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  Monday December 10, 2007 17:17:53 -0600  

   

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How We Determine the STAR Threat Level

In May of this year we raised our Spacetime Threat Assessment (STAR) Level for the first time. Some of you might be curious how and why this was done.

The original idea for the STAR Threat Level was to enhance open source intelligence with input from AMP -- anomalous mental phenomena -- to provide early warning of potential threats that might be missed or not communicated to the public at large.

Our first effort appeared to be on target. In December of 2006, we received AMP-sourced intelligence suggesting that terrorists would shift their attention from threats to destroy planes mid-air to a ground based strategy that targeted planes and airport facilities. The AMP data suggested an all-out assault might be in the planning stages, designed to destroy terminals, planes and persons on the ground. This item was filed away until early May of 2007, when AMP-sources suggested increasing threats under development.

A decision was made to raise the threat level.


Shortly after our level was raised to 'SEVERE: there is a strong potential for damaging events," the media broke the story about the terrorist plot to destroy JFK Airport. Associated Press reported "Federal authorities said a plot by a suspected Muslim terrorist cell to blow up John F. Kennedy International Airport, its fuel tanks and a jet fuel artery could have caused “unthinkable” devastation."
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Although the JFK plot had fizzled, our AMP data suggested more was yet to come. And indications were pointing to ever-increasing threat levels over the summer.

We decided to maintain the heightened STAR Alert.

More incidents occurred, this time in London and Glasgow. CNN reported, "On Saturday, a sport utility vehicle was driven into an entrance at Scotland's Glasgow International Airport and burst into flames. On Friday, two explosives-laden cars were discovered at two locations in London. The United Kingdom raised its terrorism threat level to critical, the highest level possible, after the attack Saturday at Scotland's busiest airport."

Other threats, reports from unknown and possibly unreliable sources, were tasked as targets for AMP-intelligence sources.

One item, a rumor of loose 'suitcase' nukes, initially resulted in an ambiguous result. The key AMP-based finding determined that safety measures built into the design of such a weapon would frustrate any attempt to access the triggering mechanism. The device would need to be reconstructed -- and more importantly -- the design involved a Plutonium sphere, and was not a simple gun-type bomb.

Further tasking of this alleged target suggested a specific location -- an 'executive' near a fire station close to the twin ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles -- and a few weeks later, Michael Chertoff, chief of Homeland Security, appeared at the AMP-identified location to discuss the response following a nuclear attack. In May, AMP-results initially determined that the only 'chatter' at the DHS appeared to involve modeling of an attack; fall-out patterns, estimated damage assessments, but nothing specific. The AMP-data about Long Beach appeared to have fallen right out of a RAND study of the effects of a terrorist nuclear strike against the Twin Ports; the nuclear yield and location of the simulated attack matched the independently derived AMP data.

Official reaction in the United States to ever-increasing conventional intelligence appeared in the media.

Associate Press reported "Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff laid out a list of factors contributing to his 'gut feeling' that the nation faces a higher risk of attack this summer: al-Qaida's increased freedom to train in South Asia, a flurry of public statements from the network's leadership, a history of summertime attacks, a broader range of attacks in North Africa and Europe and homegrown terrorism increasing in Europe."
 

How we determine the threat level

    * Open sources (media, reports, scientific papers)

    * Private sources (government 'chatter')

    * AMP sources (threat scenarios)

The Spacetime Threat is assessed from multiple sources, including AMP (anomalous mental phenomena) sources which may represent alternative channels of information, including viral information and human intuitive perception.

AMP sources are used to enhance the threat assessment. No claim of objective overt reality is assigned to AMP sources beyond the additional creative input supplied by intuitive data. For example, elements of government intelligence have utilized input from authors of fiction to develop threat scenarios to assess the potential for unforeseen developments that may have been overlooked using conventional methods.

Mapping of AMP sources to real-world events as they occur drives the threat level higher. For example, if an AMP source provided a PAST (Premonition Alert to a Spacetime Threat) of a nuclear detonation, followed by real-world intelligence warning of a 'loose nuke' on the black market, then the threat level would be increased.



 

SPACETIME THREAT ASSESSMENT SCALE

EXTREME: threatening events are already in progress

SEVERE: there is a strong potential for realization of damaging events

HIGH: a potential exists for damaging events

ELEVATED: a potential exists for developing threats

GUARDED: climate is favorable for developing threats

LOW: a small potential exists for developing threats

   

 

     
 
STARstream Research
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Our Mission:  STAR Reports survey exotic physics and consciousness concepts related to the survival or otherwise of the human race. The Starstream material will from time to time appear as the Spacetime Threat Assessment Report, targeted to various select contacts in the defense and intelligence community.

Determining the Threat  Copyright © 2007 Starstream Research All Rights Reserved

Last modified: 12/04/2007 01:38:55 PM