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Telepathy, the power to control people's mind, seeing things hidden
from sight.
Science or science fiction?
What happens if this power falls into the wrong hands or is used as a weapon
in warfare?
Find out in the 5th Dimension, as we use science to unravel the truth
behind telepathy.
January 1971 as Apollo 14 strikes out for the moon, onboard an astronaut is
secretly planning a very different kind of mission.
Two hundred thousand miles from Earth, astronaut Edgar Mitchell is hoping to
transmit symbols across the wastes of space using only the power of his
mind.
I focused on the symbol, became the symbol, and resonated with the symbol.
Mitchell's experiment was the first interstellar telepathy ever tried.
But would it ever succeed?
Telepathy, the power to read minds, predict the future, and see things
without using our normal senses.
Something that flies in the face of the norm laws of science.
Many animals have a sixth sense.
Snakes can detect minute changes in their environment using only their
tongue.
Lone wolves can keep in touch with their pack over vast distances.
Could these senses exist in humans, hidden deep in our brains?
Based in San Francisco is the government funded Cognitive Sciences
Laboratory.
Scientists here study psychic or PSI anomalies.
They are trained to be skeptical, but even some of them take telepathy
seriously.
James Spottiswoode is professor of physics and well-known critic of the
paranormal.
There are experiments in telepathy or in the ability of people to transmit
information from one person to another over a distance, which are extremely
carefully down and very well researched and very carefully done
statistics. And there is evidence from those experiments that such effects do
exist.
Enough evidence to lock the American and Russian intelligence services in
psychic warfare.
January 1991, Operation Desert Storm is under way.
While the allied forces are destroying Saddam's regime in Iraq, a different
kind of war is being waged back in America.
A secret U.S. unit is in operation at Fort Meade near Washington.
This is Operation Stargate, a highly confidential unit with an
extraordinary mission to spy the enemy by using telepathy or remote viewing.
Director of the project, Dale Graff.
The overcast had to do with locating Scud missiles or whatever the missiles
were called then.
Predictions of certain strikes which in one or two cases I know were
accurate.
We did predict.
Top target was enemy of the hour, Saddam Hussein.
Major Ed Dames is a former PSI agent.
His task in Operation Desert Storm to pinpoint Saddam's location using only
his mind.
Oh yes, yes.
There was a big-- there was a task force sitting off the coast with
special operations, ready to go in ten minutes notice wherever we or the
Mossad told them Saddam Hussein was.
PSI agents have been working inside the U.S. military machine for the past
20 years.
It's a hard job to explain to outsiders.
A lot of what they did is still classified, and sometimes even they
don't really know how their strange powers work.
For 17 years, Lieutenant Joseph McMoneagle was a psychic spy and
superstar of the Stargate unit.
We don't last too long in the kind of job that I was doing, and I had lasted
a lot longer than most.
So they called me and then interviewed me.
After being interviewed, the second thing they did was have me tested to
make sure that I was stable and not crazy.
That's a pretty good idea.
In the Vietnam War, McMoneagle had been a point man, a role where his
powers had been stretched to breaking point.
You know, when you are in a very stressful situation, and you have to
make a decision that's a life-death decision, and sometimes you have to go
with your intuitive side, and it's kept me alive more times, to the point
that other people would start trusting me more than not in making those
decisions.
Having a sixth sense is a potent weapon on the battlefield.
For a squad navigating through enemy territory, survival can depend on
predicting ambush or danger ahead.
The point man goes ahead as a lookout.
In the stresses of war, the American military recognized that some men had
a stronger sense of danger than others.
McMoneagle's sense for danger was honed in Vietnam and it changed his
life forever.
As a result of that experience from that point on, I certainly knew what
people were thinking.
I started knowing things before they could happen.
I could hear conversations going on in the next room which you couldn't
possibly hear.
I was seeing things were going to happen the next day before they
happen.
I just started knowing things and they were like having clear pictures going
on in my brain.
In 1975, while the Cold War was still driving military thinking, the CIA
secretly set up the first PSI unit.
Few outsiders even knew of its existence.
I could not give our product, our information to the right people that
needed it, because they were not allowed to know about the existence of
the program.
So I would sneak it out and take it to the laboratories and other scientists
that work for DID and would pass it to them under the table.
And I'd say, don't ask where this came from.
One aim was to locate telepathically military bases in the Soviet Union.
Agents were trained in various ways of visualizing or remote viewing
different targets.
Sometimes they were given coordinates for a location or pictures hidden in
sealed envelopes.
The task was to draw accurately what they could see only in their minds.
How is it done?
It seems to defy rational analysis.
I empty my mind and then I center my mind as well as I can.
I then open my mind to whatever information is necessary to answer
what the expectation is.
The information most of the time comes in many different fragments, which is
usually very difficult understanding.
You have to try to build a picture out of it.
Now we can't really, at this point explain ESP side, remote viewing from
a conventional scientific point of view.
It's there, we just don't quite know where to look for it yet, but the
brain knows how to do it.
Each idea appears to exist as pattern of information. So we tune our radio,
our isolator into that particular pattern, and we locked onto it.
One of Stargate's top priorities was Severodvinsk, a closed city at the
heart of the Soviet armaments industry.
In 1979, the CIA were desperate to know what was being built inside its
enormous marine bunkers.
The most sophisticated spy planes were useless against the walls of concrete.
So the CIA called in a different kind of expert.
The National Security Council came to us and they asked us if we would take
a look at in the very northern part of the Soviet Union.
They were using coordinates at the time.
So Joe had no idea on what these coordinates meant, because even if we
had looked at the map, we are interested in the buildings that were
down there, that were going in trouble there.
What was about to happen was extraordinary.
Looking in a building remote viewing wise, I get an impression of lots of
bright lights, two very large cigar shapes and some unique welding
methodologies.
I had a sense that they were two very large hole shapes that were being
welded side by side, which kind of threw me a little bit because I had
never seen two hole shapes being put together like that, that basically
they are being put together this way.
What McMoneagle visualized appeared to be accurate.
The shapes he described matched what the Russians really were building, an
Akula-class submarine, the biggest in the world.
But the U.S. authorities were skeptical.
John Alexander was commander of the U.S. Intelligence and Security
Command.
He asked marine engineers to assess McMoneagle's report.
At first, they dismissed it.
That was truly spectacular, and again, as a good example of our unwillingness
to believe what Joe had done as, of course, had spotted this unique
submarine being built and the information was passed to our boat
builders, who just said you can't do that.
I mean it's got to be nonsense because anything that big if it went down the
depth would be crushed.
So we just discounted it, because we didn't know how to do it.
But the naval experts were wrong.
The Akula submarine turned out to be the ultimate weapon of mass
destruction, capable of launching long range missiles from any depth and
carrying up to 200 nuclear warheads.
It confirmed NATO's worst fears that Russia was winning the arms race.
The operation was a triumph, attracting government support for more
PSI operations.
It still viewed as one of the best remote viewing experiments ever.
But while one remote viewing exercise might be a hit, the next might be a
complete miss.
For conventional scientists, this poses a serious problem.
Professor Ray Hyman is a leading psychologist who spent many years
assessing science in the paranormal.
The gold standard of our science is independent replication, and this is
where parapsychology has fallen even when they gotten results by their
standards which they think are good, they have been unable consistently
replicate them.
But in the icy decks of the Cold War, American intelligence services could
not afford to be skeptical.
Russia was outperforming America.
Her military parade sent a clear signal to the world that the Soviet
Union was winning the race.
The Kremlin would do anything to stay ahead of the game.
Oleg Calugan was a General with the KGB.
He knew how much serious interest the agency was taking in the paranormal.
From the earliest stages of the Cold War, the Soviet scientific community,
supported, financed, and inspired by the KGB, and the defense department of
the USSR, they would provide money for research and to well look forward what
they come out of it.
So that was the beginning.
The KGB had become particularly interested in an experiment that had
taken place in the 1960s, an experiment which suggested that the
paranormal might have something to offer.
Karl Nikolaev, an actor and journalist, successfully switched the
light on purely by the power of thought.
So I would side the philosophy we preached and practiced, and yet our
scientist decided that we have to have another look at, maybe there was
something, and indeed, there were people who we found who had natural--
I mean, mental powers, extraordinary powers.
Nikolaev also claimed to be able to communicate telepathically over long
distances.
His achievements have still never really been explained.
In 1998, an American team filmed this experiment.
On camera, Nikolaev met with Dr. Stanislav Popuff for the first time.
Popuff, a well-know medium was given a sealed envelope with instructions in
it that he was to communicate to Nikolaev telepathically.
He was to take a small statue of Lenin from the chest of drawers and place it
on the table.
Lenin! Look Lenin.
The film crew was sure that two men had no way of communicating, and
Nikolaev carried out the instructions to the letter.
People with these extraordinary abilities would be used to look for
the crime, I mean just looking for some people who disappeared or I mean
I don't know how successful they were.
But these experiments were conducted in my time and afterwards.
The Russians set up a top secret program of research.
One experiment tested mental links in animals.
Female rabbits separated from their young had their brain waves measured.
In another room the baby rabbits were killed.
According to researchers, the results were consistent.
The mother's brain activity increased dramatically at the time of killing.
The information was carefully leaked to the CIA.
As Dale Graff explains:
It was part of the Cold War scenario, where, hey, there is something going
on in the communist country.
Regardless of what we may think of it, let's take a look at it and see how
credible it is.
And first of all, determined is it real and what might it do to or for
us, and if it is, then can we apply it as well.
But while American government interest in the paranormal was cautious, one
leading scientist decided to secretly enter the race.
In 1971, astronaut Dr. Ed Mitchell plan to carry out the ultimate
telepathy experiment, thought transfer from space.
I had been reading a literature of parapsychology and realized there
wasn't an explanation in classical science, and I realized that if this
was real, science was very negligent in working to find out what is the
reality here.
So the moon flight seemed like a perfect opportunity to experiment at a
great distance.
Mitchell was part of the crew of Apollo 14, which was aiming to spend
one day on the moon.
He was determined to do his experiment as far from Earth as man had ever
been.
Mitchell had taken with him a set of Zener cards, often used in telepathy
experiments.
His aim was to communicate the symbols back to collaborate U.S. on Earth.
He intended to do it during the scheduled rest periods fixed in their
program.
I would concentrate on each symbol for 15 seconds while my colleagues in
United States would attempt to write down what they thought the symbols
were.
I focused on the symbol, became the symbol, you know, resonated with the
symbol.
So that presumably the people in the United States could resonate with me
and in some way they got that, which with amazing accuracy they did.
The conditions and results of Mitchell's experiments have been
questioned.
Lift off was late and the schedule was changed, so his Earth bound recipients
did their part of the test at the wrong time.
Even so two of them a quarter of the answers right, higher than the laws of
chance.
Back on Earth, Mitchell took his results to parapsychologist, Joseph
Banks Rhine.
He was the leading research figure in my history as I stared studying this
and the one with the best credentials, the one who was doing the most work,
the most credible work, and the most scientific outlook in perspective.
No nonsense, just good hard science.
So it was natural but I would turn to him.
Based at Duke University, North Carolina, Rhine had been carrying out
his research since the 1930s.
Rhine spent 30 years trying to explore the paranormals through scientific
means.
Mitchell's space experiment was based on one of Rhine's designs.
Sitting on either side of the screen, the subject tries to turn over which
ever card the controller has picked and passed on telepathically.
Here, a mother and child are tested for links.
Using statistics, Rhine wanted to show that something more than chance was
happening in his lab and on the Apollo 14 mission.
Chance could have produced this result one out of 3000 experiments, which is
pretty good T value, statistical value.
But Rhine's methods came under fire from scientists like Ray Hyman.
In the main methodological philosophy people criticized Rhine for was that
his cards were not well-controlled.
He used hand shuffling methods which we now know don't really truly
randomize.
And one of the weaknesses of parapsychology is that they do lie
completely on statistics to decide whether the phenomenon is real or not.
Unfortunately, statistical tests by themselves tell you nothing, even if
you get a departure that's real from -- lest much we show that there's chance
it wasn't the real reason why it was there.
It doesn't tell you what was the reason, and it could still be a very
normal reason.
Some of these criticisms he tried to meet and he tried to now correct his
methods, but as he corrected methods according to criticisms the size of
his effect kept going down and getting smaller and smaller and smaller, and
it looked like by the time he was going to do these things completely
right, there was going to be nothing left.
If some Americans were skeptical, the Russians weren't going to give up.
Secret pictures of a parapsychology research institute in Moscow showed
that this was a serious business.
But was this real science or an elaborate hoax intended to confuse and
distract the Americans?
We sort of -- you might call it a slide race, and the problem that we
had was getting credible reports out of the Soviet Union, because it
doesn't take very much to hide a remote viewing or a parapsychology
lab.
Rumors of Soviet projects became wilder and wilder.
Telepathic killing, teleportation, mind control, the CIA realized this
was a race they had to join.
They focused on the Stanford Research Institute.
Hal Puthoff was a physicist there.
In the 1970s, the CIA employed him to start research on telepathy.
When the CIA first approached us, what they brought with them was
documentation, which was absolutely to me mind-boggling.
It was hundreds of pages, listing dozens of high level Soviet institutes
that were putting full-time effort on this.
Well, to be honest, I was shocked.
I really didn't expect this.
And I have to admit that even after 13 years of being in-charge of the
project which grew into a multi-million dollar project, still
toward the end, every time I would go into an experiment, I say to myself,
what am I doing here, this can't possibly work.
So it was certainly a cut across the grain.
The main method he used was the double blind method.
A sealed envelope was taken from a locked safe and given to a subject, in
this case Puthoff himself.
Inside the envelope on a folded paper, a location was written.
The subject would then drive to the destination inside.
In a wired cage back in the institute sat a viewer with a guard.
The cage was to prevent the possible influence of electromagnetic waves.
In this experiment, Puthoff's destination was a nearby yacht harbor.
The remote viewer drew a picture of what he visualized from reading
Puthoff's mind.
Time and again the viewer got it right.
We put remote viewers on submarines for example and take them into the
ocean to where we had enough seawater shielding, which is a conductive
shield which should shield electromagnetic signals even at very
low frequencies, and they would still perform admirably.
So not being able to pinpoint a mechanism was always something that
was zooming around the back of my mind and was still a challenge.
I've got a sense that I want to associate the individual with--
Individuals that have good remote viewing talent maybe able to describe
many times and, in fact most of the times, very well a remote scene or the
remote object, but they may not know what it is.
So the point is the seeing is not the same as the knowing.
So the interpretation to me is still a big issue.
It was an ongoing problem.
In this experiment the location was a swimming pool in San Francisco.
The viewer saw water in pools, but identified the open air swimming pool
as a water treatment pool.
Seeing something that they couldn't identify often happened in the
Stargate experiments.
Were there accurate results just lucky guesses?
Even more worrying was news that the Russians were sinister progress.
There was a KGB defector Nikolai Khokhlov, who had come out and he
talked about experiments of fracturing spinal chords and actually using this
literally as a weapon.
Like a villainous bond character, a Khokhlov had worked as an assassin for
the KGB, carrying out his attacks using a handgun camouflaged as a
cigarette packet.
After defecting to the U.S., he helped set up a unit to monitor paranormal
research in the Soviet Union.
Khokhlov claimed to have found disturbing results.
The most important power of people, might, is about to be controlled by
sophisticated, incredible science future like devices manufacture by the
people in the Soviet Union.
I think our concerns were reports of remote influence, and that the ability
to actually to take these capabilities, not just observe, but to
influence the target.
In 1978, the KGB chose the Grandmaster's chest tournament as a
public testing ground for remote influence.
The young Grandmaster Anatoly Karpov was set against the Russian defector
Viktor Korchnoi.
In the audience sat a KGB agent, Dr. Zukhar.
His orders were to use telepathy to distract and handicap Korchnoi during
the match.
That man had these born capabilities, and the man was also trained to
enhance his ability to influence people at a distance, and he did use
it, and Korchnoi when he complained, he was absolutely right.
Korchnoi demanded that Dr. Zukhar be thrown out of the tournament rooms,
but his pleas were ignored.
After a number of intense rounds, Korchnoi lost narrowly.
As far as he was concerned, the KGB was responsible for his defeat.
All of them were decorated and full intact doctor, because of his super,
super abilities to influence and actually to help Russia win the World
Chess Championship.
Well, what probably would Karpov win anyway, but in this particular case,
the Soviet KGB helped him win the championship.
A year later, Russia and America meet for the SALT I Summit.
For the U.S., it's particularly tense.
Secret Russian reports suggest that KGB planned to use remote powers to
influence high ranking officials.
Could the American president be in danger?
Influence would have been probably a better way to do it, because if you
kill a president and somebody else comes in who is an unknown, it's
better if you've got control of something, a person or a system that
belongs to a threat or an enemy to use it, so that you still command and
manipulate it rather than kill it.
In spite of the mutual mistrust, the two superpowers reach a historic
agreement to limit strategic atomic weapons.
Although the nuclear risk was reduced, other parts of the arms race
continued.
John Alexander gives the picture.
Everything that you developed, remote viewing or a new tank, had to be based
on a threat.
And so one of the ways of getting programs going and supported was to
say, oh, you are going to watch out, because there are-- they've got a
better widget coming over there.
And for the U.S., hostilities were emerging in other places.
November 1979, Iran.
Islamic students stormed the American embassy and took more than 50 U.S.
hostages.
Stargate was called in.
That was extremely debilitating over a period of time that lasted for over 10
months and it was 64 people and it was the same target, and we had to keep
going back to it over and over and over.
Hal Puthoff recalls the first breakthrough.
Although Olive r was giving the medical description, he said, you
know, this fellow is so sick he should be in a hospital, but he is not in a
hospital, and not only that but I see him on a plane in a few days, and he
practically dies from the vertigo of being in this plane.
So anyway, we just sent all that information off.
Shortly afterwards, a hostage is released for medical reasons.
Coincidence or genuine remote viewing, and a much needed success for
Stargate.
They did acquire very accurate information including the health
status of one of the individuals and the note that he was going to be
unexpectedly released, and that happened within a 24-hour period after
the viewers had noted it and predicted it.
But for every psychic victory, there have been failures.
Three years later, a case comes up in Verona, Italy.
The highest ranking American native officer was abducted from his homes,
General James L. Dozier.
I was jolted from the rear, spun around, and I was looking down the
barrels of two silenced pistols.
A fight started which I quickly began to lose, and pretty soon they hit me
on the head and I fell onto the floor.
Then they brought a trunk, put me in the trunk, and took me away.
They said several times that we are the Red Brigades,
I heard that, but I wasn't sure whether they were going to kill me or
hold me for a ransom or what.
Stargate agents were quickly called in to help visualize Dozier's location,
but it wasn't going to be a straightforward job and the clock was
ticking.
The track record of the Red Brigades was to keep them a few weeks and then
you find them in the river, so there wasn't a lot of time, and naturally,
we got into this, the remote viewing group at Fort Meade and many others
around the world.
I think it was about 4:30 a.m. in the morning, and when they called me, they
just told me not to listen to any radios and watch no televisions, just
come right to work.
I was in a room that was painted all gray, the walls were all gray, the rug
was gray, the table was painted gray.
You actually get dizzy trying to stand up in this room, if you can imagine.
Everything was gray, light gray.
I lay back in the chair and just closed my eyes and imagined myself at
1000 feet looking down over the area of the Italy, and what came to me was
this portion of Italy where the Dobe lies.
I imagined myself actually seeing streets in a roadmap and then standing
in front of the building that he was being held in, and looking out at the
face of the building.
It's almost like you can see him through a wall, and it's like you can
see through the things.
You are just feeling through a wall.
You are just drawn there.
I don't know how to explain that.
We had another person who said that he was being held inside of a tent,
inside that apartment.
42 days after his abduction, an Italian special unit finds General
Dozier and releases him alive and well.
Just as the Stargate viewers had described, Dozier had been in Padova,
isolated by his jailors in a tent.
If just a coincidence, these were astonishingly accurate guesses.
But Stargate is absent from Dozier's account of his release.
I just can't tell you what a superb job the Italian police did, but they
did it with just good solid police work.
Did Dozier's release saw more to a Red Brigade defector than the psychic
spies at Fort Meade?
The Italian police told me the day that I was rescued that psychics had
been involved, but after four weeks they didn't even want to talk to a
psychic, that they had so many false leads, that they just dismissed them.
Dozier's case highlights the difficulty Stargate faces.
Too many misses and people quickly lose faith and patience.
Right after the General was abducted, there were a lot of diverse inputs
coming in from all over, and we could see there is no good pattern.
So how do you really know where to put the emphasis on?
So, you know, some reports got out, they weren't the ones that were
officially sanctioned through our place.
But it wasn't until later on, halfway through the six weeks period that he
was held captive, that the data tended to come together.
Despite the clarity of McMoneagle's vision, a high profile case like
Dozier's put Stargate and its methods under scrutiny.
How many times had they failed?
How many times had they succeeded?
It's information which still remains largely classified.
You don't particularly want to advertise just how well or how good or
maybe not so good these capabilities are?
It'd rather that be an element of surprise or unknown factor.
By the end of the Cold War in 1995, the CIA ordered that Stargate's
20-year operation was put under review.
From a scientific perspective, the picture was bleak.
Professor Hyman looked into their methods.
The operation's idea was nothing that could be recognized, that could be
evaluated scientifically, because it had no controls.
We don't know exactly what the remote viewers were told, how much
information they had, how much they could guess just by lucky means, and
by just reasonable means, because they are not going to be asked about
ordinary things and the kinds of questions they are going to be asked
and problems they are going to be given.
Given that many of them had intelligence backgrounds, they
probably could guess somewhat of what's going to be the world.
Even then Stargate managed to divide scientists.
Professor Jessica Utts from the University of California was also part
of the review.
Ray Hyman and I both agreed that there was something in the data that could
not be explained by chance alone, and I think we disagreed in terms of what
the ultimate explanation will be.
So we saw results that can't be explained by chance.
In other words, people were guessing at better rates than they should have
been able to guess if just by chance.
Despite the debates, Stargate had choked up more misses than hits, and
in 1995 the Pentagon shut the operation down.
The Russian operations were also allegedly cancelled.
Oleg Calugan believes otherwise.
These experiments continued in the 1990s.
Well, I do not know if they do it now, but I would not be surprised.
They may have resumed these experiments, because this is something
which indeed is not just madness.
It's a real thing, and it needs to be sort of explored and probably put into
practical use once those are in power feel that it is necessary.
Edinburgh, Scotland, although the military are no longer in the driving
seat, the study of telepathy goes on.
The University where Sherlock Holmes' creator Sir Arthur Conan Doyle once
studied is home to the Koestler Institute of Parapsychology.
The experiments were run by Professor Robert Morris, who believed the
results were promising.
It does not look as though chance is the explanation.
It looks as although it's a genuine effect there.
Under scientific conditions, thought transference is being thoroughly
investigated.
It looks as though we found additional ways that people can get information
in from the world around them, through something that might be analogist to a
new sense but maybe something more directs in that.
This is the way it looks.
Exactly what process is going on, of course, that remains to be seen.
Known as the Ganzfeld Procedure, the experiment shows a short film to a
transmitter party.
A receiver party sitting in a separate sound proof room was trying to
visualize images from the film.
Plane flying through the sky, clouds.
Both parties are linked only by headphones to the person monitoring
the experiments.
There's people walking through the woods.
The results aren't always successful, but intriguingly subjects who are more
creative score more hits.
In the Ganzfeld Procedure, we find that we get our best results if, in
fact, we pre-select people who are very skilled at being artists or
musicians.
If we add together all of those people that we worked with, we've had a bout
a 40% success rate, we would just expect 25 by chance.
But is this hard science or just pure coincidence?
We try to apply as many of the standards from present day science as
we possibly can.
We try to design our studies so that the interpretations of them are fairly
straightforward.
With the Ganzfeld experiment it's the problem with all the other
parapsychologic experiments.
The main problem is that it so far has been-- no one has been able to show
consistent pattern of results that could be independently replicated.
Proving telepathy really works is a difficult road to travel down, but
despite scientific controversies, thousands believe in the psychic
powers of the mind.
And today Stargate's legacy lives on in its own small way.
Now retired from his post, the PSI agent Ed Dames remains a firm believer
in his paranormal talents and runs his own psychic detective agency on the
island of Hawaii.
Today, he is trying to locate a missing body.
Using remote viewing, he thinks he has found a spot, out on a beach in the
north of the island.
Using psychic powers to try and solve crimes is still used by many law
enforces across America, but does it actually work?
In this case, no body was turned up.
We would regard this as something that is not supernatural at all, that it is
part of the natural world using laws of physics and biology and psychology
that we just yet don't completely understand.
As science reopens the door into the unknown, the world has entered into a
new era.
With the Cold War over, we now live with a new threat, a world order where
terrorists, dictators, and weapons of mass destruction remain dangerously
hidden from view.
In the fight against terrorism, could we be entering a new era of psychic
warfare?
In 2003, Joe McMoneagle confirmed that he was asked to help in the search for
Saddam, but he would not reveal by whom.
Telepathy may defy scientific explanation, but for many, it is a
reality.
From the race for supremacy in the Cold War to the age of terrorism, it
remains a mysterious skill that could radically change our future.
As we continue to explore telepathy, the boundary between science fiction
and science fact may one day become blurred.
If we were to prove its existence, the possibilities seem endless, and who
knows where the journey of our minds could end.