NEW BOOK PROMPTS CALL FOR DISCLOSURE OF PSYCHOLOGICAL-WEAPONS R&D
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This document, titled "NEW BOOK PROMPTS CALL FOR DISCLOSURE OF PSYCHOLOGICAL-WEAPONS R&D," discusses a failed attempt by the American military to use telepathy for their purposes. There was also a mention of joint projects involving the transfer of space technologies to India, which India has refused due to their nonparticipation in the Treaty on the Nonproliferation of Nuclear Weapons. It is also mentioned that the Americans offered India military satellites and modern airplanes in exchange for access to Indian ports for American warships and submarines. Additionally, there is a mention of a stand-testing model called Topaz that was sold to the Pentagon for $7.5 million, with expectations for economic benefits in the hundreds of millions.
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Body: Approved For Release 2000/08/11 :CIA-RDP96-007928000500610013-2
'~ both times.
As a result, we failed to receive
about 3 billion dollars in the last 5 years
alone.
The Americans are pressuring us to
give up certain joint projects involving
the transfer of space technologies to In-
dia, which refuses to join the Treaty on
the Nonproliferation of Nuclear Weapons.
They themselves, though, a few days
ago offered India military satellites and
modern airplanes in exchange for the right
of American warships and submarines to
enter Indian ports ....
Incidentally, it has now been discov-
ered that what we sold was not an operating
~~ ~~
Topaz but a stand-testing model. By ron-
ducting tests with this model, the Penta-
gon, which bought it for 7.5 million dol-
lars, expects to obtain an economic benefit
in the hundreds of millions.
*See a so t e Daily SNAP, January 16, 1992,
p. 1, col. 2
(SNAP 920505)
Author: Tsarev, I.
Title: NEW BOOK PROMPTS CALL FOR DIS-
CLOSURE OF PSYCHOLOGICAL-WEAPONS R&D
Primary Source: Trud, Apri 10, 1992, No.
61 (21585), p. 4, cols. 5-7
Extract: An ultrasecret experiment of Ame-
rican military services which was aimed at
the possible use of telepathy for their
purposes was described in an article by
Jacques Berger entitled "Thought Transmis-
sion --~ A Milit