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Secret CIA program claimed to have found alien civilization on dark side of the moon: 'They look like us'

Secret CIA program claimed to have found alien civilization on dark side of the moon: 'They look like us'

Daily Mail​2 days ago

As the US prepares to send astronauts back to the moon, a CIA file has resurfaced that claims to have found life there more than 25 years ago.
In the 1970s and 80s, the CIA conducted experiments with individuals who claimed they could perceive information about distant objects, events, or people, a process known as 'remote viewing.'
The experience of remote viewer Ingo Swann was first revealed in 1998 when he explained how his psychic episode took him to the dark side of the moon, a region that always faces away from Earth and out of sight from human eyes.
That's where the remote reviewer made a shocking discovery: towers, buildings, and human-like aliens working at a secret complex on the moon's surface.
Disturbingly, Swann said government officials knew the aliens had a base there, and these humanoids could actually sense his presence as he viewed them with his mind from 238,000 miles away.
He claimed that a race of aliens that 'looked exactly like us' erected several giant towers on the moon. One was the size of the United Nations building in New York.
Swann, who died in 2013, made the shocking claims in his book 'Penetration: The Question of Extraterrestrial and Human Telepathy' released in 1998.
Despite Swann's detailed claims, there has never been any tangible proof of alien bases or life on the moon discovered by lunar missions led by the US, Russia, China, Japan, and India.
The famed member of Project Stargate, the CIA's remote viewing operation created in the 1970s, said that this amazing incident was not part of his regular work with the top secret program.
Swann wrote how he received a phone call in February 1975 from intelligence agents in Washington DC, asking for his help with another secret project.
A meeting was set up between Swann and a mysterious government operative known as Mr Axelrod.
Swann had a hood placed over his head and was instructed not to speak or ask any questions as he was taken by helicopter to an underground base.
Once there, Mr Axelrod gave the remote viewer a very simple task: 'We want you to go to the Moon for us, and describe what you see.'
However, Swann was also told that he could not reveal anything he saw in that vision for 'at least 10 years.'
When the CIA operative-turned-author was finally able to share his psychic vision, the description he gave was jaw-dropping.
'I found towers, machinery, lights of different colors, strange-looking buildings,' Swann wrote in the 1998 tell-all.
'I found bridges whose function I couldn't figure out. There were a lot of domes of various sizes,' he continued.
Swann noted that the aliens appeared to be all male and did not wear any clothing. They were digging holes into the moon's craters during some kind of mining or earth-moving operation.
One thing he did not expect to see was two of the aliens spotting his consciousness viewing the secret moon base.
'Two of them pointed in my direction,' Swann explained. 'How could they do that… unless… they have some kind of high psychic perceptions, too?'
It was at that moment Mr Axelrod ended the remote viewing session he recruited Swann for.
However, Swann revealed that the news of an alien takeover on the moon did not phase Axelrod or other intelligence officials.
The remote viewer then questioned his recruiters about why NASA or the US military haven't gone back to the moon since 1972.
His questions stumbled upon the unnerving truth: 'They somehow have told you to stay away. That's why you are resorting to psychic perceptions. They are not friendly, are they?' Swann asked Axelrod.
The operative reportedly told him that he was 'approximately correct… but not completely so.'
Swann's remote viewing revelations now bring a serious question to the Trump Administration's renewed focus on sending astronauts to space instead of robots: what will we find on the moon?
On May 1, the Trump Administration slashed $6 billion that would have paid for research, operations on the International Space Station, and future missions, including the Mars Sample Return (MSR) mission.
At the same time, the cuts will allow NASA to allocate over $1 billion to manned space missions, ensuring 'that America's human space exploration efforts remain unparalleled, innovative, and efficient.'
The White House proposal emphasizes the importance of NASA beating China back to the moon and putting the first humans on Mars, with the latter being the overarching goal of Elon Musk's spaceflight company, SpaceX.
Here on Earth, congress continues to hold public hearings regarding the potential presence of extraterrestrial life in space, on Earth, and potentially on the moon.

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