CHINA LAKE:

BERKLAND
The Hiroshima A-Bomb had energy equivalent to a 5M quake, so it would be surprising if the Little Lake seismicity had any human cause, unless there were merely some sort of triggering release (a la Tesla.)

Little Lake and Ridgecrest have a long history of quakes, although this current swarm is about the most unusual I know of there.

HAYAKAWA
Phikent reported to us that there have been some strange jolts that began around 6 a.m. on Friday, March 6 around the Secret Base at China Lake Naval Air Warfare Testing site.

This is quite interesting because, strangely enough, Friday, March 6, 1998 was an interesting date. It was the day of 3.6, 1998 (three sixes = 666).

Also, on top of that, March 6, 1998 marked 666 more days to the year 2000!

What's more interesting is that the Congressional Panel on the Y2K sndrome just announced a couple of days ago from Washington, D.C., that the government must seriously start doing something about fixing the coming computer glitch. The Panel said that "we only have 666 more days" to fix the problem!! And this was reported in L.A. Times on Thursday.

Is this all just coincidence! Or, do they know more about what's coming than what we think?

from Norio

Not So Surprising Nuke-Earthquake News

Anchorwoman: "A Moscow newspaper reports that Russian scientists tried to harness earthquakes as a means of mass destruction, and the research continued under the new Russian government long after the Soviet Unioncollapsed."

Correspondent Mike Hornbrook: "The Moscow News called it 'Earthquakes Made To Order.' In a detailed article, the newspaper says research of the so-called tectonic weapons began under the Communists in the 1970s. By late 1987, the Soviet government ordered a major effort to develop such a weapon.

"It was code-named Project Mercury and Project Vulcan, and involved almost two dozen major scientific and manufacturing centers.

"The theory was that underground nuclear explosions could trigger earthquakes far from the site of the original blast. Researchers speculated the destructive force released would be many times greater than the nuclear blast, that it could be directed toward any point on earth and that there was no way to guard against it.

Rumble in the Outback

Aum's [Japanese terror cult] interest in weapons of mass destruction was considered serious enough to merit the launch of a special investigation by the US Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations. Chaired by Senator Sam Nunn, the committee spent five months conducting hundreds of interviews of "government and private individuals" and included classified briefings from numerous US intelligence agencies. Their 100-page report was published in October 1995.

The Nunn report, in addition to outlining Aum's large international membership and US $1billion plus finances, revealed the cult's fascination for so-called Tesla weapons ­ after their inventor Nikola Tesla. The report mentions Tesla's development of a "ray gun in the 1930's, which was actually a particle beam accelerator", and which was said to be able to "shoot down an airplane at 200 miles". Aum personnel also travelled to the Tesla Museum in Belgrade to research the so-called Tesla Coil ­ a device used for (amplifying?) alternating currents ­ and uncovered Tesla's work on "high energy voltage transmission and wave  amplification, which Tesla asserted could be used to  create seismological disturbances.

NOTES FROM ANONYMOUS BLACKOPS

I'll call a friend and check it out...thanks for the update...p.s. there are some RF weapons being tested out there...pretty nasty and unpredictable.

 . . .we air tested them but were restricted from testing below 25,000 ft. due to unknown consequenses...the air tests cause topiclal damage in higher terrain.

 . . .we did carry large power systems on the c130's...a mile long antenna stretched out the rear of the aircraft.

 . . .a rythmic wave which can cause havoc to anything it hits, problem was we don't have directional control from the air.

 . . . you think that Mir is falling apart because its old...no way...it keeps gettin hit.

ELECTRONIC COMBAT RANGE

The United States Navy's principal open air range for test and evaluation of airborne electronic combat systems.

RANGE SIGNAL DENSITY ENHANCEMENT (RSDE) SYSTEM

The lack of a realistic battlefield signal and pulse density environment to represent both threat and friendly emissions at open air electronic warfare (EW) ranges has long been identified as a limitation to scope for multiple EW programs by the Commander, Operational Test and Evaluation Force (COMOPTEVFOR). In the past, the dense radio frequency (RF) environment capability was tested only in laboratory facilities and the results were then extrapolated into open air EW range testing.

Through an engineering study conducted at NAWCWPNS, it was determined that this deficiency could be corrected at a modest cost by feeding a laboratory EW environment signal generator into a broadband transmitter (e.g., like an electronic countermeasures (ECM) transmitter) attached to a reference-system-servoed high-gain antenna. This device would readily provide a high-density EW signal background for EW system testing (all current radar modulations would be represented).

Electronic Warfare

Principles and employment of Electronic Warfare assets for Air Force personnel at all levels.

 HAARP

KENT STEADMAN

CyberSpace ORBIT