Navy Commander
Recommends Use
of Psychic
Powers
"Presented within is a brief history
of the remote viewing program, an examination of its evolution
over the course of more than twenty-three years, and a
discussion of its continuing relevance to national security and
emerging warfare trends."
Author Jon Ronson was largely
responsible for alerting the public to on-going interest by
military personnel in the use of remote viewing for intelligence
collection. In his often darkly humorous book "The Men Who Stare
at Goats," Ronson tells the tale of the military use of psychic
powers. Ronson concludes that black ops personnel had
established a new psychic warfare program.
About the same time Ronson was
investigating his book, a paper was written for the Marine Corp.
War College, that asked a similar question:
"Did the CIA terminate the remote viewing
program because it feared potential ridicule by association, or
did it stage a "public execution" as a means of taking the
program underground? Both are legitimate questions ... Arguably, the second question is more intriguing
as it implies that the CIA recognized the value of remote
viewing, yet intended to make it appear otherwise. By
discrediting the program, was the CIA actually intending to
continue using remote viewing but under its own supervision and
for its own purposes under a newly established and more tightly
controlled program? Or, was the CIA concerned that remote
viewing could be used to access sensitive U.S. secrets by both
U.S. and non-U.S. remote viewers, particularly if this ability
was somehow to become publicly recognized and possibly regarded
as intriguing or even stimulating by society at-large?"
The paper, by Commander L.R. Bremseth,
United States Navy, reviews the history and use of remote viewing
and is available on-line:
Unconventional Human
Intelligence Support:
Transcendent and Asymmetric Warfare
Implications of Remote Viewing
Bremseth concludes with a recommendation
that a psychic spy research effort be initiated to "Establish a
new, broad-based paranormal research program within a highly
selective, military or intra-agency organization, employing the
strictest screening procedures used by SRI, CIA, DIA and INSCOM
in selecting/identifying remote viewing candidates and support
personnel." In addition to the use of remote viewing to collect
intelligence, Bremseth also recommended that any new program
must, "Explore a myriad of phenomena having potential military
applications with the goal of developing transcendent and
asymmetrical warfare approaches."
Source:
http://www.lfr.org/LFR/csl/library/Bremseth.pdf
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