CIA uploads millions of classified documents to its website, including information on UFOs and psychic powers

The 'STAR GATE' remote viewing programme aimed to explore whether humans could be taught to be psychic

Andrew Griffin
Wednesday 18 January 2017 07:18 EST
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A janitor mops the floor at the headquarters of the Central Intelligence Agency
A janitor mops the floor at the headquarters of the Central Intelligence Agency (BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP/Getty Images)

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The CIA is putting its secret history online, uploading millions of newly declassified documents.

The documents include previously unseen information about the agency's hunt for UFOs and its work on the "Star Gate" project, which tried to teach humans to become psychic and see through walls.

One document, for instance, describes that project in detail. It shows how the CIA recruited volunteers to go through a programme of training that would let people access information without any of the usual means, and which would be used as a weapon for which there is "no known defense".

The US spy agency will put up 12 million pages into its online "reading room", where people will be able to search through the documents.

The previously classified pages include private briefs given to presidents and the information that is passed between its operatives. They cover everything from the Cold War and Vietnam to relatively modern problems like terrorism.

That means that people can see its history from its formation until the early 90s, for now. None of that is selected, the agency claims, meaning that it shows some of the agency and the US government's most controversial episodes.

The CIA has to declassify records that are 25 years old, unless they are made exempt. That means that each year it releases a whole new set of documents.

But this year that has been accompanied by the first time that the documents have been made available online. Until now, the documents could only be read on four terminals inside the US National Archives, in their original format.

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