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    The Week

    The military's 'magic plan' to make enemies hallucinate

    Believe it or not, the armed forces have a long-standing relationship with illusionists. Now, $4 million is being used to look into sensory manipulation tactics

    As the military's technology arm, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) is charged with ushering in the future of field combat, developing everything from hypersonic planes to robotic allies. But a new project hinted at in the Pentagon's defense budget is piquing outsider interest thanks to some seemingly bewitching connotations: The agency is being granted $4 million for a project known simply as "Battlefield Illusion." Here's what we know about the military's "magic plan":

    What does the project call for?
    The goal is to develop a way to confuse the enemy with "auditory and visual" hallucinations to lend our troops a "tactical advantage," says Noah Shachtman at Wired. The project aims to use new technologies similar to the misdirection techniques utilized by magicians. 

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    And this is a real way to spend money?
    "Magicians and generals have had a long-standing relationship," says Shachtman. "Harry Houdini snooped on the German and Russian militaries for Scotland Yard. English illusionist Jasper Maskelyne is reported to have created dummy submarines and fake tanks to distract Rommel's army during World War II." And during the Cold War, the CIA paid magician John Mulholland $3,000 to write a manual on "misdirection, concealment, and stagecraft."

    Alright. But how will "Battlefield Illusion" trick enemies?
    It would likely use "optical technology" mounted onto vehicles to create on-field hallucinations, says Rob Waugh at Britain's Daily Mail.  The technology is said to be similar to "current measures designed to confuse radar systems" — such as electromagnetic manipulation — "but applied to human beings." 

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    What other types of technologies have they looked into?
    Other military contractors have been developing "invisibility cloaks" to hide the infrared signatures of military vehicles. In the past, both the UK and US governments have looked into weaponizing hallucinogens like LSD for combat use. And early in the war on terror, defense technology experts "floated the idea of a 'Voice of God' weapon," says Shachtman, which would have used "directed sound waves to convince would-be jihadis that Allah was speaking in their ears — and ordering them to put down their suicide belts." Sounds like magic, doesn't it?

    Sources: Daily Mail, Global Post, Wired

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    44 comments

    • Whatever.  •  Canal Winchester, Ohio  •  3 mths ago
      All warfare is deception.

      - General Sun Tzu
      • Mandy 3 mths ago
        Sun Tzu gets a lot of credit, but the Chinese really havent done too well fighting anybody except each other.
    • ES42  •  3 mths ago
      This is a really important article. In all seriousness...people need to be aware that this technology exists. Things are not always what they seem. Never forget.
      • bsquared959 3 mths ago
        I agree. Once they perfect the technology overseas they can use it on us.
    • RU Kidding  •  3 mths ago
      I heard that congress is testing this out on the American people... it's called CSPAN...
      • ES42 3 mths ago
        It's called COINTELPRO actually. And the victims are called Targeted Individuals or TI's. Also see Gang Stalking.
    • Timothy  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  3 mths ago
      So I'm guessing this is what they meant all along by the term "War on Drugs".
    • Shadow  •  Greenwood, Indiana  •  3 mths ago
      Well written article. Thanks.
    • b  •  3 mths ago
      What we really should do is smuggle millions of "Keeping with the Kardashians" and "Jersey Shore" DVDs into foreign countries. Then we can dumb down their population and finally get them addicted to junk food, fashion magazines, etc........ You know, like what's already happened here.
    • Windman  •  Surfside, California  •  3 mths ago
      Two word's, google MKULTRA.
    • Raft  •  3 mths ago
      Are they still staring at goats?
    • James Dogue  •  3 mths ago
      Our enemies have devised a different strategy. Comedians.
    • James  •  3 mths ago
      It's already in play, republicans are halucinating they have a candidate..
    • Someone unimportant  •  New York, New York  •  3 mths ago
      I think we have already gotten that kool-aid. Obama 2008
    • radiation  •  3 mths ago
      lololololol----thats the best they got voice of god--lololol--they are dumb and dangerous--but the robotic humanoids are the terminators we the people have not seen yet but their comming soon--
    • axeofgod  •  3 mths ago
      speaking from personal experience, violence and LSD do not mix... the last thing you need when you're trying to sort out a trip is the "fight or flight" response...
    • The Wiz  •  3 mths ago
      The military's 'magic plan' to make enemies hallucinate...

      They would save billions if they just dropped pictures of my ex-wife naked... any enemy soldiers still alive after the first glance at the photos would be too sick to fight!
    • St. Sassypants  •  3 mths ago
      Have they tried religion? The enemy will soon be handling snakes, seeing virgins in tortillas, giving away all their money to con artists, waiting in the desert for UFOs ...
    • EF  •  Irvine, California  •  3 mths ago
      LCD and shrooms...now both sides will have them
    • pj  •  3 mths ago
      I wonder if Teabaggers mind THIS waste of money?
    • James Dogue  •  3 mths ago
      America's enemies have devised a slightly different tactic. They use comedians.
    • dan r  •  3 mths ago
      i saw a film of the u.k. testing lsd. they had a good time but they were not effective at all. one soldier climbed a tree.
    • Mandy  •  Caledonia, Wisconsin  •  3 mths ago
      The best weapon in war is surprise. Four million dollars possibly well spent. What is that, the cost of a wing flap on a stealth fighter?