A 53 page paper, dated 2009, authored by Dr. Christopher (Kit) Green, titled “Clinical Medical Acute & Subacute Field Effects On Human Dermal & Neurological Tissues” has just been revealed, in an article by researcher TimMcMillan.
Front cover of the paper |
It appears to be the document, which the Defense Intelligence Agency
(DIA) listed as one of the 38 Defense Intelligence Reference Documents (DIRD),
products of their 2008-2012 Advanced Aerospace Weapon System Applications
Program (AAWSAP.) It is not in the format of an AAWSAP DIA DIRD, several of
which have been released previously.
However, the document appears to be the paper submitted by Green, which would later be issued as a DIA DIRD. Having said that, after acquiring a full copy of the Green DIRD, the purpose of this blog is to take a look at its contents and provide some commentary on what it contains. The quotes are from the paper, the notes are mine.
A DIA issued DIRD |
However, the document appears to be the paper submitted by Green, which would later be issued as a DIA DIRD. Having said that, after acquiring a full copy of the Green DIRD, the purpose of this blog is to take a look at its contents and provide some commentary on what it contains. The quotes are from the paper, the notes are mine.
The paper
Chapter one: “Definition of Topic and Domain of the study.”
“The
objective of the overall program for which this paper has been prepared is to
understand the physics and the engineering of advanced aerospace weapon system
applications in the future, eg from now through to the year 2050. This study
addresses the clinical medical signs and symptoms and biophysics of injury
known and expected from near field (mostly ultra-high), NIEMR Microwave,
Thermal, from unintentional exposure to anomalous systems.” (Page 6.)
Note 1: This
clearly refers to the Defense Intelligence Agency’s AAWSAP put out for solicitation in August 2008.
First page of the DIA solicitation |
Chapter two: “Background: What is thought
to cause harm?”
“There is a
relatively comprehensive literature on reported deleterious effects from
exposure at close ranges to perceived anomalous aircraft of apparent advanced
design.” (Page 9.)
Note 2: Here,
Green refers to John Schuessler’s work; including the Cash-Landrum case; and
his 1996 catalogue “UFO-Related HumanPhysiological Effects.” In addition, the work of Jim McCampbell, in this
same area, is referenced.
“That is,
it is of particular interest in a threat analysis program, regardless of
whether anomalous-craft-induced physiological effects of humans are intended
or not, to ascertain probable mechanisms…” (Page 10.)
Note 3: “A threat
analysis program.” Nowhere in this paper, does Green refer to the Advanced
Aerospace Threat Identification Program (AATIP.) References to the program are
clearly to AAWSAP.
Another clear reference to AAWSAP appears on page 12:
"Yet, while directionally indicative of interest and intention to understand, the material does not rise to the quality of the initiative of this ADVANCED AEROSPACE WEAPON SYSTEM APPLICATIONS PROGRAM in which this paper serves as one of several dozen analytical examples."
Clear reference to AAWSAP
Another clear reference to AAWSAP appears on page 12:
"Yet, while directionally indicative of interest and intention to understand, the material does not rise to the quality of the initiative of this ADVANCED AEROSPACE WEAPON SYSTEM APPLICATIONS PROGRAM in which this paper serves as one of several dozen analytical examples."
Classified studies
Speaking of
classified studies of the effects of RF radiation on humans, Green writes:
“Classified
information exists that is highly pertinent to the study of this subject, and
only a small part of the classified literature has been released.”
Green then
goes on to review the large volume of existing open source literature about the
effects of effects from exposure to certain known radiation sources. He
concludes:
“In
summary, the evidence is solid that the military and aerospace industries’ own
classified, proprietary and unclassified literature, as well as the certain
evidence of many aerospace RF-related microwave, antenna-related, High-Power
(HP) microwave, infrasonic/sonic, and thermal (from any source) energy
deposition accidents (vide infra) is congruent with the anomalous vehicle
reports. This means that one cannot discount the claimed and often observed
imagery of being real-world (although current and likely advanced beyond public
information) technologies, and which are causes of these effects and injuries.”
(Page 18.)
Note 4: In short,
the effects from close range encounters with UAP match those effects from
exposure to known radiation sources.
Chapter three: “How damage occurs.”
Here, Green
examines how damage occurs from exposure to conventional source of RF energy.
Examples of damage are heating, burning, headaches, dizziness, cardiac
palpitations, severe anxiety, etc.
“There have
been several studies (encompassing about 100 reported cases during acute
accidental exposures in military aerospace and communications situations) that
have collected data on human exposures to RF of fixed and broad bandwidths.
Comparison of this medical literature presents striking overlaps to the claimed
clinical injury patterns of several hundred near-field case of anomalous and
hostile events being currently analysed for a companion study to this, as
described in Appendices One, Two & Three.” (Page 23.)
Note 5: Appendix
1 is a short discussion of the Schuessler catalog of “UFO-Related Human
Physiological Effects;" including the provision of a “Table of effects
frequency.” In 1996, Schuessler produced a catalog of 365 selected cases from
the time frame 1873-1994.
Appendix 2
is a partial listing of 96 cases from the UFO literature, prepared by
“Green/Morris” with a time frame of 1952 - Sept 1971 of UAP cases which the
authors have coded for ICD codes. [International Statistical Classification of
Diseases and Related Health Problems.] This is almost certainly related to the
database of such events which Green, in a 2018 interview with author Annie
Jacobsen, stated that he had been compiling. There are three Australian events
in this list (pages 49 and 50), namely:
1. 1952/07/22 Australia, NSW, Sydney.
93. 70/8 or 9 Australia, Sydney, New South Wales
95. 1971/08/01 Australia, Gladstone, Australia
1.
Event 1 was
a widely seen green ball of light in the sky. I tracked down a newspaper report
in the “Daily Telegraph” Sydney newspaper, Tuesday 22 July 1952 page 3. There
appears: “In Sydney, Albert Thomas, 33 of Regent Street, Redfern a night
watchman at the NSW railway’s tarpaulin factory, Enfield, said he believed that
the light was a flying saucer. “As soon as I stepped out of the door my arms
started to tingle. Then an electric shock ran through the whole of my body.”
However, from reading the rest of the article, it would seem to me that the green
ball of light was a fireball, and thus would not meet Green’s near-field of
10’s of meters distance.
Event 93
was an apparent abduction investigated by this author. It involved a man who
experienced an apparent loss of time after seeing a red-orange light at an
ill-defined distance. There were no apparent medical injuries involved.
Event 95
was an apparent abduction with effects to a motor vehicle, and “time
distortion” to the witnesses. I could find no details of physical injuries
being reported by the witnesses.
None of the
three Australian cases should really be in such a catalogue.
Appendix 3
provides comment about ICD codes followed by a description of the Vallee
classification system for anomalous phenomena.
“What cannot
be overly emphasized, is that when one looks at the literature of anomaly
cases, including UFO claims from the most reliable sources, the extent and
degree of acute high but not necessarily chronic low-level injuries are
consistent across patients who are injured, compared to witnesses in the
far-field, who are not.” (Page 27.)
Note 6: By
near-field Green, defines this on page 28 as “within 10’s of meters.”
“There are
no significant differences in either the reported acute effects (symptoms) or
the physician observed (signs) between the case of the three antenna engineers
or the Cash-Landrum cases.” (Page 27.)
Note 7: For a comprehensive
review of the Cash-Landrum case, see the extensive work of researcher Curt Collins at the Blue BlurryLines blog.
Chapter four: “Applicable subacute injury effects.”
Here, Green
examines the established literature, taking an in depth look at what is known.
Chapter five: “Cognitive and neural injury mechanisms and effects.”
Green looks
at the literature on the possible mechanisms by which RF can alter neuro
chemical processes.
In summary
In this
paper, Green explores what is medically known about the exposure to various
known radio frequency energy sources; and its effects on humans, animals and
tissue samples. He then compares these effects with those reported by
individuals who have a close encounter with UAP.
Preface to the paper
Note 8: In the
“Preface” to the document, Green provides the following quote, citing a
November 2007 “Proposal to Analyse Probable ET Generated Specific Near-Field
Electromagnetic Emissions.” The proposal was “to Puthoff/Hathaway.” I have not
come across this proposal before. An Internet search failed to locate such a paper.
“As an
example of the breadth of the study, certain characteristics of the fields
associated with exotic propulsion can with near certainty be gleaned from
archival records of their effects on human physiology. Therefore, under
consideration is the outsourcing of a medical analysis of the archival data to
ascertain probable mechanisms, field strengths etc., involved in the generation
of he reported physiological effects.
The
intention is to explicate the coupling mechanisms for communicating to human
tissue possible in the context of traditional physics from exogenous sources,
with as yet unknown signal generation and focusing. The pilot project proposed
does not require that the coupled physics be explained only modeled.”
George D.Hathaway, is a Canadian engineer, who operates Hathaway Research International.
Hathaway authored two of the 38 DIA DIRDs, namely, “Superconductivity in
Gravity Research” and “Maverick vs Corporate Research Cultures.”
Overall
comment
As this is a 2009 dated paper, it throws some additional light on the work which Green was engaged in between 2005 and 2009, specifically, examining the effects on humans due to close encounters with UAP.
It also demonstrates that the AAWSAP, did indeed concern the subject of UAP. Green, in his DIRD, uses seven different terms, namely:
* Anomalous aircraft
* Anomalous craft
* Anomalous vehicles
* UFO
* Aerospace objects
* Anomalous aerospace objects
* Anomalous aerospace vehicles.
Hi there! I´m a huge fan of the blog Unidentified Aerial Phenomena - scientific research and Blue Blurry Lines. I´ve finish now the Christopher Green article for AAWSAP: "Clinical Medical Acute & Subacute Field Effects on Human Dermal & Neurological Tissues". I think a lot of the strange phenomenon the skinwalker ranch people report, are very like, the efects of the electromagnetic radiation on the human brain, that Kit Green says exist, in so called psychotronic warfare! Perhaps the Ranch is nothing more than a human experimentation. The radiation exists so all the fear and "voices in my head" could be the effects of this radiation. Thanks for the time
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