What would you do if you could see into the future? And what if your visions were filled with images of terror?
The CIA and other intelligence agencies have been asking that question from the beginning.
Is it really possible to know the future?
Ask a modern physicist steeped in Einstein's theory of General Relativity, in which space and time may be curved into time machines by wormholes and exotic negative energy, and the answer might be a highly qualified maybe.
Mix in a little quantum theory, and interpret the results as parallel universes, and the answer, as explained by popular physicist and author Michio Kaku is "Apparently, time travel seems to be consistent with the known laws of physics."
The truth is, as always, stranger than simple explanations of time machines portrayed in popular films and television.
Tales and rumors of the future are the stuff of dreams from which Internet myths become viral memes, ideas spread like a disease over the world wide web of deceit and confusion.
Hidden within the flood of insanity and paranoia are little truths: predictions come true, warnings unheeded, and coincidences of misfortune.
Or perhaps, genuine knowing of the future.
The US government would like to put "the knowing" into a national intelligence briefing, if it were possible.
As documented at the STARpod.org website, more than twenty years ago the Defense Intelligence Agency extended a program initiated by the CIA to determine if the future was written, not in the stars, but on the front page of newspapers yet to be published.
Called Project "P," the idea was to determine if trained psychics, also under the tutelage of the intelligence agency, would be able to predict with accuracy the headlines of near future events.
Intelligence officials had some reason to expect success: it had been demonstrated that their psychics could "read" aspects of documents hidden and locked behind closed doors. This was during the heyday of America's secret infatuation with paranormal espionage in the mid 1980s.
Unfortunately the psychics missed most of the targeted headlines, leading DIA intelligence officials to conclude that Project "P revealed a near total inability to predict future events. Except for a few and isolated, eye-catching successes, there was no evidence of consistency or reliability in the results obtained from remote viewing efforts conducted in a predictive mode."
One curious coincidence from Project "P" is notable.
According to CIA STAR GATE files, released under the Freedom of Information Act, DIA psychic spy 079 described a "secret project 911" when tasked to view a future edition of the Washington Post. Typically the DIA psychics were tasked in secret, without revealing the actual target they were intended to "view."
Some of the STAR GATE Project "P" files may be viewed at the STARpod.org website.
Agent 079 described the vision of June 18th, 1987:
"I saw pieces of white paper with black print. One piece of paper said a formula or project's number was 911. These papers were on a long light brown table sitting out and they were in draft form."
Was the future yet to be written in draft form waiting for that fateful day when aircraft would be used as weapons of mass destruction against buildings in New York City and Washington, D.C.?
DIA psychics also reported interrupted viewing sessions filled with terrible visions of aircraft flow as weapons against the U.S. Capitol Building and simultaneous attacks in New York City and against the Pentagon and the White House in Washington.
Closer to the fateful events of September 11th, 2001, Professor Gary E.R. Schwartz was testing paranormal dreamer Chris Robinson, a British citizen who had predicted various catastrophes by carefully interpreting symbols in his nocturnal visions. In August of 2001, at the University of Arizona where the tests were being staged, he told Schwartz of a horrific dream of airplanes crashing into buildings.
Was this vision related to a DIA psychic's 1986 brush with future fear?
In the 1986 vision, the psychic spy saw "A rather large, tall structure..."
"Site is a massive grey structure. It has a stepped or different level feeling, stacked...newspaper headlines have something to do with a collapse of a building -- a lot of people hurt or injured. I also sense a feeling of panic, people scrambling and perhaps something to do with an aircraft... I sense that the object may cause structural damage as it crashes through the building. All of this takes place sometime in the future."
According to the DIA records, "This particular Source commented later that these perceptions were so strong and clear that she attempted to flag down a member of the interviewer staff on the highway to report her on-going perceptions. The Source further became somewhat anxious by her unusually clear perceptions due to two personal agendas - a spouse who is assigned to the Pentagon and a sister who is intending to participate in the [1986] NYC ceremonies. She went so far as to request guidance from the interviewer staff on what actions, if any she should take, to insure the safety of her relatives, bearing in mind that as of yet, she has not been told the nature of the questions or the entire project."
It was the responsibility of DIA intelligence officers in charge of the project to interpret the meaning behind the psychics warnings of an impending attack. They concluded that "NYC (New York City) will be the target of an unexpected terrorist attack, by air and ground, of... suicide-forces... Washington will also be a target, simultaneously with (the) primary targets (being) the White House... (and the) Pentagon..."
Then, on September 11th, terrorists unleashed the unthinkable.
Professor Gary E. Schwartz was in shock.
A little more than a year prior to the 9/11 attacks, I had been in virtual discussion over the Internet with Professor Schwartz and physicist Jack Sarfatti, both well known for their alternative view that within the mind's eye the future can reach into the past.
Internet entrepreneur Joe Firmage had recently come out of the closet about his belief in an extraterrestrial presence, and launched the ISSO -- the International Space Sciences Organization -- to review possible modes of intergalactic travel. It was reported that NASA launched an investigation, worried that proprietary government information might be discussed at ISSO where foreign physicists were among the elite UFO believers.
And not too far removed in the shadows, CIA was in the loop.
This is the draft version of the first chapter of the book "The UFO Spy Games: CIA, 9/11, UFOs, and the Extraterrestrial Presence".
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