STUXNET, and UFOs: Cyber Warfare and Alien Extraterrestrial Invasion

Gary S. Bekkum
Is there a connection between cyber invasion and allegations of nuclear intrusion by UFOs?

(STARpod.org) -- Have US nuclear systems been attacked by an extraterrestrial cyber-worm from beyond?

Over the past several days, the Internet has been buzzing with controversial allegations of interference by something from "out there," and mainstream media reports of a cyber attack by a computer worm called STUXNET.

According to media sources, Iran now confirms being the target of a weaponized computer worm reportedly capable of inflicting real-world damage to sensitive systems. It is widely assumed the source of the worm is state-sponsored, due to the sophistication of the cyber attack, and many believe the worm has been targeted against the Iranian nuclear industry.

Iran has denied that computers used by their nuclear plant have been compromised by the invasive cyber worm.

Is the STUXNET threat (and other unreported cyber attacks lurking in the shadows) being downplayed by the governments of our small blue world?

Keep in mind the US once considered the existence of a handful of soldiers scribbling notes about their mental impressions a state secret impacting national security.

Sources to STARstream Research have reported that US government intelligence agencies targeted Iranian underground nuclear facilities using 'psychic spies' -- a method left over from the cold war, when the Defense Intelligence Agency collected psychic intelligence against the Soviet Union.

The past use of psychics by the US Department of Defense was revealed by the CIA in 1995, and discussed on ABC News Nightline by Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, a CIA manager called "Norm," and the director of psychic research at SAIC, Dr. Ed May. Although many intelligence sources have confirmed the reality of the 'psychic' phenomena, they claim that information collected by psychic sources is "not actionable," and that new technologies are capable of more effective intrusive collection of intelligence.

Among the intrusive technologies being explored are efforts to 'read the mind' using fMRI and other brain scanning devices.

Meanwhile, a handful of former US government officers are preparing to present the case for interference with US nuclear weapons systems by Unidentified Flying Objects.

Our own sources, including one person who remains a senior advisor to the DIA, claim that the government has been dealing with a "phenomenology problem" for decades.

This is an important distinction. A "phenomenon" refers to outward appearances that may have no real bearing on the nature of the source. The alleged appearance of mysterious lights in the sky, and the simultaneous shut down of nuclear weapons systems, could just as easily involve psychological operations as an invasion from outer space aliens.


Today, Chinese media continue to report sightings of UFOs. During the cold war, CIA Director W.B. Smith requested investigation of the use of UFOs and other strange phenomena for psychological warfare.

The mysteries of human consciousness, including the psychic "remote viewing" programs run by the US intelligence community, suggest a fundamental vulnerability of the human mind to unexplained phenomena.

What could be more effective, and intrusive, than the direct penetration of your private inner thoughts?

The question remains: has the Intelligence Community developed methods capable of launching an attack to directly interfere with human conscious perceptions?

To their credit, the Defense Intelligence Agency of the US Department of Defense sponsored an open National Academies of Science study warning of a potential 9/11-like surprise attack against the human mind.

(Some readers will undoubtedly believe open studies are part of the disinformation campaign targeted against competitive foreign intelligence services.)

According to the report, questions of interest to the members of the intelligence community include discovering ways of reading the human mind (artificial telepathy), improving human cognitive performance, remote control of mental states, and machine-mind interfaces.

Earlier this year, the esteemed Professor Stephen Hawking warned of the danger of an extraterrestrial alien invasion.

Given what is known about the physics of inter-galactic space travel, it seems quite reasonable to assume that any alien intelligent life (or cyber system) -- capable of making the journey to the Earth -- would be enormously advanced in the field of cognitive neuroscience.

Have nuclear weapons systems been taken off line by UFOs?

Are we on the cusp of an Independence Day extraterrestrial war scenario?

I personally suspect that any invasion from beyond our blue home-world would take the form of a cyber-psychological attack directly targeting command, communication, and control systems -- and, given sufficient technological capability -- the cognitive consciousness and unconscious minds of key individuals within the government.

Today's cyber-warfare is a pale foreshadowing of what is to come.

Copyright (c) 2010 by Gary S Bekkum / STARstream Research / STARpod.org -- All rights reserved.

For more about American Intelligence and paranormal activity, see Spies, Lies, and Polygraph Tape -- Knowing the Future: The UFO Spy Games. To read about the book, click here.

For additional information, please visit STARpod.org
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Gary S. Bekkum

Gary S. Bekkum is an independent occasional rogue journalist, author, and researcher of material that blurs the distinction between fiction and reality.

He is the author of Spies, Lies, and Polygraph Tape -- Knowing the Future: The UFO Spy Games Book. To read more about the book, click here.

In 2004 Bekkum initiated STARstream Research, as an informal survey of exotic physics and consciousness concepts related to the survival or otherwise of the human race. Building from an international network of contacts in science and the defense industry, some of the STARstream Research material is available to the public at STARpod.org.

As a result of his efforts, Bekkum has reported numerous contacts with past and present intelligence officials interested in the application of exotic phenomena, ranging from antigravity to mind-to-mind communication, and predicting future events.

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