Here Is PROOF That The Pentagon Can Manipulate Weather…

In the past, many people did not believe in chemtrails or geoengineering, but not anymore.

People are well aware that the government is completely able to manipulate the weather and have been doing it for quite some time too.

How long have they been manipulating the weather?

Since the Vietnam War.

So, here is the scoop.

During the Vietnam War, the U.S. Air Force started a cloud-seeding project at the demands of the CIA and then-Secretary of State Henry Kissinger beginning in 1967 and ending in 1972.

The project was called Operation Popeye and according to Wikipedia it “attempted to extend the monsoon season over specific areas of the Ho Chi Minh Trail, in order to disrupt North Vietnamese military supplies by softening road surfaces and causing landslides”.

So besides spraying Agent Orage Chemicals on the Vietnamese the US Government was literally controlling the weather of an entire region over 60 years ago.

If the Pentagon was able to change the weather in the 60s just imagine what they can do now!

 

Gizmodo had more on the story:

Controlling the weather sounds like it should be the exclusive domain of science fiction. But manipulation of the clouds has a somewhat surprising history in the real world. In fact, the U.S. military ran a secret, little-remembered weather control program during the Vietnam War.

You can listen to me discuss the history of weather control over at Marketplace Tech.

From March 1967 until July 1972 the U.S. military spent over $3 million per year conducting a top secret operation in Southeast Asia. The goal was to extend the monsoon season and flood the Ho Chi Minh Trail, the system of supply routes used by enemy fighters in Vietnam. The Americans hoped to cause landslides, wash out river crossings, and just generally disrupt the movement of North Vietnamese troops. It was the first large scale effort to manipulate the weather for military purposes. And it’s still unclear how well it actually worked.

The program went by many names. It was called at various times Operation Popeye, Operation Motorpool, and Operation Intermediary-Compatriot. Reportedly the name had to be changed so many times on account of people without the proper security clearances learning the name.

Whatever you want to call it, the goals were ambitious. A power once thought to be only in the hands of your deity of choice was now a weapon to be wielded by Man. And in a strange way, some American forces saw it as more palatable way to fight by disrupting movement rather than bombing. “Make mud, not war,” was the unofficial moniker of the Air Force pilots who carried out the missions.

The project worked by seeding clouds over countries like Laos and Vietnam with silver iodide. Roughly 2,000 runs were conducted over the five years of the program.

 

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