Home

This article shows clearly the military's intent to use every possible thought-influencing technology. This article is about UNclassified technology. We involuntary test subjects can tell you from first hand experience that far more invasive devices now exist.


See also another article on this site.

Military Use of Ultrasonic Brainwave Clusters

Copyright 1991 ITV News Bureau, Ltd. (Reprinted With Permission)

HIGH TECH PSYCHOLOGICAL WARFARE ARRIVES IN THE MIDDLE EAST
DHAHRAN, SAUDI ARABIA

(March 23)--Sources in Dhahran today revealed what might
have been the true reason for the seemingly illogical and
apparently suicidal attack by Iraqi troops on the deserted
city of Al-Khafji, located just 12 miles south of the
Kuwaiti border. The report indicates that the top priority
objective of the Iraqi strike across the border was a
successful attempt to destroy a small, portable FM radio
station that had been installed on the roof of the tallest
building in the town of Al-Khafji by the U. S. Defense
Department's PsyOps Branch.

With the destruction of Saddam Hussein's military command
and control system, communications with Iraqi troops in
Kuwait are now largely carried out in a very primitive
manner by utilizing Iraq's commercial FM radio stations
located in the small Iraqi towns adjacent to Kuwait's
western border. Military orders are encoded and then
transmitted by Baghdad's military FM radio station YIHS.
These signals are received and re-broadcast, in turn, by
designated FM stations located between Baghdad and the
Kuwaiti border until the programming arrives at the
designated "control" station of the day which then
broadcasts directly to the troops in Kuwait on exactly
100.00 MHz (megahertz), which is continuously monitored by
all.

In order to nullify this Iraqi military line of
communications (LOC), the U.  S. PsyOps organization
attached to the U. S. Central Command in Dhahran installed
a portable FM broadcast transmitter, a gasoline-electric
generator and a continuous tape recording system on top of
the tallest building in the deserted city of Al-Khafji. The
station transmitted on 100.00 MHz and its power output was
adjusted to cover up the transmission of the Iraqi station
operating on exactly the same frequency.

The clandestine station programming consisted of patriotic
and religious music and intentionally vague, confusing and
contradictory military orders and information to the Iraqi
soldiers in the Kuwait i Theater of Command (KTO). The size
and power of enemy forces was always intentionally
exaggerated. Surrender was encouraged.

ACCORDING TO STATEMENTS MADE BY CAPTURED AND DESERTING
IRAQI SOLDIERS, HOWEVER, THE MOST DEVASTATING AND
DEMORALIZING PROGRAMMING WAS THE FIRST KNOWN MILITARY USE OF
THE NEW, HIGH TECH, TYPE OF SUBLIMINAL MESSAGES REFERRED TO
AS ULTRA-HIGH-FREQUENCY "SILENT SOUNDS" OR "SILENT
SUBLIMINALS".  (See Newsweek, July 30, 1990, Page 61.)

ALTHOUGH COMPLETELY SILENT TO THE HUMAN EAR, THE NEGATIVE
VOICE MESSAGES PLACED ON THE TAPES ALONGSIDE THE AUDIBLE
PROGRAMMING BY pSYoPS PSYCHOLOGISTS WERE CLEARLY PERCEIVED
BY THE SUBCONSCIOUS MINDS OF THE iRAQI SOLDIERS AND THE
SILENT MESSAGES COMPLETELY DEMORALIZED THEM AND INSTILLED A
PERPETUAL FEELING OF FEAR AND HOPELESSNESS IN THEIR MINDS.
iT WAS NECESSARY FOR THE iRAQI TANK COMMANDERS OR ANOTHER
CREW MEMBER TO LISTEN TO THE FM STATION 24 HOURS EACH DAY
FOR QUICKLY CHANGING DEPLOYMENT ORDERS. tHEY WERE BEING
EXPOSED TO THE "SILENT sOUNDS" DURING THE SAME LISTENING
PERIODS.

The same Dhahran source indicates that the Al-Khafji
station has now been repaired and is now back in full
operation.

--------------------------------------------------------

RIYADH, SAUDI ARABIA

(March 26)--Around Riyadh, the uninitiated called it the
"Black Hole." A large but dingy basement storage room at
the headquarters of the Royal Saudi Air Force has been
turned over to the American Air Force, and it was so secret
that even officers with top security clearance couldn't get
inside. Within the space allotted him, Brig.  Gen. Buster
C. Glosson built a maze of small offices in order to plot
the air war against Iraq.

In one set of cubicles, officers pondered how to eliminate
Saddam Hussein's nuclear weapons, his chemical and
biological plants, his missile-production factories. In a
second, they concentrated on the Republican Guard, its
artillery and tanks dug in along Iraq's border with Kuwait.
In the third, they planned and implemented an unbelievable
and highly classified PsyOps program utilizing "silent
sound" techniques. In a fourth, they studied targets of
opportunity in Kuwait itself.

From throughout the American military, Glosson recruited
intelligence officers to scout the enemy, logistics people
to match weapons to objectives, "fraggers" to pick the
final targets. Everyone was sworn to secrecy; they worked
with laptop computers on a special system that could not be
tapped into by anyone else, however high ranking, in the
allied Central Command. Glosson ordered a large sign hung
on one wall, lettered by computer printout. It read: The
Way Home Is Through Baghdad.

In places like Black Hole, the secret history of the war
was played out during the seven anxious months that began
last August.  The final victory sprang out of the
details--and only now, in the afterglow of success, are the
details beginning to emerge. President Bush, his top
military brass and his field commanders kept the war
planning so closely guarded that almost no one, even senior
military officers, knows the full scope of what they
accomplished.

With much the same skill that they displayed in
establishing air superiority over the battlefield, they
established a different sort of supremacy over the media,
hiding the risks they took, the mistakes they made and the
successful steps they took to overcome them.

In retrospect, the steady beat of coalition successes made
the victory over Saddam Hussein look almost easy. The
untold history of the war, however, is a chronicle of tight
spots and alarming surprises, of stratagems devised to
outwit a foe who was consistently given more credit for
more strength and more determination than he ultimately
displayed. "Special operations" spies sneak into Iraq and
Kuwait, darting around the desert in dune buggies at night,
helping to locate Scud batteries and other targets, even
filching electronics from Iraqi antiaircraft sites for
study by coalition experts in Riyadh. The allied air
command.

Home