
Secret network of spy tunnels to open as London's newest tourist attraction
The London Tunnels, the company that looks after this underground labyrinth, has recently announced a collaboration with the Museum of Military Intelligence (MMI) on the project, two years after the plans were first announced.
The below street-level network is known as the Kinsway Exchange Tunnels and was constructed during the Blitz as a deep-level air raid shelter under the London Underground.
The mile-long series of tunnels was shortly after occupied by the Special Operations Executive, a clandestine organisation established in July 1940 under the orders of then Prime Minister Winston Churchill, during the later stages of World War II.
It was during this time that Bond author Ian Fleming was working as a liaison officer within the wartime administration, and it is thought that the tunnels inspired the research and development Q Branch in his novels.
After a few other uses for the network, the tunnels were used for a secure hotline that connected the White House to the Kremlin during the Cold War, before it was taken over by BT.
Now, the tunnels will have a new life as a major tourist attraction that hopes to welcome up to three million visitors per year.
The tunnels will have a permanent exhibition showcasing the history of military intelligence and its use of the tunnel complex, including a special exhibition centred around the Special Operations Executive.
The displays will spotlight original artefacts, equipment, weapons, documents and images through a 'modern high-tech experience' that promises to bring to life the history and techniques used by military intelligence.
The exhibition will feature stories from the Battle of Britain and D-Day, the espionage operations of the Cold War and the Falklands War.
It will also display more recent military operations, including peace-keeping missions and the response to terrorism threats that have occurred within the 21st century.
Visitors will also be able to delve into how the British military works today and what operations they carry out.
Angus Murray, CEO of The London Tunnels, said: 'We are delighted to become the home of the public exhibition of the Museum of Military Intelligence. This new location will provide convenient central London access to an important and unique collection which has until now been largely hidden.
'The tunnels, built and designed to protect Londoners during the Blitz, are the ideal backdrop to tell the remarkable, and untold, stories of the men and women who played a vital role in protecting Britain then, and the role of the armed services protecting Britain today.'
In its 2023 consultation documents, London Tunnels said the new museum would increase local spending up to £80m (€95m) per year, create 40 onsite jobs and offer free trips for local schools.
The London Tunnels said work is scheduled to begin in 2027, with completion in 2028.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Irish Sun
33 minutes ago
- The Irish Sun
Halle Berry, 58, channels famous Bond Girl role as Jinx as she strips off to a bikini on holiday
HALLE Berry looked sensational at 58 as she stripped to a bandeau bikini on holiday. The Hollywood star chose a cream two-piece with black trim, with the bottoms tied high on her hip, as she strolled in the sunshine at the Colorado River. 7 Halle Berry showed off incredible bikini body in a cream two-piece on holiday Credit: Instagram 7 She was chaneling her role as Bond girl Jinx from the Die Another Day flick Credit: Handout 7 She was seen exploring Lake Powell on a boat Credit: Instagram Halle's swimwear flashed her glowing tan and rock hard abs, with the actress adding extra glam to her look with a gold pendant necklace and patterned headscarf. She went make-up free and left her caramel-colored locks in natural waves as she posed at the equally impressive surroundings of Lake Powell, a reservoir in Utah and Arizona. After posing in front of a huge rock she hopped on a boat to explore the waters further. Her look oozed Bond girl glam, chaneling her role as Jinx in 007 flick Die Another Day. read more halle berry The character, full name Giacinta Johnson, was a national security agent and particularly known for one scene where she emerged from the sea in a orange halterneck bikini. She starred alongside Pierce Brosnan in the 2002 flick and slept with the MI5 agent. The Bond movies are famed for their array of Bond girls including Halle , Ana de Armas, Ursula Andress and Barbara Bach and super villains such as Blofeld. Halle shot to fame in the 80s and started off her career as a model, but later got into acting. Most read in Celebrity Back on her sunny holiday, the X Men star then covered up her bikini in a striped shirt before she shouted "I love you" into the vast canyon space, before hearing her voice echo around her. Halle Berry, 58, bounces on trampoline in just a cheeky swimsuit as she's sprayed with a hose Just last month, Oscar winner was on holiday with Van Hunt in Switzerland when she decided to show off her moves in a different white two-piece. Yet as she swirled around to Van Hunt's new track, the bikini bottoms fell off to the floor. The screen star also Halle Berry Movies Since her start in Hollywood in 1989, Halle Berry has appeared in several iconic films. Halle's list of films includes: The Flinstones (1994) Why Do Fools Fall In Love (1998) Monster's Ball (2001) Die Another Day (2002) Gothika (2003) Catwoman (2004) X-Men (2006, 2014) Perfect Stranger (2007) Movie 43 (2013) The Call (2013) Kingsman: The Golden Circle (2017) John Wick: Chapter 3 (2019) Moonfall (2022) The Mothership (2023) The Union (2024) OFF SCREEN she got candid on Jenna & Friends on the Today show - and dished out details on her love life. The Catwoman actress revealed that Van has already proposed to her - wanting to make her 'Mrs Halle Van Hunt.' But the star, who's walked down the aisle three times before, didn't say yes just yet. 'So I put out the proposal, and it's still on hold as you can see,' Van said, as Halle laughed. 'It's just out there floating. You know, maybe you can encourage her.' Explaining her hesitation, Halle admitted it comes down to her history with marriage. 'Well, I've been married three times,' she said. 'Van has been married once, and so no, we don't feel like we have to get married to validate our love in any way. We don't.' Still, she hinted a wedding could happen but only on their terms. 'But I think we will get married just because, out of the people I've been married to, this is the person I should have married,' she added. Halle shares daughter Nahla, 17, with ex-boyfriend Gabriel Aubry, and son Maceo, 11, with ex-husband Olivier Martinez, to whom she was married from 2013 to 2016. She was also previously married to baseball star David Justice from 1993 to 1997 and singer Eric Benét from 2001 to 2005. 7 Halle later covered up in a striped shirt and bandana as she explored the canyons Credit: Instagram 7 The reservoir is in Utah and Arizona Credit: Instagram 7 Halle recently suffered a rare bikini blunder in a white two piece Credit: Instagram 7 She starred in 2022 flick Die Another Day with Pierce Brosnan Credit: Rex


Irish Independent
a day ago
- Irish Independent
‘Kamikaze: An Untold History' review: War documentary tries to make sense of Japan's suicide missions
Director spent 15 years tracking down and talking to peers of the pilots and members of their families to deliver this monumental achievement in filmmaking Amid the innumerable books and documentaries about World War II, few examine the question of why there was widespread public support in Japan for the kamikaze missions that sent 4,000 pilots, all in their teens or early 20s, to their deaths in the final 10 months of the war. The feature-length documentary Kamikaze: An Untold History (BBC iPlayer), produced by Japan's public service broadcaster NHK, is an attempt to make sense of what seems senseless. It's crystal clear on why the missions themselves went on so long after the country's military leaders knew the war was already a lost cause. The sacrifice of the lives of these young men, many of whom hadn't even completed their training, was a cynical attempt to prolong the war in order to negotiate more favourable terms with the Allies. Historical records show that a mere 10pc of the kamikaze missions succeeded in their objective In the event, what followed was the dropping of two atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, followed within days by the Japanese surrender. Historical records show that a mere 10pc of the kamikaze missions succeeded in their objective. All the sacrifices, all the deaths, including those of 7,000 Allied personnel killed in the attacks, were ultimately for nothing. The documentary's director, Oshima Takayuki, spent 15 years tracking down and talking to peers of the pilots and members of their families. The result is a monumental achievement. The documentary explodes the myth, easily digestible during the war to those in the West being drip-fed racial stereotypes, that the kamikaze pilots were, like the suicide bombers of today, crazed fanatics who were happy to give their lives for the cause. Maybe a handful of them were. Most, however, were just young, terrified men who, fearful of being shamed and branded traitors, felt they had no choice but to volunteer. They were given a form on which they had to state their willingness to go on a kamikaze mission. The choices were: 'strongly desire', 'desire' or 'negative'. 'In that environment, it must have been difficult to write 'negative',' says a historian. The only way for a pilot to ensure they didn't end up on a kamikaze mission was to achieve the highest training grades. The best pilots were considered by their superiors too valuable to be treated as cannon fodder. Everyone else was expendable. Kawashima Tetsuzo enlisted at 15 and died a few months short of his 18th birthday. Here, his family sift through some mementos. There's a Japanese flag signed by all his classmates and an article from a women's magazine honouring him and others who had died on missions. There were letters of tribute written by his teachers. The first kamikaze missions involved 24 pilots. One of them was 20-year-old Hitora Yukinobu. His plane was second in a formation of six and his death was captured on film. Footage from the US aircraft carrier he was attacking shows his plane being hit in the wing. Pupils had to sing a song, written by their teacher after the young man's death, urging 500 more students to enlist and go to war Tsunoda Kazuo, whose status as an ace pilot meant he was spared kamikaze missions, was assigned to follow the planes and report on the result of the attack. He says the pilots had the message drilled into them that kamikaze missions were their only way of ensuring Japan's survival. The media glorified the pilots' supposedly 'pure-hearted' sacrifice. Their stories were told on the radio, featuring personal messages they'd recorded for their families the night before flying to their deaths. Shrines were erected in their hometowns. A film about the exploits of one squadron was shown in cinemas to huge enthusiasm. The slogan '100 Million Kamikaze' swept across the country. Schools had a big role to play in the propaganda campaign. A friend of a kamikaze pilot recalls an empty coffin being carried into the school hall. Pupils had to sing a song, written by their teacher after the young man's death, urging 500 more students to enlist and go to war. When she's told this by director Takayuki, the teacher's now elderly daughter is surprised he'd written such a thing. She says he was a mild-mannered man who was unfit for military service due to having had TB. 'He must have felt a sense of inferiority,' she says.


The Irish Sun
3 days ago
- The Irish Sun
Bond girl who bedded Sean Connery as 007 unrecognizable as she's spotted in LA – can you guess who she is?
A FORMER Bond girl who bedded Sean Connery as 007 looks unrecognizable while stepping out in Los Angeles. Six decades ago, this lady starred in a 1960s classic James Bond movie. Advertisement 5 Can you guess who this former femme fatale is? Credit: 5 She looked summery in a white ensemble complete with a blue floaty shirt worn over the top Credit: She was born in Rome and began her career in the 50s. But it was her role as a femme fatale in 1965 when her character who seduced agent 007 that she shot to fame. Her role of Fiona Volpe saw her lure 007 in as a trap to take him prisoner at gunpoint. Spotted last week in LA, this lady and former screen siren is now 88 years of age. Advertisement Read More about 007 You've guessed it, it's Italian beauty Luciana Paluzzi. 5 That's it! It's Thunderball 1965 femme fatale Luciana Paluzzi who starred opposite Sean Connery Credit: Alamy 5 Her character bedded 007 in the 60s flick Credit: Alamy James Bond fans will remember her role as Fiona in the 1965 classic Thunderball. Advertisement Stepping out in Los Angeles last Thursday, Luciana was accompanied by her husband Michael Jay Solomon, 87. Her husband also worked within the realms of showbiz and headed Warner Bros International Television in the 1980s and 1990s. Most read in Celebrity The smitten couple, who got wed in 1979, looked content and happy as they stepped out side by side. Luciana looked stunning as she wore a white top with some matching trousers. Advertisement She completed the look with a floaty blue shirt that she wore open. Luciana, who had flame-coloured hair when starring in the Bond flick, still has fiery locks today, and on her recent outing she wore them swept back and tied at the back of her head. She completed the look with some sunglasses and a pair of white shoes. Meanwhile, Luciana's husband Michael wore an all-black ensemble, which contrasted against her pristine white look. Advertisement Luciana and Michael tied the knot in the late 70s and then moved to New York City together. The marriage caused her to end her film career. In 1980, she became sales representative of Canale 5 and it:Reteitalia in the United States. As well as living in New York, the couple has resided at an exclusive clifftop estate on the Pacific Ocean in Jalisco, Advertisement But the couple sold their lavish Mexican estate in 2005. They are now thought to split their time between New York and Rome. 5 She was very much a pin up in the 60s Credit: Alamy