DOD, Intel. Agencies Look at Russian Mind Control Technology,
Claims FBI Considered Testing on Koresh
By Mark Tapscott (Defense Electronics July 1993)
Federal law enforcement officials considered testing a Russian
scientist's acoustic mind control device on cultist David Koresh
a few weeks before the fiery conflagration that killed the
Branch Davidian leader and more than 70 of his followers in
Waco, Texas, Defense Electronic has learned.
In a series of closed meeting beginning March 17 in suburban
Northern Virginia with Dr. Igor Smirnov of the Moscow Medical
Academy, FBI officials were briefed on the Russian's decade-long
research on a computerized acoustic device allegedly capable of
implanting thoughts in a person's mind without that person being
aware of the source of the thought.
"It was suggested to us [by other federal officials] that they
bring in the FBI, which was looking for a viable option to deal
with Koresh," said a source who participated in the Smirnov
meetings who agreed to discussion of the gathering only on
condition of anonymity.
His account of the meeting was confirmed by an executive summary
memorandum prepared by official of Psychotechnologies Corp., a
Richmond, Virginia, based firm that owns the American rights to
the Russian technology. A copy of the Psychotechnologies
summary, which has been circulated among U.S. intelligence
executives, was obtained by DE.
The Psychotechnologies memo described the standoff between
federal agents and Koresh in Waco as "an ongoing domestic
hostage situation." After several meetings with Smirnov, FBI
officials, who repeatedly expressed fear during the discussions
that Koresh and his followers were suicidal, asked for a
proposal describing requirements and procedures for using the
device in Waco, he said.
"They wanted the Russians to promise zero risk" in using the
device on Koresh, but the Russians wouldn't do that," the
participant said. Another obstacle was the fact Smirnov had only
brought "entry-level equipment" and more sophisticated hardware
would have had to be rushed over from Russia before the device
could be used in an attempt to end the standoff in Texas.
As a result, Koresh and his band were not used as test subjects
for a demonstration of a technology developed under the former
Soviet Union and apparently used against civilians in
Afghanistan, which is why the U.S. defense and intelligence
communities were well-represented in the March meeting in
Virginia.
"There was a strong interest among the intelligence agencies
because they had been tracking Smirnov for years," the
participant said, "and because we know there is evidence the
Soviet Army's Special Forces used the technology during the
conflict in Afghanistan"
Alcohol and drug abuse among Red Army soldiers was so pervasive
during the Afghan war that Soviet officials relied upon the
technology in preparing troops for missions involving atrocities
against civilians.
Officials from the central Intelligence Agency (CIA), Defense
Intelligence Agency (DIA) and the Advance Research Project
Agency (ARPA) were also present, according to the source.
Spokesmen for those agencies did not return a reporter's
telephone calls seeking to confirm whether individuals from
their organization attended the Smirnov meetings.
Because the US has no known counter-measure to the technology,
intelligence community and ARPA officials are concerned that
weaponize versions of the device may still be in Russian
military inventory, and they expressed fear during the meetings
that the technology could be exported to Third World nations via
growing black market in military equipment from the former
Soviet Union, he said.
The main purpose of the March meetings was described in the
Psychotechnologies memo as to "determine whether
psycho-correction technologies represent a present or future
threat to the U.S. national security in situation where
inaudible command might be used to alter behavior.
The memo went on to note that meeting attendees were also
interested in whether "psycho-correction detection decoding and
counter-measures programs should be undertaken by the US." An
effective psycho-correction device could be a military threat
the memorandum continued if it were deployed to "negatively
affect morale of US troops in combat" or to "affect judgment or
opinions of decision makers, key personnel or populaces" in a
conflict.
Further, the memo said Department of Defense (DOD) official were
concerned that the technology could be used in protection of US
embassies , military training and in non-violently "clearing
areas of potential enemies, snipers, etc."
Non-military participants were also included in the Smirnov
meetings in Virginia, as well as a series of subsequent briefing
by the two Russians at the University of Kansas Medical Center
in Topeka. The non-military attendees included Dr. Richard
Nakamura of the National Institute of Mental Health and Dr.
Christopher Green, director of General Motors Corp. (GM)
biomedical research department in Detroit.
Dr. Nakamura could not be reached for comment, but he was
described in the Psychotechnologies memo as being "familiar with
US patents" in the area and that "the Russian seemed to have
solved" mathematical problems "which had prevented development
of US work beyond basic stage."
Dr. Green said through a GM spokesman that he attended the
Smirnov briefing in his capacity as a member of a National
Academy of Sciences (NAS) panel on 21st Century Army
technologies. "This has no connection to anything being done by
GM," the spokesman said.
"It looks promising but we don't have enough details yet to
really appraise it," Dr Fowler Jones of Univ. of Kansas Medical
Center's psychology division told DE. "It was really more of a
presentation than an actual demonstration because,
unfortunately, a lot of the software we couldn't get going."
Jones said he and his colleagues at the Kansas facility are
looking for funding sources before search to determine whether
the Russian psycho-correction technology can be used in treating
alcoholism and other addiction.
The Psychotechnologies memo described an agreement company
official entered into with Smirnov in March in which "the
Russian side agreed to commit the psycho-correction technologies
still in Russia and all related know-how to the US. company in
exchange for stock. The Russian side has agreed to provide all
support necessary to recreate current [psycho- correction]
capability in the US and to upgrade the capability using US
components and computer programmers. All necessary developmental
and existing algorithms will be provided by the Russian side."
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REMEMBER WACO....
http://www.apfn.org/apfn/wacopg.htm