Between 1972 and 1995, the United States government funded research into extrasensory perception and its potential intelligence applications. The program operated under multiple codenames — Gondola Wish, Grill Flame, Center Lane, Sun Streak, and finally Stargate — across different agencies and facilities. At its peak, it employed 23 military and civilian personnel at Fort Meade. When the CIA conducted an independent evaluation in 1995, it concluded the program had produced no actionable intelligence despite $20 million in documented expenditures.
On June 6, 1972, physicist Harold Puthoff submitted a letter to the Central Intelligence Agency proposing research into "quantum biological phenomena" — CIA codename for extrasensory perception. Puthoff, a former NSA officer with an active security clearance, argued that recent parapsychology experiments warranted investigation as a potential intelligence collection method. The CIA's Office of Technical Service approved a $50,000 exploratory grant to Stanford Research Institute, where Puthoff worked with laser physicist Russell Targ. The funding initiated what would become the longest-running paranormal research program in US government history.
The program's origins lay in Cold War concerns about Soviet psychic research. Intelligence reports from the 1960s suggested the USSR was investigating telepathy and psychokinesis for military applications, spending an estimated 20 million rubles annually on parapsychology. Whether these reports were accurate or deliberate Soviet disinformation remains contested. Regardless, they provided sufficient justification for American intelligence agencies to fund parallel research as a defensive measure. The logic was straightforward: if the Soviets were developing psychic espionage capabilities, the United States could not afford to be caught unprepared.
At SRI, Puthoff and Targ began testing subjects who claimed psychic abilities. Their first star performer was Ingo Swann, a New York artist who claimed to conduct out-of-body experiences and remote observations of distant locations. Swann developed the "coordinate remote viewing" protocol, where subjects attempted to psychically perceive locations identified only by geographic coordinates — latitude and longitude numbers that supposedly prevented any sensory information about the target. In theory, this methodology eliminated the possibility of fraud or prior knowledge. In practice, concerns about sensory leakage and subtle cueing persisted throughout the program's history.
The program's most celebrated early result involved Pat Price, a former police commissioner from Burbank, California, recruited in 1973. Price claimed to have remotely viewed a Soviet research facility at Semipalatinsk, Kazakhstan — a location he identified from coordinates alone. His sketches showed buildings, a large crane, and described various activities at the site. When satellite imagery later appeared to confirm architectural details Price had described, program advocates declared it proof of remote viewing's validity.
Critical examination reveals significant problems with this claim. Price had served in the Office of Naval Intelligence during the Korean War and maintained contacts in the intelligence community. The Semipalatinsk facility was a known Soviet nuclear test site, discussed in unclassified publications. Whether Price obtained information through conventional means or genuinely perceived it psychically cannot be definitively determined from available records. What is certain is that this single case became the foundation for two decades of continued funding.
"Pat Price's Semipalatinsk session was viewed as the gold standard, the case that proved remote viewing worked. When you examine it closely, you realize how much faith was required to reach that conclusion."
Ray Hyman — CIA Stargate Evaluation, 1995Price died suddenly of a heart attack in 1975 at age 57, preventing any follow-up questioning about his methods or knowledge sources. His death generated conspiracy theories among program believers, who speculated about Soviet assassination. Medical records showed Price had a history of heart disease. No evidence supports assassination theories, but Price's death removed the possibility of resolving questions about his most famous session.
In 1977, the US Army established an operational remote viewing unit at Fort Meade, Maryland, under Intelligence and Security Command. Unlike the SRI research program, this unit was designed to produce actionable intelligence. The Army recruited six soldiers, trained them in Ingo Swann's coordinate remote viewing protocols, and began tasking them with real-world intelligence collection missions.
The Fort Meade unit targeted Soviet military installations, weapons systems, hostage locations, and other priority intelligence requirements. Remote viewers sat in sparse rooms, receiving only coordinate numbers for targets they were supposed to perceive psychically. They sketched impressions, described sensations, and produced reports that were forwarded to intelligence analysts. At its peak in the mid-1980s, the unit employed 23 military and civilian personnel and produced hundreds of intelligence reports annually.
Joseph McMoneagle, who joined the unit in 1978, became its most prominent member. A Chief Warrant Officer with prior service in Vietnam, McMoneagle participated in hundreds of remote viewing sessions before retiring in 1984. He was awarded the Legion of Merit with a classified citation describing his "providing information on more than 150 targets that were unavailable from other sources." The citation's classification prevented independent verification of these claims. After retirement, McMoneagle became a vocal advocate for remote viewing, publishing books and conducting paid training seminars.
What kind of intelligence did remote viewers produce? Declassified session reports reveal a consistent pattern: vague, ambiguous descriptions that could be interpreted multiple ways, occasionally punctuated by specific details that were usually wrong. A typical remote viewing report might describe "sense of metal, coldness, large structure, military purpose, underground components" — descriptions so generic they could apply to hundreds of facilities.
When viewers provided specific information, the accuracy rate was dismal. Edwin May, the program's final research director, later acknowledged that remote viewing sessions contained "about 15-20% accurate information, which sounds impressive until you realize that random guessing would produce about the same rate given the nature of the targets and the generality of most responses."
Program advocates cite cases where remote viewers allegedly described correct details, but these claims invariably lack independent verification. The TWA Flight 847 hijacking in 1985 is frequently mentioned: remote viewers allegedly described the Beirut location where hostages were held. However, Beirut was the obvious location given the hijackers' demands and the aircraft's flight path. No evidence shows remote viewing provided information beyond what conventional intelligence already knew.
Throughout its existence, the program maintained an academic research component designed to provide scientific legitimacy. SRI researchers published papers in peer-reviewed parapsychology journals, presented at conferences, and cultivated relationships with sympathetic academics. This strategy created a feedback loop: government funding enabled research, which produced publications, which justified continued government funding.
In 1974, Puthoff and Targ published a paper in Nature describing experiments with Uri Geller, the Israeli entertainer famous for spoon-bending tricks. The paper claimed Geller demonstrated genuine psychic abilities in controlled conditions. The publication sparked immediate controversy. Magicians including James Randi demonstrated how Geller's effects could be produced through simple conjuring tricks. Nature's editors later acknowledged the paper should not have been published without more rigorous controls against fraud.
The Nature paper illustrated a fundamental problem with remote viewing research: the protocols designed to prevent fraud were consistently inadequate. Experimenters who believed in psychic phenomena designed experiments that left room for subtle cueing, sensory leakage, and selective reporting of successful trials. When skeptical researchers replicated experiments with tighter controls, positive results disappeared.
In 1988, the National Research Council published "Enhancing Human Performance," a comprehensive evaluation of various techniques proposed to improve military effectiveness, including remote viewing. The NRC panel, composed of psychologists and statisticians, examined two decades of parapsychology research and reached an unambiguous conclusion: "The committee finds no scientific justification from research conducted over a period of 130 years for the existence of parapsychological phenomena."
"After 130 years of scientific investigation, parapsychology has not produced a single replicable finding. This is not the pattern we see in genuine scientific discoveries."
National Research Council — Enhancing Human Performance Report, 1988The report identified specific methodological problems in remote viewing experiments: inadequate randomization, sensory leakage, optional stopping, file drawer effects, and lack of theoretical grounding. These were not minor technical quibbles but fundamental flaws that invalidated claimed results. The NRC recommended against military investment in parapsychology research.
The Pentagon ignored the recommendation. The remote viewing program continued operating at Fort Meade, producing intelligence reports, and consuming approximately $500,000 annually. The program had developed bureaucratic momentum and a constituency of believers within the intelligence community. Negative evaluations by mainstream scientists were dismissed as closed-minded skepticism by people unfamiliar with classified program successes — successes that remain unverified.
In 1989, SRI International decided to discontinue remote viewing research. The work transferred to Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC), a major defense contractor, where physicist Edwin May became research director. May maintained laboratory research while the Fort Meade operational unit continued intelligence missions. The division of labor provided insulation: when operational missions failed, advocates could point to laboratory experiments showing statistical anomalies; when laboratory results were criticized, advocates could claim classified operational successes that couldn't be disclosed.
By the early 1990s, budget pressures and skepticism about fringe programs led Congressional oversight committees to demand evaluation. In 1995, the CIA commissioned the American Institutes for Research to conduct an independent assessment. The AIR team included Jessica Utts, a statistics professor sympathetic to parapsychology research, and Ray Hyman, a psychologist known for debunking paranormal claims.
The AIR evaluation examined laboratory experiments, operational intelligence reports, and program records. Jessica Utts analyzed experimental data and concluded that it showed statistical evidence for an anomalous cognition effect — something beyond chance was occurring in controlled laboratory settings. However, Utts acknowledged this statistical anomaly had no practical value: "The effect size is too small and too unreliable to be useful for intelligence purposes."
Ray Hyman examined the same data and reached a different conclusion. He attributed positive results to methodological flaws, selective reporting, and inadequate controls. Hyman noted that the most rigorous experiments produced the weakest results — the opposite pattern expected if a genuine phenomenon existed. He documented cases where experimental protocols had been violated or modified mid-study, and found that claimed successes could not be independently replicated.
The evaluation's operational assessment was devastating. The AIR team reviewed intelligence reports produced by Fort Meade remote viewers and found no evidence that any report had led to actionable intelligence. Program advocates cited numerous successes, but when examined closely, these claims collapsed. Either the information was already known through conventional intelligence, or it was so vague as to be useless, or it was simply wrong.
The evaluation concluded: "The research methodology was inadequate to provide an evidence base sufficient to support the operational use of remote viewing. The experimental research had not been independently replicated. The intelligence use of remote viewing had not been shown to produce actionable intelligence. Continued operation of the program is not warranted."
In November 1995, the CIA publicly disclosed the Stargate program and released portions of the AIR evaluation. The decision to declassify was driven by multiple factors: the negative evaluation provided justification for termination, Congressional pressure for transparency following Cold War's end, and awareness that program participants were preparing to go public regardless.
The disclosure generated brief media attention. Television programs featured interviews with former remote viewers describing alleged successes. Joseph McMoneagle appeared on "Nightline." Books were published. Training seminars were offered to paying customers. Remote viewing became a minor industry in the paranormal marketplace.
Within the intelligence community, Stargate's termination was viewed as an overdue housecleaning. One senior CIA official, speaking on background to the New York Times, described it as "the single most useless intelligence program we ever ran." Another characterized it as "a twenty-year experiment that conclusively proved psychic spying doesn't work."
The fundamental methodological problem with remote viewing research is that it studies a phenomenon with no theoretical framework. Mainstream science has no model for how information could be transmitted psychically across space and time. Remote viewing advocates respond that the phenomenon exists regardless of theory — that empirical results should drive theoretical development. This argument founders on the absence of robust, independently replicable empirical results.
Every scientific discipline has characteristic features: phenomena become easier to study as methods improve, effect sizes increase with better experimental design, results replicate across independent laboratories, and practical applications emerge from research insights. Remote viewing research showed the opposite pattern: as controls tightened, effects diminished; as experimental sophistication increased, positive results disappeared; no practical applications emerged despite two decades of effort and $20 million in funding.
"If remote viewing were a real phenomenon, we would expect to see progress over twenty years — better results, more reliable methods, practical applications. Instead we see stagnation and claims that get vaguer over time."
Ray Hyman — Journal of Parapsychology, 1996The file drawer problem looms large. Thousands of remote viewing sessions were conducted. Successful sessions were preserved, documented, and cited as evidence. Failed sessions — the vast majority — disappeared into file drawers or were excluded from analysis. This selective reporting creates a distorted picture where positive results appear statistically significant when in fact they represent the expected random fluctuations from a large number of trials.
Despite the CIA's negative evaluation and program termination, remote viewing advocates continue to claim the program was successful and that it was cancelled for reasons unrelated to effectiveness. Edwin May argues that political factors, not performance, drove the decision. Joseph McMoneagle maintains that classified successes cannot be publicly discussed. Russell Targ publishes books teaching remote viewing techniques. The cottage industry persists.
These claims are unfalsifiable. When asked for specific examples of actionable intelligence produced through remote viewing, advocates cite classification restrictions. When shown the CIA evaluation's conclusions, they argue evaluators lacked access to the best cases. When pressed for independently verifiable results, they point to experiments that skeptical researchers have demonstrated contain methodological flaws.
The Stargate program's legacy is not the validation of psychic phenomena but rather a case study in how institutional momentum, confirmation bias, and classification secrecy can sustain programs long after evidence demonstrates their futility. Intelligence agencies funded research based on fears about Soviet psychic warfare. When initial results seemed promising, funding continued. As investment accumulated, termination became harder to justify. Classification prevented outside scrutiny. A small community of believers controlled the narrative until Congressional pressure forced independent evaluation.
The documented record on Project Stargate is clear: over 23 years, multiple agencies spent approximately $20 million funding research into whether extrasensory perception could be developed as an intelligence collection method. Thousands of experiments were conducted at SRI International and SAIC. An operational unit at Fort Meade employed military personnel to conduct psychic espionage missions. Hundreds of intelligence reports were produced and distributed to military commands.
When independently evaluated by the CIA in 1995, this entire enterprise was found to have produced zero instances of actionable intelligence. No hostage was located. No Soviet weapon system was described with accuracy beyond what conventional intelligence already knew. No military operation was conducted based on remote viewing information. The program's most celebrated successes, when examined closely, either contained information available through conventional means or were so vague as to be unfalsifiable.
In laboratory settings, some statistical anomalies appeared in experiments, but these anomalies were small, unreliable, and disappeared when controls tightened. The pattern is consistent with methodological artifacts, not genuine psychic perception. After 130 years of parapsychology research and 23 years of focused government funding, remote viewing has not produced a single independently replicated finding that demonstrates the existence of extrasensory perception.
This does not prove psychic phenomena are impossible. It proves that if such phenomena exist, two decades of well-funded research by committed believers operating without normal budgetary constraints failed to produce evidence sufficient to justify operational use. For intelligence purposes, remote viewing was comprehensively tested and definitively failed. The program stands as a monument to how extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence — and vague, unfalsifiable assertions are not evidence regardless of classification level.