BRIEFING GIVEN TO SENATE APPROPRIATIONS COMMITTEE 29 JUNE 1982
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP96-00788R001100290005-5
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
S
Document Page Count:
9
Document Creation Date:
November 4, 2016
Document Release Date:
September 5, 2003
Sequence Number:
5
Case Number:
Publication Date:
June 29, 1982
Content Type:
BRIEF
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SURtl
SLIDE 0 ON)
I am LTC Jaehim, Project Manager for the INSCOM portion of!!
DOD Project GRILL FLAME.
SLIDE 0 OFF)
The purpose of this briefing is to .;provide you with background
information concerning INSCOM's involvement in Project GRILL
FLAME. This briefing is divided into three major portions.
SLIDE 1 ON)
First, the history of INSCOM's involvement and the roles
of Ma and INSCOM in the project.
e Next, a discussion of remote viewing and examples of.completed
projects for which we received the requestor's evaluation.
e And, finally, a review of those projects which have been
completed but not evaluated.
SLIDE 1 OFF
First the history of INSCOM's involvement. In the fall of
-1978, ACSI tasked INSCOM to determine if parapsychology could
be used to collect intelligence. For our purposes parapsychology
is defined in two major categories:
First, physical actions performed by mental powers
that cannot be explained by known physical means.
This is known as telekinesis or plychokOntsis, and
Second, perceptions which cannot be explained
through known sensory means. This is known as ESP,
.telepathy and remote viewing.
SLIDE 2 ON)
Specifically, INSCOM"S tasking was to determine if Remote
Viewing could be used as a collection method. Remote Viewing.
is defined, as the ability of an individual, to access information
previously unknown, without regard to time, location, or
any attempt to hide the tsvge't from a collector.
SLIDE 2 OFF)
To meet ACSI's tasking INSCOM established a project team under
the Assistant Deputy Chief of Staff for Human Intelligence.
The.criteria developed to determine if remote viewing would
be a viable collection method was as follows:
SLIDE 3 ON
First, could remote viewing be learned? Next could remote
viewing be applied as a collection method? And, finally,
could remote viewng respond to collection requirements in a
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First, could remote viewing be learned: SRI International,
an acknowledged leader in the field of paranormal reseach,
which is located in Menlo Park, California relied upon
established pV~chics, who used their individual abilities to
remote view. INSCOM, using the personality traits and
characteristics compa.led by SRI during their work with these
pk~'ychics, screened approximately 250 intelligence personnel
within the-Baltimore/Washington area,'looking for people with
similar-characteristics. Based on SRI observations, successful
remote viewers tend to be confident, outgoing, adventurous,
broadly successful individuals with some artistic_..bent._(We
aned much.of this information from commanders and supervisors
We g e-; ned-mucFi of-fhis *-information from commanders and
supervisors. We then conducted over 100 individual interviews.
After the screenings and interviews, nine.people were selected.
They were a mixture of military and civilian, officers and
enlisted, men and women. After. additional intervieus with the
SRI scientists involved in pchic research, six were selected
to go. to California for.two weeks of actual training.. Upon
their return to Fort Meade they continued in an in-house
training program modeled after the SRI training phase. To
determine how long th,s training should last, since no one had
attempted to train nfychics, guidance was again sought from.SRI.
Based upon their judgment an 18 to 24 month training cycle was
SLIDE 4 ON established. Milestones during this first period were g. the
fall of 1978 through February 1979 - personnel were located;
om February 1979 through.December 1979 - initial training
'st SRI in California and Fort Meade was undertaken. INSCOM's
first training session was conducted on 28 February 1979.,
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After.. the personnel were located and training had begun, the
next questions to be answered applied to the second and third
criteria concerning operations. That is, could remote viewing
be applied as a collection method? If so, would the information
be of reasonable accuracy and accepted and used by the
intelligence analyst who receive the product. Finally, could
remote viewing respond to collection requirements in a timely
manner?
Work to answer these questions was overcome by events. In
September 1979, ACSI tasked INSCOM to locate a missing
navy aircraft. The only information provided was a picture
of the type aircraft missing and the names of the crew. Where
the aircraft was operating was not disclosed. On 4 September
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1979, the first operational remote viewing session took place.
In this initial session,, the remote viewer placed the
aircraft to within 15 miles of where it was actually. located.
Based on these results, INSCOM was tasked to work against
additional operational targets. These taskings forced a
premature halt to the initial training phase. In December 1979,
the project was committed to operations.
Tfle.background of INSCOM and the GRILL FLAME project would be
incomplete without examining the different roles of DIA and-
INSCOM; since there appearsto have been some blurring of
these distinctions in the past.
DIA is concerned with:
a Assessing the threat, principally from the Soviet Union
and China.
? Determining countermeasures to any U. S. vulnerabilities.
a And, determining the. po:teb:ita .'of remote: viewing using
established psychics. ?
DIA performs this function primarily through contracts at SRI.
INSCOM is applying remote viewing to assist in its evaluation
as a collection method, and to determine if remote viewing
can be learned by professional intelligence personnel who are
not established psychics.
Our remote viewing collection is done with assigned personnel.
We contract only for specific items which enhance our collection.
For example:
a Which targeting methods have the highest probability
of success.
a Can the accuracy of a remote viewer be determined from
an analysis of his statemnets?
a Can the SRI new training technique increase the
quality and reliability of collection:
This completes the background portion of the briefing.
~R
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The next portion covers the anatomy of a collection project
and presents examples of results from completed projects.
Typically a project begins with a request for information on
a target, which is not susptible to normal collection. systems,
or cuing data to target other intelligence systems. Based upon
personnel available, priority of the Carnet, and the potential
for providing requested information, the INSCOM project manager
makes a decision whether to accept or'decline the project. Many
times even though the likelihood of obtaining the information
is not high, the project is accepted. The first task is the
construction of a remote veiwing collection plan.
This collection plan lists the essential elements of information
(EEI) and the intelligence indicators which will address these
EEI. Also listed are the target time windows for which these
indicators will be relevant. The collection plan indicates
which remote viewer will be used. They are selected on the
basis of their past performance and the types of indicators which
are needed.
Once a specific remote viewer has been selected, we contact
him and set up a specific date and time for the remote viewing
session. This is done to allow him time to prepare mentally
for the task, as well as allowing us time to arrange support.
At this time, the remote viewer is.not told what the targets will
be. He only knows he will be doing an operational remote
viewing session.
There.may be more than one session for a particular project.
Several sessions may have to be done to address all the-indicators
needed to answer the EEI.. A remote viewing. session is a team
SLIDE 8 ON effort. There are two members of this team. One is the
interviewer, the other is the remote viewer. The interviewer
controls the session. His job is to keep the remote viewer
on track, to direct the focus of the remote viewer and to
question him about the target. The remote viewer is responsible
only for reporting.
The goal of the session is to collect intelligence. To do
this, great care is taken to try and force the.. remote viewer
to produce only information of intelligence value. This is
done by denying him other sources of information about the
target. We always keep the remote viewer "blind". Most times
the interviewer is also kept "blind", so he will not
inadvertently lead the remote viewer.
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Let's now look at the conduct of an actual remote viewing session.
The remote viewer arrives at the operation section at the specified
date and time. He arid the; interviewer then discuss what is
going to be expected. They-are still. not talking about the
target. ..This time is generally used to establish enthusiasm
and motivation on the part of both the interviewer and the
remote viewer. At the designated time,they go.into a room,
which had been designed es'ecially for remote viewing. It is
a comfortable room with to e recording and monitoring equipment.
It's acoustically treated rid carpeted. The only thing done
in this room is remote viewing.
During the remote viewing session the lights are dimmed reducing
after images on the retina of the eye, and producing a quiet,
stable environment. At the start of the session, the interviewer
provides the remote viewer with the target cuing data. The
remote viewer has not seen this information before. He receives
it only at the start of the remote viewing session. Target
cuing data may fall into several categories. It may be
geographic or UTM coordinates, an overhead photograph of
the area, or a photograph of an individual or object. Perhaps,
there is some reason not to give target information to a remote
viewer. The way to overcome this is simply to.place the target
information in a sealed envelope. The remote viewer is
given this sealed envelope and he is told that the target for
today is in the envelope. He is then simply asked to describe
the target. Once the remote viewer has this cuing data, the
tape recorder is turned onrahd the session begins.
SLIDE 9 OFF ~ nba
The remote viewer is asked to focus his attention, pt s.ieallly
relax and concentrate on the target which has been designated.
Once this is accomplished,'he is then asked to describe his
perceptions of the target. During the course of the session,
the interviewer questions the remote viewer.about his perceptions,
and directs . the remote viewer in the target area. At times
an outside analyst may monitor the session from a control room.
The remote viewer.and interviewer are both.aware of the
monitoring. The analyst may wish certain areas of the remote
viewer towards the goal of the analyst. At no time are the
analyst's questions heard by the remote viewer.
After the session, which usually lasts about 30 minutes, the
remote viewer is asked to draw the perceptions he.had during
session. This is very important. The.-drawings may be.more
accurate or show.a different perspective than the verbal
descriptions about the target. After the drawing is done
and the remote viewer talks about them, the remote viewing
session is completed. The tape is then.transcribed and a .
transcript furnished to the project requestor. After the.
project is completed the requestor provides an evaluation.
As in any other task, feedback is essential. The remote viewer
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wishes to know if he did well in.his efforts. He needs to
know that his descriptions were accurate. This helps him in
future projects, as well as establishing a.sense of worth in
his efforts to remote view. The project manager requires
feedback to evaluate the collection method.
The following graphics are summaries of our operation. From
September 1979 thru May 1982.
Note the comparison of sessions to projects. The specific
number of collection sessions, necessary to meet a project's
requirements, is based upon the requestor's tasking. As an
example, the support provided during the Iranian hostage
crisis covered an extended period of time and resulted in
an excess of. 200 sessions. There also have been pro.jects_
where the task was successfully accomplished with just a
single.session. Of the' 65 projects completed.and fully evaluated,
over 50 percent have provided information of value to the requester. .
ew
The results of evaluated projects are depicted on this slide.
It should be noted that while ACSI is listed as.the official
requester on 8 projects, two.projects were conducted in support
of Army MACOMS, two were combination ACSI/INSCOM and another
was the missing navy AGE.
I would now like to cover our project book. The project '
book accompanying this briefing presents examples of intelligence
collected through remote viewing. Prior to its review I wish
to emphasize the following points:
Remote viewing is.-rsolt a magic lamp and is. not a substitute for
current intelligence work. Remote viewing is a highly controlled
and formally established, unique intelligence collection
capability which has the following characteristics:
J-r %$
It is PASSIVE
To the extent of our knowledge, collection by remote viewing
is totally passive. Only one claim of detection of remote
viewing.is known. Chinese scientists claim to have detected
remote viewing durin their experiments-with children
~- invents SG1
is insu is B
claim. Work to replicate ese experiments is continuing
at SRI.
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The principal cost of remote viewing collection is the
people involved. There is no expensive hardware, and
lastly,
Time, target size, or degree of.difficultyall have no apparent
effect on collection by remote viewing. Even conceptualized
plans have been collected against prior to their actual
implementation.
Remote viewing has been successfully used against seven
categories of tasking. rived are described in the project
book and are color coded for easy reference. They are:
1. Penetration of inaccessible targets (BLACK TAB)
2. !Science and technology information (RED TAB)
3. Cuing of other intelligence collection
systems (YELLOW TAB)
4. Imminent hostilities (BLUE TAB)
At this time two categories:
Penetration of inaccessible targets.
And the cuing of other intelligence collection system.
SG1
A
There are two additional categories which we believe.to be
equally important, but for which the data base is
insufficient. They are human source assessments and accurate
personality profiles.
Each example.in the book presents the actual. target, the
reason for targeting, and the targeting data. Examples of
verbatim viewer descriptions are provided, with the analytic
comments to the.right. In all cases, these comments were made by
intelligence analysts. Additional projects which are not S G1
detailed in We book are listed in the appendix.. A
At this point I would like to walk you through 2 of the
examples in the book.
The first, under TAB 1, is project
The lab page contains the target, the
tasking and target cuing data. We were tasked by the NSC Staff
in late 1979. To determine what is--,taking place within
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AACII
This briefing has covered the history of INSCOM and the
GRILL FLAME program. How.we began in the program, and
some of the actions we have begun to improve our product.
Our objectives for the future concern:
? Selection of people. We are working to develop .
a method of recurring recruitment, and in coordination
with the staff psychologist, revalidate the initial
screening criteria used. Next,
? Increase the reliability of remote viewing. We are
studying how to implement the SRI report on audio
analysis. The staff p ~c.hplogist is assisting us
by working on individual remote viewer profiles
and locating places where enhanced individual training
could be received. And we also wish to evaluate the
new SRI Training program, since they indicate it
will decrease tendencies of a remote viewer to
analyze rather than just report, increase. the quality
and reliability of remote viewing and provide some
predictive value about the remote viewing product.
In summary:
Remote viewing has demonstrated it is of value and has a
high rate of success. Remote viewing should never stand alone,
but should be used in conjunction with information from other
intelligence sources. We do not evaluate our product. All
evaluations are done by the professional intelligence analysts
who assign the project. Collection of intelligence through
remote viewing is not an experiment. It is a successful
collection. method. The rmy effort is,not research and development,
it.is operational collection. Remote viewing is passive,
inexpensive, there is no defense and there is no risk of
of collection compromise.
This concludes the briefing. Are there any questions?
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