BY GARY S
BEKKUM

July 14,
2008
Imagination
hit the hard
road of
fiscal
reality when
the United
States
Government
shut down
the
"Real-life
X-Files" --
so why is
the
Intelligence
Community
still
interested
today?
For more
than
twenty-five
years, real
American
spies and
their
civilian
associates
have been
playing spy
games
concerning
rumors of an
otherworldly
intelligence.
It sounds
crazy but
it's true:
the United
States
government
spent
decades
mired in the
most extreme
psychological
intelligence
gathering
schemes
imaginable.
At the core
of the story
are tales of
intelligence
activities
involving a
non-human
source. How
the
international
Intelligence
Community
responded to
this
apparent
craziness is
even
stranger,
and
establishes
an
historical
precedent
for current
activities.
The Freedom
of
Information
Act (FOIA)
has resulted
in the
release of
officially
declassified
"Real-life
X-files"
documents.
Now
available by
request from
the Central
Intelligence
Agency are
previously
secret files
that provide
independent
researchers
tantalizing
glimpses
into
paranormal
diamonds-in-the-rough.
Lost among
tens of
thousands of
pages of
notes,
classified
reports,
countless
"Memorandums
for the
Record,"
letters and
emails are
the obscure
clues needed
to
illuminate
the
government
insanity.
Among the
collected
works are
psychic
reports
conducted by
the
Department
of Defense
to monitor
the
activities
of
extraterrestrials
and,
warnings
that New
York City
and
Washington,
D.C. would
simultaneously
be attacked
by
terrorists
using
aircraft as
missiles to
collapse
buildings.
Tens of
millions of
U.S. dollars
were spent
on the
efforts
revealed by
the FOIA
documents;
other
programs may
have existed
or perhaps
continue
today at
America's
spy
agencies.
The British
government
conducted
one of their
own psychic
spy studies
as recently
as
post-9/11.
Gus Russo,
investigative
journalist
and author
of the book
"Brothers in
Arms,"
revealed to
us that one
of his
sources told
him about
current
psychic-spy
research
being
conducted by
the National
Security
Agency (NSA).
Today, the
rumors of
"Real-life
X-files"
continue to
spread.
Personal
messages
passed over
the Internet
point to
on-going
covert
intelligence
gathering
among the
believers,
due in part
to their
contact with
foreign
scientists,
tales of
bizarre
research
programs,
and
encounters
with
otherworldly
beings.
If you
examine the
archive of
government
files,
you'll find
it's all
there:
teleportation
studies,
antigravity
devices,
spacetime
wormholes,
fantastic
starships
from other
worlds, time
machines,
and
extraterrestrial
telepathy.
Maybe we
should blame
it on Gene
Roddenberry,
the creator
of STAR
TREK, for
inputing the
science-cloaked
dream into
the
collective
unconscious
of our
world?
The most
visible U.S.
Intelligence
Community
effort to
turn fantasy
into real
intelligence
has come to
be known as
Project STAR
GATE.
The STAR
GATE program
was run by
the Defense
Intelligence
Agency (DIA)
during the
early to
mid-1990s.
To date
about 89,000
pages of
STAR GATE
documents
have been
released by
the CIA, the
agency that
acquired
control of
the program
in 1995.
Following
the demise
of STAR
GATE,
researchers
were able to
explore
their
fantastical
musings of
pseudo-scientific
exploration
with
scientists
who had
worked on
similar
projects in
the Former
Soviet Union
(FSU) and
China, and
numerous
other states
interested
in exploring
the
application
of
imagination
to conduct
intelligence.
According to
the STAR
GATE record,
it was a
Congressionally
Directed
Action that
initiated
the sharing
of
"Real-life
X-files"
between
nations.
Meanwhile,
reports of
anomalous
objects
detected on
radar and
psychic
surveillance
of alien
activity
attracted
the
government's
core of
believers
into
"Working
Groups"
where
unexplained
phenomena
were
discussed
under a thin
veil of
secrecy.
The former
government
secrecy, the
open
exchange of
alternative
ideas, and
recent
covert
actions of
some members
of the
Intelligence
Community
provide a
minor
glimpse into
a dark
labyrinth of
Orwellian
mind-games
which have
been
exposed, in
part, only
recently.
The strange
world of
21st Century
parapsychological
paranoia as
"cold-war
replacement
therapy" is
inhabited by
deep
background
"deep
throat"
contacts who
offer "not
for
attribution"
information.
Often, their
identities
and their
professional
reputations
are trampled
under foot
by less than
ethical
Internet
amateurs who
seem to act
as "useful
idiots" for
some members
of the
Intelligence
Community.
Exposed for
all to see
on the World
Wide Web,
the
"Real-life
X-files" act
as
"flypaper"
to attract
spies
interested
in new
technologies.
Flies emerge
from tiny
cracks in
the wall of
cyberspace,
where much
of the
modern-day
"Real-life
X-filing"
takes place.
Among the
various
species
attracted to
the virtual
flypaper,
weaving in
and out
amongst
hoaxers and
confused
laymen, are
sticky
offers to
share
scientific
knowledge,
clues to
help track
down
terrorist
activities,
and other
cloak-and-dagger
inspired spy
games.
Some
participants,
notable for
their
current
positions in
the
government,
or for their
presence on
committees
alongside
former
high-ranking
officials
from CIA and
the
Department
of Homeland
Security,
are actively
pursuing
Chinese
activities
involving
new or
unusual
theoretical
developments.
Recent
Chinese
efforts
include
so-called
High
Frequency
Gravity
Waves (HFGW)
and possible
quantum
aspects of
human
consciousness.
One
journalist,
a reporter
on
alternative
technologies,
who remains
unnamed by
request,
provided the
story of an
attempted
"recruitment"
by an
element of
the
Department
of Defense.
In a private
communication,
the
journalist
explained
that he had
been offered
funding in
exchange for
allowing his
potential
"handler" to
select some
of the
stories he
would
publish in
the future.
The offer
arrived in
typical
cloak-and-dagger
fashion with
a
clandestine
meeting in a
cheap hotel
and warnings
that
knowledge of
the contact
might make
the
journalist a
target for
foreign
nations'
intelligence
services.
Digging
deeper, it
appears that
the
present-day
"Real-life
X-file" has
more to do
with
smoke-and-mirrors
cover for
intelligence
colle
ction on
foreign
activities
than STAR
TREK
inspired
reverse-engineering
of alien
technology.
According to
one source,
who remains
unidentified
by request,
"Several
prominent
scientists
have talked
openly about
moving
overseas
because they
can't get
any funding
here -- a
few of them
have talked
about China,
despite
acknowledging
that
anything
they develop
over there
would likely
be used
against us."
In the end,
the
Intelligence
Community
"X-Filers"
remain
focused on
their core
mission:
stay ahead
of your
nemesis,
whether he
sits at a
desk in
Beijing or
greets you
in a trench
coat on a
cold dark
street in
Budapest.
We can also
be certain
the other
side is
playing a
similar role
in the
"X-files"
spy game.
As for the
oft alleged
extraterrestrial
presence, in
a universe
filled with
countless
possibilities
for
developing
intelligent
life, only
time will
tell.
For more
information
on the story
behind the
story of The
REAL-LIFE
X-FILES,
visit the
STARstream
Research
website at
STARpod.org.
http://www.starpod.org
(c) 2008
Gary S.
Bekkum and
STARstream
Research.
All rights
reserved.
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Last
modified:
07/15/2008
08:56:17 PM