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The Pentagon's arms-research chief, Michael Griffin, is eying advancement in space-based directed energy weapons, Defense One reported.
Such weapons can be,
...meaning that it can be hard to pin an attack with a particle weapon on any particular culprit since it leaves no evidence behind of who or even what did the damage.
According to the report, the concept has existed since the early 1980s under what are known as neutral-particle beams. NPBs travel near the speed of light and penetrate a target and are designed as a missile defense system.
Over the years, the military has explored the application process of using NPBs to take out ICBMs (intercontinental ballistic missiles.)
The Pentagon first tested a concept in the late 1980s, according to a 1990s write up that military scientists sent to lawmakers; the agency explored the possibility of a space-based weapon that could,
Last September, U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis hinted at using a kinetic weapon on Tuesday while discussing tensions with North Korea when he made a Freudian slip, as reported.
Mattis was asked whether there was,
Later during the press conference, another reporter questioned Mattis and caught him off-guard:
There is also the statement, made in January of last year by Trump's Air Force chief of staff, David Goldfein, who revealed to USA TODAY that the U.S. President could use "space weapons against ISIS."
However, the U.S. also has other kinetic weapons in its arsenal - one of the weapons systems is the "Rods from God."
What is the Rods from God?
The "Rods from God" is a part of the directed energy weapon family; it's a kinetic energy weapon. The rods are directed munitions; the higher you are (the greater your distance from the planet), the greater the kinetic energy you have.
In 2004, published in Popular Science, Eric Adams writes:
Although the report states that the concept of developing NPBs only started in the 1980s, the overall concept of using kinetic energy weapons has been around since the 1950s when the RAND Corporation proposed placing rods on tips of ICBMs.
Of course, though, the Pentagon won't say how far along the research is, or even confirm that any efforts exist, citing those details as classified.
However, everyone knows about the infamous "Star Wars" Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI) - Ronald Reagan's plans for a missile defense system a project to set up satellites with lasers that could destroy any ballistic missiles which threatened the U.S.
So the idea of kinetic energy weapons system has been in the pipework for a long time.
If we look a little closer into the current millennium, there is also the fact that the "U.S. Air Force Transformation Flight Plan," published by the Air Force in November 2003, references "hypervelocity rod bundles" in its outline of future space-based weapons; and, in 2002, another report from RAND, "Space Weapons, Earth Wars," talks about the effectiveness of such a weapon.
A space weapons agreement was proposed by Rep Dennis Kucinich called the "Space Preservation Treaty" in 2005 which states that countries won't seek to weaponize space.
However, that bill never made it past the introduction stage.
Another House of Representatives bill known as the H.R.2977 "Space Preservation Act" was proposed in 2001 to ban the use of "exotic weapons" listing the following:
Trump himself has hinted at disclosing this technology renewing the National Space Council by signing an executive order on June 30th in order to steer the future of American space policy and more recently stating "we need a space force."
This comes after last year's proposal that stated for America and Russia to build a Moon base together.
In June, Congress voted under the defense authorization 2018 bill on forming a "new" sixth branch of the military called "Space Corps" which would take over Air Force Space Command Operations and likely Naval Space Operations.
The National Space Council was last active in the early 1990s during President George H.W. Bush's administration, which ironically years later his son George W. Bush also called for space-based weapons.
In 1989, The New York Times reported that the Air Force had shut down another planned manned space program which sought a staff of 32 astronauts and a space shuttle launching facility in Colorado.
It's important to note that modern space shuttles only carry eight passengers maximum, so 32 would be an accomplishment indeed. The space facility and project cost an estimated minimum of $5 billion dollars, so why would they shut it down?'
A WikiLeaks email entitled "Impeach These Criminals Please - with 100 Attached Torture Case Summaries," also curiously mentions direct energy weapons from the global intelligence Stratfor files.
The email exchange was between several individuals within Stratfor in late 2007, including Aaric Eisenstein, the VP of Publishing at the time, and included an attached document of 'torture case summaries,' which is 152 pages in length.
The email is purported to be from an Australian man named John Finch, claiming to be one of the government's many "Targeted Individuals," subject to intense unbearable mental torture, mind control and 24/7 surveillance according to his own account.
In that document, it lists each victim's name, their country of origin, the year torture began, and their own personal strife with the weapons.
Clients of Stratfor included,
Other WikiLeaks documents - this time from Hacking Team, the mysterious Italian surveillance malware vendor - also show references to nonlethal directed energy weapons.
Then there is this document on the bioeffects of nonlethal weapons.
The main thing to take away from all this information is, as Seattle-pi wrote in a 2015 article, "Weapons in space put the world at risk," especially if they are run unsanctioned unbeknownst to Congress and even the President of the United States by Military Industrial Complex Aerospace corporations.
The second thing to take away is that there is a tremendous amount of history where the U.S. has been working on these weapons, and many likely already exist at least in compartmentalized circles.
Space-based weapons are quite literally a threat to National Security and American sovereignty - space is the final frontier as Neil Armstrong said.
Although, I don't think Armstrong meant to end life as we know it and expand war into space bringing about our own demise.
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