llm/dae871b9-5bc1-417d-9129-a6e7d38e06c7/topic-17-bf4e6f19-ccda-4d12-8900-a844d533ec36-output.json
While the United States historically transitioned from fixed bunkers to airborne command posts to leverage its secure airspace against mass nuclear threats, North Korea’s lack of air superiority forces its leadership into deep subterranean fortifications to ensure regime survival. This strategic divergence highlights a chilling disparity in modern survival plans, as commenters suggest that political elites and billionaires continue to expand secret underground networks while leaving the general public vulnerable. Ultimately, these preparations raise both practical and moral questions about where command planes would eventually land and whether a military would even choose to defend a government that has effectively abandoned its citizenry to a nuclear inferno.