- 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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