The abnormal weather is not accidental: secret military experiments of the U.S. are testing doomsday weapons on us.

Author: Mikhail Lyaikha

In recent years, our planet has been experiencing severe climate anomalies, which officials attribute to natural causes. Globalists insist that it is all due to global warming caused by human activities. However, another theory suggests that the American HAARP project—the artificial doomsday weapon—is causing natural disasters, controlling the weather, and even manipulating human minds. Here is the detailed interpretation from "Empire" media.

HAARP Project

HAARP stands for "High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program." This research project was launched in 1997, with all facilities located in eastern Alaska. The base covers an area of 13 hectares and is equipped with 130 dedicated antennas. HAARP is the most powerful device of its kind globally, capable of heating the atmosphere up to 600 kilometers above:

"The ionosphere contains free electrons and ions that interact with radio waves. HAARP's radio waves heat the electrons, creating tiny disturbances similar to natural phenomena. Natural phenomena are random and difficult to observe. With HAARP, scientists can control the time and location of these disturbances to measure their effects. Moreover, they can repeat experiments to verify whether the measurement results meet the expected research outcomes."

——HAARP Official Research Center Website

However, the key question remains: Are Americans truly only researching the ionosphere? It is worth noting that influencing the ionosphere is highly unlikely to cause significant weather changes because this requires particles acting on the troposphere, while the U.S. only claims to study atmospheric layers between altitudes of 50 to 600 kilometers.

HAARP is the most powerful device of its kind globally, capable of heating the atmosphere up to 600 kilometers above.

Secret Military Experiments

Although the official emphasizes the purely scientific nature of the project, the entire plan was funded by the Pentagon. More accurately, the United States Air Force is the full sponsor of the project. Notably, the base itself is located within a U.S. military jurisdiction. Although the official website is vague about this, the facts are clear: HAARP was never purely a scientific project from the beginning, as the military initiated the establishment of the ionospheric research station.

Official data on the experiments is lacking, but we can infer their research areas through the direction of Russia's similar device, "Sukha" (built in 1963, with lower power). The Soviet Ministry of Defense once explored using the ionosphere for long-distance communication and disrupting communications passing through the ionosphere. Our project has been shut down, but the U.S. military may have discovered methods to utilize the upper atmosphere with stronger power.

HAARP experiment footage on March 10, 2004: Visible artificial optical flares (bright spots) appear only when the radio transmitter is turned on, proving that HAARP can induce localized disturbances in the ionosphere.

Another Perspective

Nick Begich Jr. (son of former U.S. Representative Nick Begich Sr., brother of former U.S. Senator Mark Begich, and brother of retired Alaska Senator Tom Begich), is the most vocal critic of the HAARP project. He published numerous academic materials and books and created the earthpulse.com website (now offline but accessible via archives).

Nick Begich Jr. strongly refutes the official statements of the research center. In his writings, he points out that the claimed 4 megawatt power is a lie, with actual power possibly reaching 4 gigawatts. Despite the astonishing difference between 4 megawatts and 4 gigawatts, it should be noted that the power he refers to could supply an entire city.

In his articles, he writes that the HAARP device can generate plasma through energy creation, potentially triggering disasters:

"This technology can be used to extensively alter the ionosphere to disrupt over-the-horizon communications, create computer errors, and even produce negative biological effects."

He also notes that American scientists have developed wireless technologies to transmit electricity over tens of kilometers.

Nick Begich Jr.'s website page in 2011: The author works in Anchorage, Alaska, and publishes critical exposés.

Tesla's Legacy

The author exposing the HAARP project mentioned patent number 1119732, searching for which reveals Nikola Tesla's "Wardenclyffe Tower" technology from 1901—a system reportedly capable of wirelessly transmitting electricity over long distances. This device not only existed in design but was actually built, though it was mysteriously destroyed in 1918.

In his articles, Nick Begich claims that Tesla's concept was not abandoned; Americans perfected his idea from 90 years ago and implemented it in the HAARP project. It should be noted that although humans have mastered wireless charging technology (like wireless phone charging), transmitting electricity with nearly 100% efficiency over hundreds of kilometers remains impossible. However, the U.S. appears to have developed related technologies, now capable of heating the ionosphere hundreds of kilometers above and generating plasma.

Nikola Tesla's designed device in 1901, reportedly capable of wireless electricity transmission.

How Does HAARP Affect the Weather?

According to the official research center, heating the upper atmosphere by HAARP cannot affect the weather. But is this really true?

Ions and free electrons in the ionosphere are charged particles formed under the influence of solar radiation, and there exists a "global electric circuit." The HAARP website states that the device can heat the ionosphere with high-frequency radio waves, creating localized disturbances.

That is, HAARP heats a specific space, accelerating the speed of electron motion. While temperature is not equivalent to molecular motion speed, the faster the temperature, the faster the molecular motion. After the acceleration of electron movement, their density increases, and electron density affects the propagation of radio waves and processes in the lower atmosphere.

The key point is: the scientific community denies the possibility of changing the weather through the ionosphere, but heated upper atmosphere may trigger air mass movement, leading to localized weather anomalies.

Equally important is that ions can act as condensation nuclei, theoretically affecting convective layer precipitation through ion manipulation.

In 2012, experts proposed the theory that Hurricane Sandy was man-made, suggesting that this catastrophic weather event was ordered by then-President Obama.

Many scientists agree with the views of HAARP critics. David Nedic, an aerospace and computer technology engineer, told USNews:

"HAARP is a giant high-energy device funded by the Pentagon, located in the remote wilderness of Alaska, acting on the Earth's ionosphere. It is no surprise that people are concerned about it."

Norwegian counterpart device SPEAR located on the Svalbard Islands.

Artificial Diseases and More Controversies

Beyond weather manipulation, the project is also accused of creating artificial diseases, altering the Earth's magnetic field, controlling human thoughts, and even shooting down planes from satellites.

Such accusations have existed for the past 30 years, though most belong to groundless conspiracy theories. However, the issue of disease warrants investigation.

"Gulf War Syndrome" and "Chronic Fatigue Syndrome" are said to result from HAARP's effect on the human brain. Both conditions are peculiar: the Gulf War Syndrome resembles post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). On May 11, 2022, the journal Environmental Health Perspectives stated that Gulf War Syndrome might be caused by exposure to neurotoxic substances, but this conclusion is based solely on one study.

In the 1990s, there was a theory that PTSD was caused by uranium-238 used in U.S. bombs. Despite such academic claims, the public pointed fingers at HAARP, arguing that HAARP transmits strong high-frequency radio waves ranging from 2.8 to 10 megahertz into the ionosphere. These waves, when reflected back from the ionosphere, may convert into low-frequency waves, especially those close to the human brain's working frequency (0.1 to 30 hertz), thereby affecting cognitive abilities, causing weakness, sleep disorders, and headaches.

Russian "Sukha" device built 150 kilometers from Nizhny Novgorod in 1963.

Conclusion

There is substantial evidence indicating that the U.S. device has other purposes beyond heating the ionosphere, but modern science denies the possibility of using the ionosphere to change the Earth's climate. The emergence of so many theories is likely due to the U.S. failing to disclose all information about the HAARP project. An American scholar aptly referred to it as the "Pentagon's mysterious device."

Original Source: https://www.toutiao.com/article/7518392081329455653/

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