
September 1, 1998: Gulf Breeze - Richard C. Hoagland & Vance Davis
Davis recounts how he was recruited into the NSA at age 18 after the agency discovered his childhood training in Silva Mind Control. He describes being tested for psychic abilities including telepathy and psychokinesis. The conversation turns to the extraordinary circumstances surrounding the Gulf Breeze Six case, in which Davis and five fellow intelligence analysts went AWOL from their post in Augsburg, Germany, were jailed for 21 days, then released with honorable discharges after a call from the White House. Davis suggests the charges were dropped because a trial would have exposed classified information about a shadow government operating alongside elected officials.
Davis warns that current intelligence points to a potential coup attempt in Russia involving a military general working with Muammar Gaddafi and Osama bin Laden. He expresses concern for President Clinton's safety during his Moscow summit visit and references intercepted communications suggesting a coordinated Islamic fundamentalist campaign against Western interests.
Key Moments
Hoagland: 'first shot in this new phase was fired by North Korea': Hoagland tells Bell his NSA-connected sources concluded that the North Korean missile that flew over Japan was the first shot in a new phase - a failed strike that, by the grace of God, did not connect, framed alongside Qaddafi's Russian-general contact as part of an internal coup plot.
Davis says NSA recruited him at 18 over Silva Mind Control scores: Davis describes how, during his NSA polygraph at Fort Meade, interrogators produced a quarter-inch stack of documents containing his classwork and scores from Jose Silva's Silva Mind Control course taken when he was 15 - and asked him to pop a balloon with his mind.
Vance Davis identifies himself as a member of the Gulf Breeze Six: Davis confirms he is the former NSA analyst who, with five other Army intelligence soldiers, went AWOL from Augsburg in 1990, was held in solitary at Fort Benning, and was released after 21 days with honorable discharges 'by order of the Joint Chiefs' and President Bush.
Davis: there are two governments in the United States: Davis tells Bell that as a naive 18-year-old in 1984 he learned firsthand inside NSA that there are two governments - the elected one with no real hard power, and a non-elected network of organizations and individuals that pulls the strings on most elected officials.
Davis: Russian general in league with Qaddafi and bin Laden, civil war coming: Davis says a Russian general with the majority of the Russian military behind him is in league with Qaddafi and 'a certain bin Laden' in Afghanistan, working toward a coup that would restore communist power and push Russia into civil war as Yeltsin's prime-minister fight escalates.
