Declassified CIA documents reveal a secret study that appears to confirm reincarnation is a real thing that exists. The study, conducted by United States Army Intelligence in 1983, asserts “consciousness never dies.”
The 29-page report titled “Analysis and Assessment of The Gateway Process” was apparently declassified by the CIA in 2003, but is only now being widely circulated online. It was written by U.S. Army Lieutenant Colonel Wayne M. McDonnell.
The study was commissioned to evaluate the Monroe Institute’s Gateway Experience, which at one point was a secretive project. Now available to anyone with $1,120 to spend, the 8-week program, according to the institute’s website, “takes you from the physical waking state, through deep relaxation, and ultimately into unexplored dimensions of your consciousness.”
“The ‘Gateway Experience’ is a training system designed to bring enhanced strength, focus, and coherence to the amplitude of brainwave output between the left and right hemispheres so as to alter consciousness, moving it outside the physical sphere so as to ultimately escape even the restrictions of space and time,” the 1983 CIA report explained. “The participant then gains to the various levels of intuitive knowledge which the universe offers.”
“Consciousness is energy and it exists outside of our understanding of reality,” McDonnell wrote in the declassified report.
“There is a sound and rational basis in terms of physical science parameters for considering Gateway to be plausible in terms of its essential objectives,” he also stated. “Intuitional insights of not only personal but of a practical and professional nature would seem to be within the bounds of reasonable expectations.”
The report also suggested memories and experiences from our lives are carried forward in reincarnation. This idea was bolstered by studies on children under the age of five who claimed to have “memories of a previous life they claim to have lived.”
Why was the United States government interested in studying such a thing? For psychic spying, of course. They wanted to know if shifting someone’s consciousness “outside the physical sphere so as to ultimately escape even the restrictions of time and space” would allow them to clandestinely spy on our enemies.
This was of special interest to Major General Albert Stubblebine III, head of U.S. Army Intelligence and Security Command (INSCOM) and a leading proponent of understanding and utilizing psychic warfare.
A previously declassified CIA documents from 1984 discussed the potential for using psychic phenomena such as remote viewing, where certain people are gifted with the ability to see a distant or unseen subject using just their minds.
In that study, remote viewers described seeing a dying “elder race” consisting of “very tall, thin” creatures on Mars.
In the 1990s, Russian scientists supposedly trained people to contact aliens using remote viewing in an effort to reverse-engineer and duplicate their advanced technology.