VOODOO GAP LOOMS AS LATEST WEAPONS CRISIS
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP96-00788R001200050011-3
Release Decision:
RIFPUB
Original Classification:
U
Document Page Count:
1
Document Creation Date:
November 4, 2016
Document Release Date:
September 5, 2003
Sequence Number:
11
Case Number:
Publication Date:
April 24, 1984
Content Type:
NSPR
File:
Attachment | Size |
---|---|
CIA-RDP96-00788R001200050011-3.pdf | 194.6 KB |
Body:
Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001200050011-3
post
7'iit xky, r Etrii 22, A984
'Voodoo' Gap'
Looms as Latest
We ons Crisis
I have reported previously on se-
cret projects to adapt psychic pheno-
Mena to military Purposes. For ex-
ample, in laboratory experiments,
psychics have been used to spy on
the Soviets by projecting their minds
outside their bodies.
One psychic was able to describe a
secret Soviet base in astonishing de-
tail that was later confirmed by sat-
ellite photographs. Another located a
Soviet Tu95 "Backfire" bomber that
had crashed in Africa.
U.S. Navy and Air Force chiefs
are skeptical about these experi-
ments, which they describe scornful-
ly as "witchcraft" and "black magic."
But the Army's intelligence chief, Lt.
Gen, William Odom, has been im-
pressed with some of the results,
Odom is worried about intelli-
gence reports that the Soviets are far
ahead in psychic research. Inside the
Pentagon, he has raised the question
of whether the Soviets could use
psychics to penetrate our secret
vaults. This has led to talk in the
backrooms about raising a "psychic
shield" to block this sort of remote
spying.
~t?eb GES~~r7C vrnc a PARrcH
The CIA also is taking psychic
research seriously. Former CIA di-
rector Stansfield Turner told critics
that their skepticism about the
CIA's psychic protects was healthy
but that the research should keep
pace with their skepticism.
The most. impressive research in
this area has been conducted by
Harold Puthoff and Russell Targ,
both respected academics with the
Stanford Research Institute in
Menlo Park, Calif. Puthoff is still
with the institute; Targ left two
years ago to form his own company,
Delphi Associates. They began their
experiments in the early 1970s, using
psychics to describe scenes at spe-
cific coordinates on the globe. The
project, partly funded by the De-
fense Department and the CIA, was
called "Scanate" for "scan by coor-
dinate,"
Their latest project, code-named
"Grill Flame," produced some amaz-
ing results. Psychics described the
contents of locked filing cabinets;
they mentally breached the security
of secret military installations.
Earlier, they had discovered the
rings around Jupiter years before
their existence was scientifically es-
tablished by photographs.
Despite these impressive achieve-
ments, sources told my associates
Dale Van Atta and Joseph Spear
that the psychics' success rate is only
about 70 percent. For example, psy-
chics who were asked by the Fenta-
C13
gon to pinpoint the place where Ita$<
ian Red Brigade terrorists were hole
ing Brig. Gen. James Dozier prison;
in January, 1982, did not come close
But the occasional successes
courage intelligence officials to kegpp_
trying in hopes of giving remote spyi :.
ing more respectability. They aloes,
are concernc;d about the soviets wii
are known to have spent many :more
years and ?? r more money on par&-
psychological research.
At the risk of being ridiculed over
Charlie Rose (D-N.C.), support coh..
tinned research into the more Prom--4
ising areas of this mysterious field""'?
After all, the atomic bomb was once
thought to be a harebrained idea. '
It's safe to say that many things con. 3,k
sidered utterly fantastic today Will R?.
be accepted as commonplace by the"',
end of the century.
Backfire of the Week: The fe , ;
era] government's massive giveawa L,
of cheese not only was supposed ta.,"
feed the hungry but also to cut down`
on surplus cheese stocks in govern-Ili
meat warehouses. It seems the give-'
away allowed some consumers to"l,
stop buying cheese at the superrnir-`,"
ket. So the government's stockpile n1~T`
surplus cheese has grown from 619<
million pounds in 1981 to 1 billion
pounds last year, The cost of tha::
government's purchase . of surplus,,`
cheese and butter went from $1.6
billion in 1979 to $2.8 billion Jo:_,
i9QQ
11 "MIS TitEM46i
Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001200050011-3