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To better understand this use of HAARP - earth-penetrating tomography -
we need to explore a few different documents. First, let's look again at that 1990
HAARP summary,200 which includes a section dealing with the generation of
extremely low frequency and very low frequency (ELF and VLF) waves. These energy
waves are sent up from the antenna array (HAARP) in such a way so it "produces a
virtual antenna in the ionosphere for radiation of radio waves" back to earth. The
antenna created in the ionosphere then radiates, or sends back, the pulsed
frequency,
It then moves through the earth, giving the military the ability to locate underground
anomalies such as shelters, nuclear facilities, oil fields, tunnels and other natural and
man made formations.
The second document which explains this application is not revealed until
much later in the program. In the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
1995, the United States Senate stops additional spending on the project until the
military outlines a plan which includes a full earth-penetrating tomography program.
The report specifies:
"This transmitter in Alaska, besides providing a world class research
facility for ionospheric physics, could allow earth-penetrating tomography over most
of the northern hemisphere. Such a capability would permit the detection and precise
location of tunnels, shelters, and other underground shelters.,."201
The Senate went on to criticize the military for not bringing forward a
complete plan for implementation of this specific capability as part of the HAARP
program. They told the military to come back with a more comprehensive plan before
they could get any more money.
The third piece of information in this part of the puzzle came out in a radio
interview conducted on December 23, 1994, by Linda Moulton Howe with the HAARP
program director, John Heckscher. Heckscher expressed his frustration in not being
able to move forward on the project because of the Senate action. He made clear that
HAARP could not continue unless the "nonproliferation people" put in the proper
documents which would clarify earth-penetrating tomography as a HAARP project
mission. The non-proliferation people, referred to by Heckscher, are those in the
Pentagon and elsewhere who develop the plans for locating underground military
installations, especially nuclear research and development facilities.
Our research, and critiques by independent scientists, raised questions about
whether or not the earth-penetrating tomography application would work in a "hot
war" environment. For it to work there need to be instruments on the ground, or
traversing the ground at very, very low altitudes. Our technical review indicated that it
would be difficult to do this in combat. But it could be used in other situations. It
could be used to verify nonproliferation agreements and other peace agreements where
the country to be probed allowed the U. S. military to install ground sensors.
200 HAARP HF Active Auroral Research Program, Joint Program Plans and Activities, Air Force
Geophysics Laboratory, Navy Office of Naval Research, February 1990.
201 The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1995,103rd Congress, 2nd Session,
Report #103-282, Calendar No. 459, Report to Accompany S.2182, Committee on Armed Services
United States Senate, June 14 (legislative day June 7)1994.