- Just what exactly are those mysterious airplane vapor
trails seen filling America's skies? A group of independent investigators
may have the answer.
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- In a series of high-tech programs that would enthrall
the most dedicated science fiction fans, the military is producing what
have become known as "chemtrails" -- the thick, viscous airplane
engine trails that have been poisoning the air and ground with toxic chemicals.
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- For two years, The SPOTLIGHT has been in contact with
experts in fields ranging from medicine to nuclear energy who have been
investigating the mysterious trails left by airplanes in skies all over
America and in many foreign countries.
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- These "tracks" in the skies, believed to be
left by a combination of military and civilian aircraft drawn into the
massive, multi-billion dollar program, are unlike regular high-flying aircraft's
vapor trails. Instead of dissipating rapidly, these so-called "chemtrails"
mesh together for hours and are often mistaken for natural clouds.
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- The principal chemical being deposited in the air consists
of various mixtures of barium salts, which were revealed in studies undertaken
by a Pennsylvania-based high-tech weapons scientist. Chemicals, he said,
were being utilized as part of the development of a new radar system at
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton, Ohio. The base will be the
site of a public demonstration on Saturday, June 23, starting at 1 p.m.
under the sponsorship of Ohio Citizens Against Chemtrails, headed by Kim
Weber, one of the citizens working on the chemtrail investigation. The
rally will be attended by hundreds of people from across the nation who
are concerned about these poisons being dumped out of the sky onto millions
of people on the ground.
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- Considerable effort has been put into chemtrail research
by a physicist who has been associated with Brookhaven National Laboratory
on Long Island, N.Y. The scientist, with his fellow researchers, has determined
that the chemtrails are being created by efforts of the military in at
least four major, but separate, projects.
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- The first project is an effort to block the rays of the
sun from hitting the Earth, including ultra-violet radiation that will
come through without an adequate layer of ozone in the upper regions above
the Earth. In the event of global warming, this, it is hoped, could lower
temperatures on the surface of the Earth and block ultra-violet radiation
from causing skin cancer in humans. The aerosol being sprayed in this
case is probably aluminum oxide or a compound that would have similar properties,
and is the only one of the government programs that does not use the barium
mixtures.
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- BLACK PROJECTS?
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- The second and most secret project is the Navy's Radio
Frequency Mission Planner (RFMP) program, which is a system encompassing
a group of computer programs. One of its supporting subprograms is know
as Variable Terrain Radio Parabolic Equation or VTRPE. This is a computer
radio frequency propagation program that deals with radio waves and enables
the RFMP system to visually see the terrain of a battlefield in three dimensions
on a television-type screen.
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- The RFMP system also depends on a satellites to supplement
the images of a battlefield picture obtained from the ground, thus producing
the 3-dimensional images. In providing an interactive picture portraying
in the radar screen, the RFMP system allows the computer operator to develop
familiarity with the "environment" before a war mission occurs
by playing a variety of "what if?" virtual warfare scenarios
on his computer screen. Since all major modes of radio frequency propagation
are modeled in his computer (the RFMP system), special, sometimes counter-intuitive,
cases can be examined in detail and exploited during a battle. Initially,
the VTRPE computer program only worked accurately over water and along
coastal areas but not over land masses because the system's radar waves
required an atmospheric condition known as "ducting," over land,
to operate accurately.
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- This "ducting" problem was solved by releasing
an aerosol, a mixture of barium salts into the atmosphere over the United
States. Thus, they can make an atmospheric radio frequency "duct"
with a base of barium aerosol released from aircraft.
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- One of the researchers, the physicist from Brookhaven,
explained how the process works: The chemical and electrical characteristics
of the mixture cause moisture to stay in the clouds. The aerosol sets
up an electrical and chemical environmental that supports RF ducting for
the RFMP/VTRPE warfare system."The mixture of barium salt from the
aerosol when sprayed in a straight line will also provide a ducting path
form point A to point B and will enable high frequency communications along
that path, even over the curvature of the Earth, in both directions,"
he said. "Enemy high frequency communications can be monitored easier
with the straight line A to B ducting medium."
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- The third project also utilizes the mixture of barium
salts in the atmosphere and involves weather control. It is a project
of the AIR Force and utilizes concepts of radio frequency radiation, developed
originally by legendary scientist Nikola Tesla, against the ionosphere
above the Earth. Known as the so-called HAARP project, it is manipulating
life-support systems in the environment, testing and altering them for
military advantage.
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- Air Force documents, obtained by the independent researchers,
indicate that "the risks are high but the rewards are worth it."
The mixture of barium salts, supporting moisture, is administered along
the weather fronts and manipulated in a controlled fashion. It is believed
that microwave energy is also utilized in the weather control program.
Weather data is also a required input to the VTRPE program of the RFMP
system. Perfect weather control technology will enable the military to
withhold rain, cause floods, cause drought, cause storms, withhold sunshine,
damage food crops, and bring any country to its knees without firing a
shot.
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- The fourth atmospheric project is being run by the Defense
Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) as a means to detect and decontaminate
enemy biological attacks. The program also utilizes a mixture of barium
salts as the base vehicle in aerosol, along with special polymer fibers.
The combination allows detection of biological agents. Some biological
agents have actually been released into the atmosphere in trials, testing
the detection and decontamination systems. It is believed that barium
salt, polymer fibers and other chemicals in the atmosphere are the physical
irritants that may be directly or indirectly responsible for unexplained
nose bleeds, asthma, allergies, pneumonia, upper respiratory ailments and
arthritis-like systems. Chemicals sprayed into the atmosphere are producing
air and ground conditions that may be harmful to humans and animals, while
stimulating the growth of molds and bacteria. Barium salts, an Earth
metal, are toxins that absorb readily into the gastrointestinal tract which
are deposited into muscles and other tissue. No case data is available
on the long-term effects of barium in humans.
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- "The programs remain secret because the Environmental
Protection Agency and state environmental agencies need 'not know' about
the by-products of the metabolites of these biological, illegal and harmful
agents," said one of the researchers. "It's for that reason
the combined projects have been kept secret from the citizens." _____
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- Jet Trails Tested In Combat Scenarios
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- The U.S. military is testing high-tech, experimental
equipment in the eastern United States.
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- EXCLUSIVE TO THE SPOTLIGHT By Mike Blair
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- Three-dimensional radar systems, such as the Navy's top
secret Variable Terrain Radio Parabolic Equation (VTRPE) program, which
visualize the terrain of a battlefield on a television-type screen, are
being developed through spreading chemtrails across the nation's skies
and are being field tested in the military exercises across the country.
The latest, which the Pentagon is calling "Joint Patriot 01,"
is under way at Fort Drum, a military base outside of Watertown, N.Y.
Exercises will run through June 30.
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- Centered at Fort Drum, the home of the Army's elite 10th
Mountain Division, the military is also utilizing facilities at Combat
Readiness Training Centers at Volk Field, Wisc., Alpena, Mich., and Utah's
Dugway Proving Grounds. "Concurrently, the exercise permits testing
of advanced command and control technology developed by the Air Force Research
Laboratory, Rome, N.Y., research site," a Pentagon spokesman said.
"Numerous technologies will be field tested, including command and
control systems, dynamic planning and targeting systems, sensor systems,
and specialized next-generation communications systems."
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- The Air Force Research Laboratory at Rome, located in
Central New York about 75 miles from Fort Drum, used to be part of Griffiss
Air Force Base, a Strategic Air Command B-52 bomber base. In 1982, the
air base was closed down and the top secret laboratory was the only Air
Force facility retained. The lab was enhanced and its mission scope increased.
Little is known about what goes on there, but it is known that the scientists
there are developing military technology involving lasers. In the mid-1990s,
a local sensation was created in the vicinity of Rome when numerous residents
reported seeing bizarre "balls of light" traveling at treetop
level. Many believed the phenomena were created at the Air Force laboratory.
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- The Pentagon claims that the maneuvers at Fort Drum are
"a war-fighting capability training exercise for more than 6,000 Air
and Army National Guard members and elements from the Army, Air Force,
Navy and Marine Corps, and allied reserve forces from Britain and the Netherlands."
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- In a similar drill, not reported in the media, 26,000
military personnel on March 20 took part in a massive exercise, which involved
a Navy battle group headed by the aircraft carrier USS Enterprise 200 miles
off the coast of North Carolina. In the drill, Eastern North Carolina
was "enemy territory" and the VTRPE system was used to keep surveillance
on it. Exercises at Fort Drum and North Carolina may have been assisted
by Air Force-induced weather changes. >
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