IS ESP REALLY PART OF A SOVIET SECRET WEAPON ?

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
NSA-RDP96X00790R000100040017-6
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RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
November 4, 2016
Document Release Date: 
April 1, 2008
Sequence Number: 
17
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
June 19, 1977
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon NSA-RDP96X00790R000100040017-6.pdf134.32 KB
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Approved For Release 2008/04101: NSA-RDP96XO079OR000100040017-6 -s ESP Really Part of a. Soviet :Secret Weapon? By Flora Lewis NwYukTlm.,NSWISedee RIS - An emigre Soviet ph i- 3ays that the Soviet Union has doing secret work in parapsy- gy with what appear to be mili- and police purposes. French scientist and former :igence agent, Jacques Bergier, written that extrasensory per- on, one of the theories studied arapsychology, may be used in nage, thought control, surveil- e and as a form of weapon. is Soviet emigre, August Stern, son of Dr. Mikhail Stern, an ,crinologist who w s imprisoned re being, allowed Ito leave the at Union in March. August Stern .t several years in a secret Sibe- laboratory in the late 1960s ig to find a physical basis for hic energy - or "psi particles." viet concern on the issue was onstrated recently in the case of art C. Toth, the Los Angeles es newsman interrogated in Mos- by the KGB and accused of hav- received "state secrets" about apsychology. HE INCIDENT had the earmarks n entrapment in the view of diplo- .s and others. There is no sign the -age document on parapsychology handed Toth just before he was seized contained important informa- tion. However, there is a record of Soviet sensitivity and August Stern's information indicates that parapsy- chology is a matter of concern to the authorities. Stem, who now lives in Paris, said he was told before leaving the Soviet Union two years ago that an even ,more secret laboratory than the one the knew In Siberia had been set up in l Moscow under the direction of the "'Parapsychology Parapsychology covers four specific fields of nonphysical phe- nomena. They are telepathy f trans- mission of thought without use of the senses), extrasensory perception. telekinesis (transmission of motion without any evident use of physical energy) and clairvoyance (the ability to see distant or future events with- out physical intervention). Most scientists remain skeptical such phenomena actually exist, but there are researchers throughout the world dedicated to proving them. SOVIET RESEARCH has gone on for years, sometimes publicly vaunted and at other times de- nounced and even denied. , At one time in the late 1950s and early 1960s, the U.S. Navy and the Stanford Research Institute did ex- periments in telepathy to see whether It could provide an undetect- able means of communicating with submarines. So far as is known, the experiments failed. But word of them reached Moscow and apparently pro- voked high-level interest. In 1975 some Soviet parapsycholo- gists were persecuted and the whole subject was publicly attacked. Ed- uard Naumov, a researcher, was tried on a charge of accepting fees for lectures without permission, and was sentenced to two years in labor camp. His colleagues were dismissed from their jobs and otherwise har- assed. At the trial much was made of the fact that he had contacts with Western parapsychologists. On June 13, 1975. Leonid I. Brezh- nev, the Soviet leader, urged the United States to agree on a ban of re- search and development of new kinds of weapons "more terrible" than anything the world has known. U.S. arms control negotiators have tried to find out what he had in mind, but th they have not learned anything more an that he meant "some kind of rays," according to U.S. officials. ing cosmic rays, but they no longer believe this to be the case. They say they are baffled by the reference. There is no evidence that Brezhnev was referring to something in the field of parapsychology. But it is a possibility that has occurred to some observers, especially because of the vacillating treatment of parapsy- chologists, the evident involvement of the KGB and what some regard as a traditional Russian interest in mystiecism. Th laboratory that Stern worked in was in Novosibirsk's Science City, a com 'in belonging to the Siberian br, of .the Academy of Sciences. It was a separate building, and the door could be opened only by a ceded lock with the code changed every week. It Was known as "Special De- partment No. 8" and was referred to as a branch of the Institute of Auto- 'oration and Electrometry. ' Workers were recruited from around the country until there were about 60 persons at the laboratory. The scientists among them were given virtually unlimited funds for elaborate equipment. "It cost many millions," Stern said. AT FIRST American intelligence HIS OWN WORK was in theoreti- thought by might have been referring cal physics. His view was that there to laser beams, or some way of focus- might be an orderly system in which all kinds of energy could be charted, similar to Mendeleyev's periodic table of chemical elements. If such a chart could be discovered for energy, Stern thought, it, too, might be found to have blank spaces that might lead to physical identifica- tion of particles to explain the mys- tery of psychic energy, the "psi particles.' He worked for two years and found nothing. Other experiments at the- laboratory involved applying electric shocks to newly born kittens to see whether their mothers, three floors upstairs, registered any reaction through some mental connection; television surveillance of people in a room to see whether they responded to attempts by others several rooms away to send them telepathic orders; studies involving monkeys and elec- tromagneticfields. There also were experiments with photon waves, in which frogs' eyes were used as a more sensitive meas- uring instrument than a machine. One involved putting bacteria on two sides of a glass plate to see whether a fatal disease could be transmitted through the glass. It was reasoned that if this could be done, it .would show that photons - light particles - were accounting for some inex- plicable forms of communication. Approved For Release 2008/04101: NSA-RDP96XO079OR000100040017-6 The Wafton Star SUDDENLY IN 1989 the la: tory was shut down. Stern said h not know the reason and did not t it was really the team's lack of cess or the poor quality of its sci as officially suggested at the i but a change of attitude or powe. ance in the Kremlin. He was back in Moscow by ' He heard that the military, and titularly the navy, was condu parapsychology research in L grad. A friend of his, a Leningrad s tilt named gimadi Ser ev him he was receiving perm>sslor. funds to open a new laboratory offered him a job. But the pr, was canceled. Friends told Stern the work do Npvosibirsk and planned in L grad had been combined in a laboratory in Moscow uner the pices of the KGB. He never lea any more about it. By the time he left in 1974, he told that all parapsychology had been curtailed except for ti? cret KGB laboratory. He said hf heard rumors that somet "important, very dangerous" been discovered, but he corn mew "I never believed it. How Cr KGB do effective research? need real scientists."