An aerial view of the HAARP facility
Starting in 1990 the groundwork for the HAARP facility was being laid by the US Air Force, US Navy, University of Alaska Fairbanks, and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) with the
alleged goal of analyzing the ionosphere and investigating the potential for developing ionospheric enhancement technology for radio communications and surveillance.
HAARP officially began construction in 1993 with BAE Systems Advanced Technologies as the primary contractor.
But nearly as soon as the HAARP facility was being constructed there were rumors circulating about it's true purpose, the prevailing theory being that it was an experimental weather manipulation facility; this theory does have evidence to back it up, so let's take a
look into those claims. Perhaps one of the earliest known and widely spread allegations against HAARP comes from the 1995 book titled 'Angels Don't Play This HAARP
', written by Jeane Manning and Nick Begich Jr. The book pushed the claim that HAARP was a US military facility designed to:
Furthermore, in the same year of 1995 the American physicist Bernard Eastlund known mostly for his co-invention of the fusion torch was interviewed for Popular Science on HAARP and raised numerous concerns about technical possibilities of the patent, they are as follows:
The most noteworthy thing to note in regards to HAARP has to be that in 1998 both the Alaska state legislature and the European Parliament held hearings about HAARP and it's potential environmental effects.
HAARP has been accused of causing numerous things over the years, including but not limited to; Hurricane Harvey, Hurricane Katrina, the 2023 Turkey Earthquakes, 2004 Asian Tsunami, Gulf War Syndrome, the Hum and in the local communities around the HAARP facility
even headaches, migraines, blackouts and seizures.
So really there are a lot of unanswered questions surrounding HAARP, none of which will ever be answered, at least by an official source.
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