by Rhoda Wilson, Expose News:
In 1996, before it became fully operational, the American television series Sightings aired a segment on the High-frequency Active Auroral Research Programme (“HAARP”) warning of the danger the project presented to the world.
One of the researchers interviewed was journalist Mark Farmer who warned, “Once we open this box – and it is a veritable Pandora’s box – we’re not going to be able to close it.”
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HAARP, originally developed and owned by the US Air Force, operates out of the HAARP Research Station in Gakona, Alaska. On 14 May 2014, the Air Force told the US Congress it intended to shut down HAARP. However, in August 2015, the research instruments were transferred to the University of Alaska Fairbanks (“UAF”). UAF now operates the site under an agreement with the Air Force.
HAARP has been involved in various research activities, including creating artificial airglow and ionospheric perturbations. In November 2023, it was announced that a four-day experiment was conducted during which HAARP was expected to produce an artificial airglow that was visible across Alaska.
From 8 to 10 May 2024, HAARP conducted tests involving the transmission of high-frequency radio waves into the upper atmosphere and ionosphere. This coincided with a spectacular display of the Aurora Borealis seen across the world between 10 and 12 May 2024. HAARP denied any connection. “The timing was purely coincidental,” a FAQ section on HAARP’s website states.
Read more: HAARP’s aurora switch was turned on last week to create “artificial airglows”
According to Wikipedia, construction of HAARP began in 1993. Although experiments had been ongoing since 1999, the facility didn’t reach full power until June 2007. On 28 January 1996, the television series Sightings aired a segment, ‘The Doomsday Machine’, about the facility. (For a list of Sightings episodes, see HERE.)
Sightings was an American paranormal and news television show that aired in the 1990s. It focused on extraterrestrial visitors, ghosts, cryptids and unexplained phenomena. The series ran from 1992 to 1998 and produced several specials and a film titled ‘Sightings: Heartland Ghost’.
In Season 4, Episode 14 titled ‘Without a Trace/Vision Quest/The Doomsday Machine/Update: UFO Investigation’, Sightings looked at the controversial HAARP project.
In the segment about HAARP, Sightings explained that the US government began experimenting with a new high-altitude electronic technology in a certain section of Alaskan airspace in 1993, prompting the Federal Aviation Administration to warn pilots to stay away from the area.
This new technology was significantly altering the Alaskan airspace, and the experiments have continued to the present day, Sightings said.
Critics were warning that the project is a high-technology weapon with global implications. Some were raising the alarm that HAARP – a $100 million Air Force project consisting of an enormous antenna farm located in Alaska – could be the ultimate doomsday machine.
Journalist Mark Farmer believed that HAARP has military applications and would be used to take giant X-rays of the Earth using a technique called Earth Penetrating Tomography, which emits extremely low frequency (“ELF”) waves.
Farmer’s research indicated that the ELF waves emitted by HAARP could penetrate several kilometres into the Earth, allowing for the detection of nuclear storage facilities and other underground installations.
Related: Link between HAARP earth-penetrating tomography technology and earthquakes, Press Core, 13 March 2011
“[HAARP] is producing surveillance systems able to detect stealthy cruise missiles and aircraft. These are systems that will enable us to communicate at higher data rates and at greater distances with our ballistic missile submarines,” Farmer said.
The Air Force insisted that HAARP is not an offensive weapon and is necessary for national security. However, Alaska Native Nick Begich proposed a different scenario in his book ‘Angels Don’t Play This HAARP’. He suggested that HAARP could be used for disrupting human thinking and debilitating troops by bombarding them with radio frequencies, citing an Air Force document from 1982 titled ‘Low-Intensity Conflict and Modern Technology’, which discusses the use of radio frequency radiation transmitters for such purposes.
It is not only humans that HAARP could affect. It has the potential to disrupt the Earth’s magnetic field and so many observers are concerned that HAARP’s disruption of the Earth’s magnetic field could damage the biomagnetic sensors that migratory animals like salmon and birds depend on.
The main concern surrounding HAARP is its ability to tamper with and punch holes in the ionosphere, with the Air Force aiming to create enough energy in the ionosphere to get a runaway effect, which worries physicists like Dr. Patrick Flanagan, who believes the ionosphere is extremely fragile.