Mind control and microwave update

  1. The story ‘The lethal bomb that does not kill’ (Daily Telegraph 27 September 1992) proves that there is military interest in this country in microwaves. The story itself is a plant from the Ministry of Defence. Its purpose is unknown.
  2. In the United States the microwave/mind control subject has been taken up by the Association of National Security Alumni. In a briefing they issued on August 19, 1992, after summarising the known DoD and CIA interest in this field, they commented on ‘The increasing number of persons contacting us for assistance in ending what they believe to be electronic harassment by elements of U.S. Intelligence’. The July issue of their magazine Unclassified (discussed above) has a couple of pages on ‘microwave harassment’. That ANSC is giving credence to the microwave/mind control story is rather significant.
  3. A number of people associated with the Greenham women who were ‘zapped’ are now claiming to have detected the use of ELF (extremely low frequency) waves before the British general election. The only public manifestation of this I have seen is a press release issued on 26 March this year. It claimed that ‘we have good reason to believe that offensive electronics are being used in the run-up to the general election. It is possible to detect an interfering signal during any speeches or interviews or any images of the opposition parties [on television]. The signal ceases abruptly when Conservative Party images or words come on the screen’. This is technically feasible, I believe, though no convincing evidence is available yet.
  4. The Soviet Press Digest is an on-line data base which carries translations of press articles from what used to be the USSR. On February 15 1992 it carried a piece headlined ‘Mind control’, in which Emilia Chirkova, a Deputy of the Zelenograd Soviet and member of the Human Rights Commission, cited Boris Yeltsin, Andre Sakharaov and Ruslan Khasbulatov, Speaker of the Russian parliament, as recent victims of electromagnetic radiation. In the Soviet Union ‘wavies’, victims of alleged microwave/ELF radiation, are emerging with exactly the same claims as their counterparts in the USA and Europe. One is quoted as saying ‘They controlled my laughter, my thoughts, and caused pain in various parts of my body. It all started in October 1985 after I had openly criticized the first secretary of the City Committee of the Communist Party.’ The article also reported victims hearing ‘voices in the head’ from ‘microwave pulse radiation’. All these are familiar from U.S. and European victims.
  5. I have been sent a document from a Swede, Ossian Anderson, Box 71, 860 35 Soraker, Sweden. Mr Anderson makes allegations that are identical in part to those of a couple of the U.K. victims of microwave/ELF attack.
  6. There is also the International Network against Mind Control (IMMC), Box 123, 11479 Stockholm, Sweden. They have taken up the case of British resident, Kasaba Ntumba, who is one of a growing group of people who claim to have had transmitters/ receivers inserted in their heads. In Mr Ntumba’s case IMMC have circulated what they say are photographs of X-rays of Mr Ntumba’s skull which appear to show…. something, anyway. I have no medical knowledge, nor any way of knowing if these photographs are genuine or not. Since Mr Ntumba lives near London and is desperate to get journalists to X-ray his skull and see for themselves, my guess is they are. I will be happy to forward letters to Mr Ntuma. The idea of implanting an electronic device in somebody’s head initially seems extraordinary. But a moment’s reflection on what we know has been done already — MK Ultra, ECT, lobotomy, et al — shows that this is just one more step down the road. If the scientists can do it, they will do it. And Jose Delgado showed that it probably could be done.All of which means what? It appears that both within NATO and the former Warsaw Pact countries anti-personnel, electromagnetic and/or microwave weapons are now being used and/or field tested. The theoretical interest in this field by the U.S. and Soviet bloc military now dates back more than 30 years, and given the obvious small-scale weapons potential of such technology, it is highly improbable that the U.S. (or Soviets) simply developed the large-scale weapons such as the microwave bomb, discussed above, or the truck-sized U.S. Air Force Gypsy microwave cannon photographed in Aviation Week and Space Technology, December 7 1987.
    The alternative explanation, that all over the world groups of nutters are spontaneously making up the same spurious allegations, is no longer credible.
  7. New sourcesAnother little group interested in this field is Bioelectromagnetics Special Interest Group of American Mensa. They produce a newsletter, Resonance, edited by Judy Wall at PO Box 69 Sumterville, Fl 33585, USA.

    There is now a victims group in the USA: Victims of Electronic Assault, run by Kelly Rahach at PO Box 657174, Cuyahoga Falls, OH 44222. Ms Rahach produces a newsletter.

 

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