Sunday, September 7, 2025

The CIA and Its “Remote Viewing” of the Ark of the Covenant

The CIA and Its “Remote Viewing” of the Ark of the Covenant


1. The Declassified Document

In 1988, during a “remote viewing” experiment, an agent identified as Remote Viewer #32 was tasked with locating an unknown target. The result: the Ark of the Covenant. The document was declassified in the year 2000. (livenowfox.com)

2. What the Viewer Saw

According to the report, the agent experienced the following visions:

  • A container within another container, made of wood, gold, and silver, resembling a coffin, adorned with cherubim (seraphim). (amazingfacts.org)

  • A subterranean, dark and damp location, somewhere in the Middle East, near mosque domes, with men dressed in white, dark-haired, and dark-eyed. (nypost.com, livenowfox.com)

  • Mentions of “protective entities,” capable of destroying anyone attempting to open the Ark without authorization. It could only be opened when “the time is right,” despite its simple mechanical design. (nypost.com)

  • Its purpose was said to be to unite a people, tied to ceremony, memory, homage, resurrection, spiritual knowledge, and historical awareness. (livenowfox.com)

3. Project Sun Streak (Stargate)

This experiment was part of Project Sun Streak, one of the CIA’s subprograms within the broader Stargate Project, which explored psychic phenomena for intelligence gathering. The program ran from the 1970s to the early 1990s. (amazingfacts.org)

4. Critical and Skeptical Voices

One of the heavyweights in these experiments, Joe McMoneagle (Remote Viewer #1), expressed skepticism. He considered using remote viewing to search for unverifiable objects—such as ancient artifacts or UAPs—“a waste of time and resources.” He clarified that real proof must come with the physical object itself. (livenowfox.com)

The skeptic community has also reacted strongly, for instance on Reddit:

“It was supposedly found with ‘remote viewing,’ which, of course, is nonsense. The location is incredibly vague…” (reddit.com)

5. What Does Science Say?

Remote viewing is classified as pseudoscience. No robust scientific evidence supports its validity. While some studies claim “significant” statistics, others conclude the results are vague, irrelevant, or inconsistent. (en.wikipedia.org)


What Does It All Mean?

  • Possible or legend? With an open mind, it’s fascinating to imagine the CIA using psychic abilities to track down one of history’s most mysterious artifacts.

  • Classic conspiracy twist? Perhaps the Ark is being deliberately concealed by hidden forces or spiritual entities, waiting for a specific moment to reveal itself. Global control? Divine revelation? The line blurs.

  • Verification? So far, there is no physical or archaeological evidence. The only clue is a psychological report with no field confirmation. That’s where myth, conspiracy, and intrigue intertwine.


Recommended Sources (for verification):

  • LiveNOW Fox: summary of the 1988 report and McMoneagle’s reaction (livenowfox.com)

  • New York Post: details of the experiment and critical responses (nypost.com)

  • Amazing Facts Blog: a religious perspective on the CIA’s findings (amazingfacts.org)

  • Wikipedia: background on Stargate Project and remote viewing (wikipedia.org)



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