For example, a professionally trained remote viewer by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and academics at the Stanford Research Institute (SRI), where this type of activity took place for more than 25 years, would successfully and repeatedly be able to describe in-depth details of a distant location.
The viewer would only be given geographical coordinates and would be blind to all other aspects of the location. It worked, it was repeatable, and the distance to the target did not matter even if it wasn’t on planet Earth.
Concerned that a psychical (PSI) gap existed between U.S. and Soviet paranormal research efforts, the CIA sponsored discreet research into paranormal phenomena. The U.S. military and intelligence services were actively involved in paranormal research and operations involving remote viewing. Remote viewing, which produced specialized human intelligence support, served as part of overall military and government organizations’ intelligence collection efforts and most likely still does.
For example, in March 1979, a young Air Force enlisted woman named Rosemary Smith was handed a map of the entire continent of Africa. She was told only that sometime in the past few days a Soviet Tu-22 bomber outfitted as a spy plane had crashed somewhere on the continent.
The United States desperately wanted to recover the
top secret Russian codes and equipment the Tu-22 carried. Using their
remote viewing skills, she pinpointed the wreckage, even though it had
been completely swallowed by the jungle canopy into which the jet had
plunged nose first....<<<Read More>>>...