REUTERS ARTICLE FROM DATA BASE SEARCH. 'KEYWORD - PSYCHIC'

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According to a report from the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), there are concerns that the Soviet Union is conducting psychotronic research that could potentially be used as a weapon against groups and leaders. Some skeptics dismiss these reports as disinformation, while mainstream scientists reject psychic research. However, there have been tests conducted where psychics accurately described military bases and nuclear plants in the Soviet Union. The CIA has not commented on whether they have conducted similar tests. The report also mentions a Soviet program that includes mind-over-matter experiments and psychokinesis. It describes experiments where a psychic named Nina Kulagina affected the heartbeat of a frog and was able to move or levitate objects through mind power. There are concerns that these abilities could be used against human targets and to steal military documents. Soviet scientists have also reported experiments where psychics hypnotized people telepathically from hundreds of miles away, raising concerns about potential hypnosis against nuclear missile silos. The report also mentions Soviet research on brain energy and a machine developed to extract energy from the brain.

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Body:  5TH STORY of Level 2 printed in KWIC format.
 Approved For Release 2000/08/10: CIA-RDP96-007918000200230012-9
 Copyri~h`~"-9?85  Reuters  Ltd
 SECTION: Washington Dateline
 LENGTH: 931 words
 BYLINE: By Christopher Hanson
 DATELINE: WASHINGTON, Nov 8
 KEYWORD: PSYCHIC
 BODY:
 . stuff of science fiction -- but a U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA)
 report expresses fear that a major Soviet "psychotronic" research effort may be
 developing just such mental powers.
 "Soviet and Czech psychotronic research ... has powerful potential for use as
 an effective weapon against groups of men and leaders," according to the report,
 a copy of which was provided to Reuters by a private source.
 Some skeptics have dismissed reports about Soviet psychic experiments as
 "disinformation" aimed at confusing the West. Many mainstream scientists reject
 psychic research.
 . tests in which psychics, sitting in a laboratory and given map
 coordinates of military bases and nuclear plants in the Soviet Union, described
 those sites in detail that was consistent with CIA data.
 A CIA spokesman would not comment on whether or not such tests had been ...
 ... years SRI has been carrying out a multi-million dollar series of U.S.
 government experiments in so-called "remote viewing", which they describe as
 "the perception of events, objects or people which are hidden from the five
 senses."
 In these experiments, they say, a psychologist would sit with a ...
 ... pins -- were remarkably accurate, the evident result of some telepathic
 mental process not yet understood.
 Targ told Reuters Soviet scientists have shown great interest in their
 research, have met with them in the United States and invited them to the
 Soviet Union for talks. The Soviets were especially interested in whether a way
 could be found to screen off secrets from psychic intrusion.
 The DIA report, "Soviet and Czechoslovakian Parapsychology Research", is
 based largely on Soviet scientific literature and describes a large-scale
 Kremlin program including mind-over-matter experiments, a field known as
 psychokinesis.
 Approved For Release 2000/08/10: CIA-RDP96-007918000200230012-9
 Reuters Ltd., November 10, 1985
 Approved For Release 2000/08/10: CIA-RDP96-007918000200230012-9
 It said in one set of experiments a Soviet psychic named Nina Kulagina stood
 in a laboratory beside the heart of a frog, which had been surgically removed
 and placed ...
 ... beat entirely," the report said.
 Kulagina's ability "might be used against human targets," the report said. It
 said Soviet scientists had reported extensively on experiments in which psychics
 moved or levitated objects through mind-power, a skill that could be used to
 "deactivate power supplies or to steal military documents."
 Larissa Vilenskaya, a scientist who says she particiapted in Soviet psychic
 studies for 10 years before emigrating to the United States, wrote in a recent
 book that Kulagina managed to affect human heartbeats in a number of
 experiments.
 The report said in other experiments reported by Soviet scientists, including
 Vilenskaya, psychics hypnotized people hundreds of miles away telepathically. It
 said some western experts are concerned that such hypnosis could be used against
 "U.S. or allied personel in (nuclear) missile silos."
 Much of the Soviet research described in the report deals with a theory that
 psychic abilities stem from a farm of brain energy that can be identified and
 studied.
 Soviet scientists have developed a machine which they say can extract energy
 from the brain, and report that when flies were exposed to a beam of such energy
 they " ...
 Approved For Release 2000/08/10: CIA-RDP96-007918000200230012-9