
The Extremely High Frequency (EHF) band, specifically at near 95 GHz (a wavelength of 3.2 mm), is not only used by 5G but is documented by the military to be used in its reported Active Denial Systems (ADS) technologies. Designed to “heat” the outer layer of the body using electromagnetic millimetre waves, by beaming a focused signal towards targets within a specific geographical area. A “microwave oven” effect, produced by 30,000 kW – 100,000 kW and above of power, depending on the distance required (measuring 250 metres – 1,000 metres at these power outputs). Vibrating water particles and heating them into steam, effectively cooking its target. Devices are advertised as using a 2 metre wide beam, and a 95 GHz frequency has a penetration depth in human skin of 0.4 mm, said to cause a target to experience unbearable pain within seconds. On its highest power setting inflicting second to third degree burns and dermal necrosis in 2 seconds. Potentially doing the same at a lower setting if triggered for a longer duration. It’s asserted, however, not to directly affect internal organs.

The book ‘Millietre Waves, Lasers, Acoustics for Non-Lethal Weapons? Physics Analyses and Inferences’ states: “Millimeter-wave radiation of 100 kW maximum power is produced by a gyrotron tube with a superconducting magnet of 3.7 Tesla, cooled by a cryo-refrigerator.”
The methods used to test the biological effects of millimetre waves in skin dosimetry evaluate the absorption and penetration depth in the epidermis and dermis. The calculations rely upon “reflection, power density (PD), penetration depth (delta), and specific absorption rate (SAR).”
The military applications of directed-energy weapons (DEWs) date back to the legend of the Mirrors of Archimedes. An ingenious ploy to use a mirror with an adjustable focal length, or series of mirrors focused on a common point, to direct sunlight towards invading ships and set them on fire. An experiment by MIT showed that such an idea was at least a possibility.


Robert Watson-Watt of the Radio Research Station was tasked by the British Air Ministry in 1935 to study the feasibility of a “death ray.” He however concluded that it wasn’t possible…but advised on the use of radio to detect aircrafts, spearheading the development of radar in Britain.
A fictional “engine-stopping ray” was also devised by elements of British intelligence during WW2 as a means of tying up the resources of Germany’s scientific researchers.
Axis engineers allegedly developed a sonic cannon that could cause fatal vibrations in target bodies. Using a methane gas combustion chamber, fed to two parabolic dishes pulse-detonated at roughly 44 Hz. A sound magnified by its dish reflectors, causing vertigo and nausea at 200 – 400 metres by vibrating the middle ear bones and shaking cochlear fluid inside the inner ear. At 50 – 200 metres distance acting on organ tissues and fluids, repeatedly compressing and releasing compressive resistant organs (the kidneys, spleen and liver). Affecting lung tissue only at close range.

The NSDAP became fascinated with “wonder weapons.” Attempting to use X-ray synchroton (a cyclic particle accelerator) beams as weapons, such as the Siemens-Schuckert developed Rehotron, a transformer with a torus-shaped secondary coil, later called a Betatron. The purpose of this reputedly failed prototype was to pre-ionise an aircraft’s ignition to serve as an anti-aircraft DEW.

Vladimir Gavreau’s innovations in instantly deadly sonic weapons have also been written-off as mythical by subsequent researchers attempting to replicate his work.
The USA reportedly used DEWs during the Iraq war to disrupt and disable electronics equipment and is accused of deploying ADS for crowd control there.
Military and even commercial cruise ships now commonly deploy Long Range Acoustic Device (LRAD) sonic weapons to ward off pirates.
Commonly listed bio-effects of “non-lethal” DEWs include: “Difficulty breathing; Disorientation; Nausea; Pain; Vertigo; Other systemic discomfort.”

Today it’s the European Space Agency that claims to posses a killer sonic weapon. Which by generating 154 dB using four large acoustic orifices (or horns) and using nitrogen gas, is capable of bursting eardrums, and at 185 – 200 dB purports to be capable of causing an air embolism in the lungs — before travelling to the heart and exploding it. Alternatively bursting the lungs due to the increased air pressure (acoustic waves increase in pressure the higher the energy and thus sound). Subject to frequency, amplitude and duration.
The American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine (AIUM) maintains that there’s “no proven biological effects associated with an unfocused sound beam with intensities below 100 mW/cm² SPTA (spatial peak temporal average) or focused sound beams below an intensity level of 1 mW/cm² SPTA.”
Sonic weapons were blamed by senior Western politicians as being the culprit of an “invisible threat.” Stemming from the Moscow Signal: a microwave transmission varying between 2.5 Ghz – 4 Ghz, recorded at only 5 microwatts per square centimetre. It was determined to be emitted by a Soviet apartment 100 metres away from a US embassy, and theorised to have been used to remotely trigger eavesdropping technology or for electronic jamming purposes (disabling US monitoring equipment), but subsequent testing apparently proved inconclusive. Others proposed it was intended to interfere with the health of the US embassy staff, and more paranoid sounding theories, even coming from some of the highest ranks of the US government, alluded to a mind control technique.

The US military’s still largely classified Project Bizarre was launched in 1965 as part of DARPA’s Project Pandora. A follow up to MKUltra (the CIA’s mind control program), with the stated purpose of analysing the Moscow Signal.
According to Ken L. Wheeler, a researcher of field theory and author of The Missing Secrets of Magnetism, these studies concluded that via upper-side or lower-side band microwave frequency manipulation, prolonged exposure could induce five negative emotional states: fear, anger, confusion, lethargy, and sadness. The US embassy in Moscow was fitted with electromagnetic protection by 1976, including wire-mesh “mosquito screens” placed on the windows.


Another strange incident was reported more recently in 2017 by US embassy staff in Cuba, who claimed to have experienced a “weird noise” described differently as “grinding metal” or “loud ringing,” leading to symptoms of headaches, memory loss, mental daze and deafness. Cuba was accused by the Trump regime of using sonic weapons against US diplomats, and over the following months more than 80 members of staff and their families echoed complaints of related symptoms.
Scientists at the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) asserted that microwave weapons were “a main suspect” (possibly due to harmonic sympathetic resonance) but there was no evidence found for this. Despite the lack of evidence, Beatrice Golomb of the University of California, published a study in MIT’s journal Neural Computation, ‘Diplomats’ Mystery Illness and Pulsed Radiofrequency/Microwave Radiation’, which assessed that pulsed radiofrequency/microwave radiation (RF/MW) exposure via the Frey effect was the source of injury.

Eventually these findings were dismissed by most scientists involved in investigating the event, identifying cricket noises and mass hysteria (aka conversion disorder) to be the cause. Conversion disorder is when fear is translated into physical symptoms and psychological contagion spreads. And fear was ramped up dramatically by the circumstances, politicians, and media. Exposure to neurotoxic pesticides was also suggested as another possibility. JAMA’s threshold for measuring brain trauma was seriously low and any attack mechanism would have needed to emit a sound that varied by individual, only affected embassy workers, and which stalked them wherever they went.

Around 50 million Americans (one in six) suffer from tinnitus – ringing in the ears. A type of phenomena that’s widely reported, taking the Taos Hum for example. The Frey effect, a perception of audible clicks, or even speech, attributed to pulsed modulated radio frequencies, as well as devices like the MEDUSA gun, are dismissed as “crazy” ideas by professor Kenneth Foster, the bioengineer who delineated the frey effect effects back in 1974: “Any kind of exposure you could give to someone that wouldn’t burn them to a crisp would produce a sound too weak to have any effect.”
A verdict supported by Bill Guy, a former professor at the University of Washington, who wrote a paper on the microwave auditory effect. “Guy says that experiments have demonstrated that radiation at 40 microjoules per pulse per square centimeter produces sound at zero decibels, which is just barely in hearing range. To produce sound at 60 decibels, or the sound of normal conversation, requires 40 watts per square centimeter of radiation. ‘That would kill you pretty fast,’ Guy says. Producing an unpleasant sound, at about 120 decibels, would take 40 million W/cm2 of energy. One milliwatt per square centimeter is considered to be the safety threshold.”
Guy concludes: “There’s a misunderstanding by the public and even some scientists about this auditory effect.” “There couldn’t possibly be a hazard from the sound, because the heat would get you first.”
This article forms a chapter of The Invisible Enemy book.