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Psychotronic weapons
Psychotronic weapons

Video: Psychotronic weapons

Video: Psychotronic weapons
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Specialized technical complexes, exercising psychotronic influence, received the name "Center for Managing People and Nature" (TsULiP). They have different technical performance, which depends on:

- appointments (mass exposure of the population or personified), - applied technologies of psychotronic influence (HF stations, microwave stations, torsion generators), - the level of development of radio electronics.

From the history

Historians are gradually publishing still classified information about the German project "Thor", which was developed in Nazi Germany. Within the framework of this project, devices were created to manipulate the consciousness of the population. By 1944, at the disposal of German scientists there were workable samples of devices and by the end of the war up to 15 stations were already operating in Germany, influencing the consciousness of the population and their own troops. They were determined to increase their fighting spirit, fanaticism, and the will to win. Their impact was aimed primarily at the "crystals of will" - special formations in the pituitary gland.

"Crystals of Will" (from the archive of "Ahnenerbe")

TsULiPs

In the Soviet Union, in many cities, stationary systems of psychotronic manipulation of the consciousness of the population "Kite", "Crab" were installed. [Riga]

The principle of operation of the "Kite" introduced in Riga in the 1980s is as follows: a settlement is covered by a coherent field in which people have a certain common quality - that is, each of them here is, as it were, "his own". The system cut off all anomalies, that is, it equalized the inhabitants in terms of intelligence, physical tone and emotional mood. Those who go beyond the established standards feel discomfort, hostility from the people around them and, in the end, sink into an average state. Under such a system, riots and popular unrest are impossible. The "Serpent" system regulated the level of crime and, according to the idea of the creators, was supposed to contribute to the serene happiness and rallying of working people. Its effectiveness turned out to be so high that it became an export commodity going to the CMEA countries and the Far East.

TV center in Riga, where the "Kite" emitters were installed

The Crab system was introduced in Moscow, Leningrad, Alma-Ata and Dushanbe. This is a more modern network of psi emitters. It allows you to manipulate the minds of people and pushes them to commit various programmed actions. Moreover, in Dushanbe in February 1990, the system malfunctioned, and the city's population was in a semi-insane state for two days. All shops and offices were looted. The militia and internal troops took part in the riots.

Information about such objects, periodically breaking through the restrictions on secrecy, is sparse, but gives some sketchy idea.

As a legacy from the Soviet Union, the post-Soviet states inherited TsULiP stations developed in the late 1970s. Such stations are installed throughout Russia. Since its commissioning, this system has been modernized several times, but, since the late 1980s, nothing has changed dramatically. Today, this system is "rotten" to the ground, everything that is - remains from Soviet times. The stations are operated by the military, many civilian personnel with subscriptions. Scientists, and indeed literate people in general, you will not find - the salaries of ordinary employees are miserable.

Block diagram of the location of equipment at the Soviet station TsULiP

The complex itself occupies an entire room, for the most part is assembled from standard Soviet devices (generators, frequency meters, voltmeters, a huge "ancient" control computer, magnetrons, waveguides), during operation it buzzes very loudly and gets very hot. The complex includes a sufficiently functional encephalograph for that time and a transcranial electrostimulator with a powerful maximum current of 20 mA.

The encephalograph and transcranial stimulator are connected to the operator. The operator sits in a small, separate room. And the whole system is controlled by a technician. He puts the program on a plastic (like film) punched tape, enters the parameters on the control panel and presses a button.

The composition of the equipment includes a box, incomprehensible to an ordinary specialist in electronics and radio engineering, for its intended purpose, a box measuring about 120 by 80 by 80 cm, sheathed with foam on the outside. Five waveguides, bundles of cables, 10 centimeters thick, and tubes from the compressor block of an industrial refrigerator fit this box - during operation, the box is cooled to a good subzero temperature (-50 or -70).

In its work, the system uses a frequency of 44 GHz, and in this connection, possibly, torsion fields are used as an agent of influence.

In one guarded building there can be a dozen or two of such complexes. Despite a long century of work, such a system was not covered anywhere in the media, although it is still in demand for an unconscious effect on the population.

Psychotronic treatment of the population in the Soviet Union

And here, the test in 1973 of the "Radiogipnosis" installation in military unit 71592, where this unit was created (the Novosibirsk region), became generally known. The report on this test "Impact on biological objects by modulated electrical and electromagnetic impulses" was presented at the Institute of Radio Engineering and Electronics of the Russian Academy of Sciences. The installation generates microwave radiation, the pulses of which cause acoustic vibrations in the brain. The plant has enough capacity to process a city with an area of about one hundred square kilometers, plunging all its inhabitants into deep sleep. A side effect of the installation is mutations in the cells of the body. The test report was signed by Academician Y. Kobzarev and Doctor of Physical and Mathematical Sciences E. Godik. Colonel-General of Aviation V. N. Abramov provided practical assistance in facilitating and formalizing the opening. These works were supervised by twice Hero of the Soviet Union, Air Marshal E. Ya. Savitsky.

In the 1980s - 90s, the special services in the USSR practiced the so-called "network method" of psychotronic treatment of the population. At this time, there were massive complaints about the exposure of citizens by the special services. And in 1993, at the seminars of the Academy of New Thinking, the technical details of this criminal bacchanalia were revealed (which still requires a criminal assessment by law enforcement agencies).

Psychotronic treatment of the population, used in the USSR

According to the information provided, the method of psychotronic processing by radio technical means is based on the discovery of our compatriot Mikhailovsky, who in the mid-30s established that various combinations of electromagnetic pulses with a duration from 20 ms to 1.25 s, repetitive with a frequency of 25-0.4 Hz and modulated at a carrier radio frequency in the range of medium and short waves, they affect individual areas of the brain that are responsible for both emotional mood and the work of individual internal organs. In the Soviet Union, the method of psychotronic processing was widely used, in which the power of a bioenergy generator is introduced into a building through household networks: lighting, a telephone, a common television antenna, a radio network, a burglar alarm, etc. As a result of the psychotronic coding of the residents of these apartments, deep irreversible injuries occur, and in the elderly, premature death. There are frequent cases when citizens leave their homes and become homeless. (N. Kromkina et al. "Why are apartments empty in Moscow?", Article in the newspaper "41st" N 30, 1992). The signals coding zombies for the population were also transmitted on the frequencies of television and radio station "Mayak".

"Pulsar" for broadband jamming of psychotronic transmitter signals

Deputy General Director of NPO Energia, Doctor of Technical Sciences V. Kanyuka headed the secret complex in Podlipki (g. Korolev), which was part of NPO Energia (at that time the head was Academician V. P. Glushko), where, in pursuance of the closed Resolution of the Central Committee of the CPSU and the USSR Council of Ministers of January 27, 1986, a generator of special physical fields was created to correct behavior huge masses of the population. This equipment, launched into space orbit, covered with its "beam" a huge territory, comparable in area with the Krasnodar Territory.

The twists and turns in the history of the development and use of psychotronic weapons are so flamboyant that they are worthy of close attention of writers and screenwriters.

On July 4, 1976, radio communications throughout the planet in the range of 3 - 30 MHz were violated by unknown impulses with an interval of one tenth of a second (remember Mikhailovsky). The signal was recorded not only by special equipment, but was also heard in ordinary radio receivers as a pulsating knock. In the west, the source of the signal was identified, it was a point not far from the town of Slavutich, Chernihiv region in Ukraine. Now for us this station is better known as ZGRLS "Chernobyl-2", and in the west it was nicknamed "Russian woodpecker" for creating characteristic interference on the air.

woodpecker_1984.mp3

"Russian Woodpecker" on shortwave radio, November 2, 1984

Then the West was seized by panic - the front pages of the capitalist press were full of headlines: “The Russians are on the verge of discovering new technologies and weapons that will leave missiles and bombers in the past. These technologies will allow them to destroy up to five American cities a day by broadcasting radio pulses. They will be able to bring panic and disease to entire nations. In the west, it was suspected that over-the-horizon radar stations were transmitting signals capable of affecting the psyche of the population. The essence of the idea was that the radar carrier signal was modulated by another ultra-low frequency signal, which coincided with the frequencies of the impulses of the brain, which was in a state of depression or irritation. Such low-frequency signals were recorded and separated from the emissions of Soviet over-the-horizon radars on the territory of many Western countries.

At present, information is spread that the Chernobyl-2 facility was supposedly conceived as part of the USSR anti-missile and anti-space defense system to detect a nuclear attack in the first two to three minutes after the launch of enemy ballistic missiles. From America to the Union, the missiles would fly 25-30 minutes, and countermeasures could be taken in time. With the help of short radio waves, capable of propagating thousands of kilometers, it was planned to constantly scan the territory of the United States. The transmitter was supposed to send powerful pulses that would reach the United States through Northern Europe and Greenland and, reflected from the trail of the torches of the launched missiles, would return back. They were picked up by the receiving antenna at the Chernobyl-2 station, and processed with the help of computers. But, in the west, such signals were classified as psychoactive and capable of influencing people's behavior.

Indeed, the carrier signal of the station was in the range from 3 to 30 MHz and was discontinuous with a frequency of 5–25 Hz. It would seem, from a technical point of view, everything was explained quite logically - the frequency was changed to determine the best signal transmission, as well as to cancel interference, and the intermittent signal served so that the receivers receive the reflected signal and would not be clogged by the powerful generated radiation. However, not all so simple…

In 1969, the Soviet Union decided to build over-the-horizon radar stations "Duga-2" near Kiev (station "Chernobyl-2") and in the Far East - near the village. Big Cartel (Komsomolsk-on-Amur, Khabarovsk Territory). Moreover, the decision was made after unsuccessful experiments with the prototype - the station "Duga" near Nikolaev, which could not fulfill its direct functions - the detection of a missile launch. But even at the stage of making the decision to create the Duga radar, experts warned about the inefficiency of such complexes for the purpose of over-the-horizon radar, but, oddly enough, they were subjected to tough sanctions. Colonel-engineer V. I. Zinin was expelled to the reserve from the management of the military customer of the air defense. During the preparation of proposals for the creation of a ZGRLS, the chief designer of the over-the-horizon radar A. N. Musatov presented a memorandum to the Scientific and Technical Council of the Scientific Research Institute of Distant Radio Communication, in which he argued that the echo signal from the ICBM torch would be ten thousand times weaker than the signals from interference on the ZGRLS, and therefore building a ZGRLS is pointless. As a result, Musatov was expelled from NIIDAR, dismissed from the personnel of the Armed Forces and expelled from the CPSU members.

Antennas of the Chernobyl-2 station

It was not possible to use the stations near Kiev and Khabarovsk for their intended purpose of radar, they could not cope with this function. On the other hand, in the west they, as psychotronic weapons of the Soviets, sowed panic, and the west made efforts to close these stations through diplomatic channels, and to block the Chernobyl-2 signal in Norway, a powerful transmitter was installed, the electromagnetic radiation of which could create nonlinear effects in the ionosphere interfering with the normal signal propagation. The Soviet stations worked hard according to the "development program" until in April 1986 the Chernobyl nuclear power plant was blown up, from which the ZGRLS "Chernobyl-2" was powered. The emitter node of this station "Lyubech-1", which was in the 30 km of the exclusion zone, was mothballed after the Chernobyl accident, and in 1987 it was decided to close it. Soon after a fire at another station - "Duga-2" near Khabarovsk, it was also closed.

So, for what purposes such systems were originally developed and applied can only be assumed - either for air defense systems, or specifically - for psychotronic influence on the population of Western countries.

Antennas of the Chernobyl-2 station

According to the vice-president of the League of Independent Scientists of Ukraine, Professor Viktor Sedletskiy, who since 1965 participated in the first experiments in the development of "psi-weapons" at the Institute for Problems of Materials Science in Kiev, in 1982 the General Secretary of the CPSU Central Committee Andropov ordered the creation of the Main Center for Psychotronics in Ukraine. The main laboratories were located in underground facilities located 30 km from the Chernobyl nuclear power plant. Several types of psychotronic generators were developed in them and a series of verification experiments were carried out there. According to Sedletsky, powerful over-the-horizon radar systems were directly related to the problems of psychotronics. Their constituent phased array antennas, which worked on radiation, controlled theta-delta rhythms of the brain. Control tasks were worked out at two over-the-horizon stations - Chernobyl-2 (type - "Duga-2") and Krasnoyarsk-26 (type - "Daryal-U"), which were part of a single psychotronic system with the code name "Shar". Sedletsky published this information back in Brezhnev times in the samizdat newspaper "Secrets of the KGB". Interestingly, in 1987, the American side accused the Soviet Union of violating the 1972 Treaty between the USSR and the United States on the Limitation of ABM Systems, which allowed the deployment of an early warning radar only along the perimeter of the state territory and the further construction of a Daryal-U-type station in Krasnoyarsk-26 has been discontinued.

"Daryal-U" at ORTU "Yeniseisk-15", Krasnoyarsk-26

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