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Did the CIA Secretly Find the Ark of the Covenant Using Psychic Powers?

A declassified 1988 document reveals a CIA remote viewer claimed to locate the biblical Ark—guarded by otherworldly beings beneath the Middle East.

LANGLEY, Va. — A 1988 CIA document from Project Sun Streak claims a psychic pinpointed the Ark of the Covenant—a biblical relic lost for centuries—hidden underground in the Middle East, guarded by “entities.” It’s a far-out tale, but the agency’s Stargate Program racked up real finds with remote viewing, from Soviet subs to Iraqi missiles.

The Ark’s story starts around 1445 BC, per Exodus 25. Crafted from acacia wood and gold, it held the Ten Commandments, built by Moses on God’s orders at Mount Sinai, a sacred chest for Israel’s tribes.

History says it rested in the Jerusalem Temple until 587 BC. Babylonian invaders sacked the city, and the Ark vanished—some say spirited to Ethiopia, others buried under the Temple Mount, per historian Flavius Josephus.

The CIA file, declassified in 2001, describes a psychic seeing a gold box in a “dark, wet” spot near “mosque domes.” The Daily Mail revived it March 26, 2025, noting “six-winged angels” atop, matching Exodus 37’s kerubim, though no dig ensued.

Remote viewing began in the 1970s, born from Cold War rivalry. The CIA, spooked by Soviet psychic research, launched Stargate in 1978, spending $20 million through 1995, per files on CIA.gov.

Its manual, “Controlled Remote Viewing,” lays out a six-stage method—coordinates, sketches, detailed impressions. Released in 1985, it trained viewers at Fort Meade, Maryland, and sits in the CIA’s FOIA archive.

In 1974, psychic Pat Price nailed a Soviet nuclear site in Kazakhstan. Given coordinates, he drew a crane and gantry, later confirmed by spy satellites, per a 2000 Psychology of the Psychic study.

Joseph McMoneagle scored big in 1979. He located a crashed Soviet Tu-95 bomber in Africa within miles, earning a Legion of Merit, he told The Guardian in 2003.

That year, McMoneagle sketched a Soviet Typhoon-class sub under construction. His double-hulled design with angled missile tubes stunned the National Security Council—later verified, per CIA records.

During the 1991 Gulf War, Stargate tracked Iraqi Scud missiles. Viewers pinpointed hidden launchers, aiding U.S. strikes, though precision varied, per a 1995 CIA review.

Flaws dogged the program. The 1995 review found a 5-15% edge over chance—significant but not reliable enough, shutting Stargate down.

Yet, hits persisted. In 1994, viewers guided inspectors to North Korea’s plutonium stockpiles, said Edwin May, Stargate’s research head, in a 2017 CIA note.

The Ark vision fits—vague but vivid, with “Arabic speakers” and a ceremonial vibe. It’s unproven; a 2013 FOIA response found no hard Ark evidence beyond psychic notes.

The manual demands rigor—filtering “noise” like guesses, training 22 peak viewers. It’s no magic; it’s a system, honed over decades.

Skeptics like historian David Marks dismiss it as “subjective delusion” in 2000—no Ark’s surfaced. Ethiopia’s Aksum church still claims it, unshown to outsiders.

The CIA hedges too. “No actionable intelligence” came from the Ark session, per its files.

For discerning readers, it’s a double take. The Ark’s ancient loss meets remote viewing’s Cold War wins—strange, yes, but not all fiction.

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