during the trials.
And there are records dating back
to the late 1950s,
which describe experiments that used
infected mosquitoes.
And those are just two experiments
known to the public.
Exactly what goes on at Dugway is,
well, pretty unclear.
And that's not by accident.
The area is intensely guarded.
Everything that comes in and out
is carefully monitored,
guards are on constant patrol and actively armed,
and the perimeter is lined with tall,
barbed-wire fencing.
There are even signs that authorize
"deadly force" when necessary.
Since the 1940s,
officials say operations have shifted
from offensive to defensive tactics.
Case in point,
most of the current known work
prepares agents to defend against
potential biological and chemical attacks.
For example,
a multitude of training programs
are held on-site for the armed forces.
Here's one in which Army Reserve soldiers are tasked
with checking the radiation levels of artillery rounds.
And here's another where soldiers
were tasked with identifying substances
in a simulated chemical lab.
Dugway's main operations include
the "BRAUCH" training facility,
constructed from various shipping containers.
It simulates underground environments
for military training.
There are also various buildings and rooms
that serve specific purposes.
Like the decontamination testing chamber,
the wind-tunnel testing room,
and the material test facility.
But perhaps the most interesting
room of all is this:
the Smartman Laboratory facility,
which houses the Smartman dummy,
a model that's used to simulate
human contact with chemical agents,
including the infamous VX nerve agent.
Specifically, the Smartman helps the lab develop
more effective individual protection respiratory equipment,
essentially gas masks and the like.
A variety of chemists, chemical analysts,
and technicians work on-site.
And the use of airtight chambers
and gas masks is not only common,
but mandatory.
Despite all of this dangerous experimentation,
the work done at Dugway hasn't
always been properly contained.
Remember that sheep incident?
That marked the start of a worrisome track record.
It happened when overhead planes
spewed out the nerve agent into the wind,
accidentally sending it into nearby
farmland in Skull Valley.
Within the next couple of days,
farmers found thousands of sheep
dead in their fields.
The Army compensated the farmers
and lent them bulldozers to bury the sheep.
But the accident sparked a whole debate
on the use of chemical weapons in warfare.
Adding on to these questionable practices,
a 1994 Senate hearing on veterans' health
focused specifically on Dugway veterans and civilians.
A report found that people at Dugway
were exposed to biological and chemical simulants
believed to be safe at the time
but that the Army had later stopped
using many of them because "they realized
they were not as safe as previously believed."
One veteran, who was accidentally sprayed
in the face with the chemical DMMP in 1984,
found himself wheezing and coughing the next day,
symptoms that ended up lasting several weeks.
Despite this, he was given only cough medicine
and antibiotics by the Dugway Army Hospital.
The Dugway Safety Office assured him
that the chemical was safe.
But by 1988, officials at Dugway had reevaluated
the simulant's danger and were concerned
it could cause cancer and kidney damage.
In 2011, the facility slipped up again:
It went on lockdown after workers
lost a vial containing the VX nerve agent.
Nobody was permitted to enter or exit the facility,
not even the employees.
And in 2016, the CDC and the Department of Defense
launched a major investigation
when a review team found that Dugway
had been operating dangerously
for several years without the government's knowledge.
USA Today reported "egregious failures"
by the facility's leadership and staff.
The reports singled out the head colonel
in command at Dugway, Brig. Gen. William King.
The Army's accountability investigation
recognized King as unqualified,
lacking the education and training
to effectively oversee biosafety procedures
crucial to Dugway's operation.
The report admonished him,
saying he "repeatedly deflected blame"
and "minimized the severity of incidents."
It even says King "fails to recognize"
how serious the incidents truly were.
And how serious were the incidents, exactly?
Well, under King's command,
the facility mistakenly shipped
live anthrax to other labs.
And not just once, but multiple times.
For over a decade.
That same report revealed that workers
had been regularly and deliberately
manipulating data in important records.
Records meant to verify that pathogens
being transported elsewhere were killed
and safe for researchers to handle
without protective gear.
Still, the facility's shady past,
secretive operations, and intense surveillance
have captured the attention, and skepticism,
of some closer observers,
including several conspiracy-theorist groups.
There are suggestions that the facility
is the "new Area 51."
And the local community has raised
their own questions about the facility's operations.
Dugway was even featured in an episode
of The History Channel's "UFO Hunters,"
in which local residents and UFO watchers
were interviewed and footage from
the area was examined.
It's hard not to wonder,
when you live in close proximity
to such a restricted landscape.
Despite these theories,
Dugway has expressed a desire to be
"more transparent."
And representatives have said the facility wants to be
"more a part of the local community"
by better informing citizens
about what exactly goes on there.
So far, they've delivered some on that.
The facility has its own events page,
which lists several events open to
the general public and the local Utah community.
This year, they're hosting a trail race
on the facility grounds.
Certainly, today's Dugway is a far cry
from the 1940s Dugway,
which was entirely closed off to the public.
But despite the shift in the level of secrecy,
much of Dugway's testing remains classified,
preserving the skepticism and
mysteriousness surrounding the facility.