dooo doo doo doo doo doo - crg 
 
 
_US  Army toyed with telepathic ray gun - tech - 21 March 2008 - New 
Scientist  Tech_ 
(http://technology.newscientist.com/article/dn13513-us-army-toyed-with-telepathic-ray-gun.html)
  
12:00 21 March 2008  NewScientist.com news service   David Hambling 
 
A recently declassified US Army report on the biological  effects of 
non-lethal weapons reveals outlandish plans for "ray gun" devices,  which would 
cause 
artificial fevers or beam voices into people's  heads. 
The report titled "Bioeffects Of Selected Nonlethal Weapons" was  released 
under the US Freedom of Information Act and is _available on this website_ 
(http://www.freedomfchs.com/usarmyrptonmicrowavefx.pdf)  (pdf). The DoD  has 
confirmed to New Scientist that it released the documents, which detail five  
different "maturing non-lethal technologies" using microwaves, lasers and  
sound. 
Released by US Army Intelligence and Security Command at Fort Meade,  
Maryland, US, the 1998 report gives an overview of what was then the state of  
the 
art in directed energy weapons for crowd control and other  applications. 
A word in your ear
Some of the technologies are conceptual, such as an electromagnetic  pulse 
that causes a seizure like those experienced by people with epilepsy.  Other 
ideas, like a microwave gun to "beam" words directly into people's ears,  have 
been tested. It is claimed that the so-called "Frey Effect" – using  
close-range 
microwaves to produce audible sounds in a person's ears – has been  used to 
project the spoken numbers 1 to 10 across a lab to  volunteers'. 
In 2004 the US Navy funded research into using the Frey effect to _project 
sound that caused "discomfort" into the ears of  crowds_ 
(http://www.navysbirprogram.com/NavySearch/Summary/summary.aspx?pk=F5B07D68-1B19-4235-B140-950CE2E19D0
8) . 
The report also discusses a microwave weapon able to produce a  disabling 
"artificial fever" by heating a person's body. While tests of the idea  are not 
mentioned, the report notes that the necessary equipment "is available  today". 
It adds that while it would take at least fifteen minutes to achieve the  
desired "fever" effect, it could be used to incapacitate people for almost "any 
 
desired period consistent with safety." 
Less exotic technologies discussed include laser dazzlers and a sound  source 
loud enough to disturb the sense of balance. Both have been realised in  the 
years since the report was written. The US army uses laser dazzlers in Iraq,  
while the Long Range Acoustic Device has military and civilian users, and has  
been used on one occasion to _repel  pirates off Somalia_ 
(http://technology.newscientist.com/channel/tech/mg18825291.600-hitech-weaponry-battles-piracy-on-
the-high-seas.html) . 
However, the report does not mention any trials of weapons for  producing 
artificial fever or seizures, or beaming voices into people's  heads. 
Potentially torturous
_Steve Wright_ 
(http://www.leedsmet.ac.uk/international/05CEF8F77F96438ABEC44CD44316AA43.htm) 
, a security expert at Leeds  Metropolitan University, UK, 
warns that the technologies described could be used  for torture. In 1998 the 
European Parliament passed a motion banning potentially  dangerous incapaci
tating technologies that interfere with the human  brain. 
"The epileptic seizure inducing device is grossly irresponsible and  should 
never be fielded," says Steve Wright "We know from similar [chemically]  
artificially-induced fits that the victim subsequently remains "potentiated" 
and  
may spontaneously suffer epileptic fits again after the initial  attack." 
The acoustic energy device that affects the ear canals, disrupting  the 
motion sense, may require dangerously loud sound levels to be effective,  
points 
out Juergen Altmann, a physicist at Dortmund University, Germany, who is  
interested in new military technologies. 
"[There is] inconsistency between the part that says "interesting"  effects 
occur at 130-155 dB and the Recovery/Safety section that says that 115  dB is 
to be avoided - without commenting on the  difference."
 
============
Peace, Hugs, and Purrs   
Carolyn Rose Goyda
Missouri, USA
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED])  
















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