Gakona, Alaska’s massive ionosphere-trained antenna array has returned to the spotlight, with the biggest target yet, in its sights—the planet Jupiter, by way of Earth’s moon.
Back in the 1990s the High-frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) was launched, ostensibly as an ionospheric research program funded by the U.S. Air Force, U.S. Navy, the University of Alaska Fairbanks, and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). In Angels Don’t Play this HAARP, the best-selling book by Atlantis Rising Magazine columnist Jeane Manning and Dr. Nick Begich, argued that HAARP might actually be an attempt to weaponize weather utilizing advanced psychotronic (parapsychological) technology. Manning and Begich were not alone in their opinion.
According to Wikipedia, one Russian military journal even wrote that such ionospheric testing would “trigger a cascade of electrons that could flip Earth’s magnetic poles.”
The Alaska state legislature and the European Parliament held hearings about HAARP, the latter citing environmental concerns.
Former Governor of Minnesota, ex-professional wrestler, and documentary maker Jesse Ventura questioned whether the government was using the site to manipulate the weather or to bombard people with mind-controlling radio waves. An Air Force spokeswoman said Ventura made an official request to visit the research station but was rejected. “He and his crew showed up at HAARP anyway and were denied access,” she said.
In 10 days worth of unprecedented experiments in October, 2022, researchers attempted what they called a ‘Jupiter bounce,’or “Interplanetary Ionosonde.” According to a statement from the University of Alaska Fairbanks, the experiment was “the largest active remote sensing operation in history,” and was intended to test HAARP’s ability to bounce signals off the ionosphere of Jupiter, and also to determine how well receivers at the University of New Mexico’s Long Wavelength Array could receive such reflected signals.
The stated purpose was to test the coordination of military and scientific facilities intended for eventual study of near-Earth asteroids, especially those that could be a hazard to Earth.
Knowing an asteroid’s composition can influence the type of defense to be used, the statement said.
The experiment consisted of transmitting a signal from HAARP to the moon and receiving the reflected signal at the California and New Mexico sites.
The possibility of ‘psychotronics’ manipulation first made news in the 1970s, when many reports surfaced suggesting that the U.S. government had developed, and actually deployed, psychotronic weapons that made mind control of targeted individuals, and even large groups, possible. Much research, and even news reports argued for the seriousness of the topic, but the idea was relentlessly ridiculed by the mainstream media, and has since been relagated to the realm of fringe conspiracy theory—not to be taken seriously by the public. Still, there were many, including the Princeton University Anomalies Lab, the Stanford Research Institute, the Institute of Noetic Sciences, and others, who took the subject very seriously and devoted considerable research to it.
According to NASA, HAARP consists of 180 antennas designed to transmit signals into the ionosphere, which extends from 30 miles (48 kilometers) to 600 miles (965 km) above sea level and is seen as the area where Earth’s atmosphere meets space. The ionosphere plays an important role in radio transmission, as it reflects radio waves. Many satellites occupy this region of the atmosphere, which is heavily influenced by solar weather.


















