Russian army used mental
interference, intercepts in Chechnya war.
From The Times of Moscow:
The
Russian military tested the telepathic effects of parapsychology in its wars in
Chechnya in the 1990s and the early 2000s, a news magazine run by the Defense
Ministry has claimed.
The techniques reportedly
allowed soldiers to wiretap conversations, disrupt software, identify potential
terrorists and read foreign-language documents locked in a safe — all using
nothing but their minds. The expert community is divided on the existence of
parapsychology capabilities in the military, reported the RBC news website,
which spotted the article on Wednesday.
The
explosive claims appeared in the February issue of the Defense Ministry’s “Army
Digest” magazine under the headline “Supersoldier for Future Wars.”
“Those capable of metacontact
can, for example, conduct nonverbal interrogations. They can see through the
captured soldier: who this person is, their strong and weak sides, and whether
they’re open to recruitment,” an excerpt from the article reads.
“The reliability of the
interrogation is almost 100 percent. It’s impossible to ‘wriggle out’ of it,”
writes the author, colonel Nikolai Poproskov.
He claimed Russian soldiers are
trained to resist the same capabilities in case they get captured, as well as
maintain all their faculties while forgoing food, drink or sleep for days at a
time.
The Defense Ministry magazine’s
guidelines cited by RBC say its articles are picked based on their “relevance,
analysis of existing problems in military theory and practice and proposed
solutions.”
(Russians also invented
baseball and were the first to have heavier-than-air flying machines. So
propagandists said in the 1950s, anyway.)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.