Knowing the Future: A Small Coincidence in the War on Terror

Gary S. Bekkum
(STARpod.org) -- Is there any red-blooded American male alive today who hasn't fantasized about taking the place of FOX TV's Jack Bauer in the battle against the bad guys?

Most Americans can imagine the heart-pounding race to disarm at nuclear weapon seconds before it detonates and levels a major city.

The key to the above scenario requires locating the nuclear weapon in time. To that end, American authorities are willing to employ almost any means of detection, from both technological and human sources.

It remains a little known fact that elements within the United States Intelligence Community once employed psychics as part of their intelligence efforts.

For more information about the America's psychic spies and the UFO spy games, see SPIES LIES and POLYGRAPH TAPE -- Knowing the Future: The UFO Spy Games Book. To read more about the book, click here.

Intelligence officials had hoped to task their psychics to "flash forward" and catch a glimpse of the future.

(Original government documentation of America's psychic spy efforts may be viewed at STARpod.org )

Less is known about whether or not psychics continue to assist the authorities in their pursuit of new terror plots.

British journalist Jon Ronson, author of the psychic-army expose' THE MEN WHO STARE AT GOATS, was led to believe that the psychic "Jedi Warriors" "are back and fighting the War on Terror."

Ronson asked retired Major General Albert Stubblebine III, who once commanded INSCOM (the Army's Intelligence and Security Command) and a small group of psychic warriors at Fort Meade.

In 1983, members of that group had issued an alert about a plot to crash an airplane explosively into the U.S. Capitol Building.

"Are they back in business?" asked Ronson.

"I hope so," replied Stubblebine, who also expressed frustration at the exposure of the program by former members.

"I could wring some of their necks."

According to Ronson, Uri Geller, who had attracted serious interest at CIA in the 1970s, also hinted that the psychics were back in business.

Ronson also asked Skip Atwater, who had been involved in the previous government psychic spy program.

Atwater replied:

"I would suppose however, that since the years that I was privy to such information, these efforts have changed direction a bit and are now highly focused on counterterrorism."

The official US government speak for intelligence collection by psychics is called "remote viewing."

In keeping with the Intelligence Community trend to outsource special requirements, some suspect at least part of the psychic-spying business was moved into the private sector.

Jon Ronson expressed a similar opinion.

In his "goats" book Ronson writes, "A number of second-generation remote viewers (psychic spies who learned the trade from members of the Fort Meade unit, and subsequently set up their own training schools) were also contacted by the intelligence communities post 9/11."

In 2007, a source, known to have connections to persons from the Intelligence Community, shared unconfirmed information suggesting at least two old Soviet-era nuclear weapons had been smuggled into the United States and were being tracked as they were moved around the country.

According to the sources for this information, the alleged devices were no longer functional but still represented a serious threat. The same source also alleged intelligence had lost track of one of the devices, and was scrambling to locate it.

For the rest of this story, see SPIES LIES and POLYGRAPH TAPE -- Knowing the Future: The UFO Spy Games Book. To read more about the book, click here.

For more about America's use of psychic spies, reverse engineered technologies, and beyond, please visit STARpod.org.