Did the US hit Turkey with a HAARP Earthquake?

By VT - Claudio Resta - February 21, 2023

24 hours before the earthquake ten Western countries withdrew their ambassadors from Ankara. Coincidence?

During the Cold War, Russia developed a sophisticated machine to probe the thickness of the earth’s crust. However, the results obtained were completely different from those expected! EARTHQUAKE! Whose effects are extremely dramatic if the machine is used in places situated along a tectonic fault line.

At the end of the Cold War and of the Soviet Union US military bought the machine and the scientist who developed it. Nobody knows where it is now but the suspect is that they use it against Nations that run counter to US foreign policy agendas and goals like Turkey. The machine is called PAMIR.

Here are the original pages of IVTAN, the Russian Institute for High Temperatures, which talks about one of these Pamir generators.

Some Turkish media have reported that the cause of the recent earthquake could be a low-yield nuclear bomb, although no official confirmation of this has yet been given.

According to Dane Wigington Nations that run counter to US foreign policy agendas and goals (or covet natural and energy resources) are too often hit by catastrophic earthquakes. Question: Is it just an incredible coincidence?

While according to Scientist Fran De Aquino, Department of Physics, State University of Maranhao, S.Luis/MA, Brazil, conducted a study on HAARP that appeared online in July (ed of 2011): High-power ELF radiation generated by modulated HF heating of the ionosphere can cause Earthquakes, Cyclones, and localized heating.

The production of very low-frequency waves (ELF ) by interacting with the ions present in the Van Hallen belts, can, due to the interaction between the electric field and the gravitational discovery by Professor Fran De Aquino, lead to a reduction in gravity over a certain area of the earth.

This decrease in gravity leads to a decrease in the pressure of the air column placed above that area of the earth’s surface, generating an effect that can lead to a lifting of the earth.

To understand this situation with an analogy, you can place the tip of a syringe without a needle on your hand and pull the plunger: due to the decreased pressure above the hand, you will see the skin lift. According to the calculations of Professor De Aquino an ionospheric heater can even cause an earthquake of 9th degree on the Richter scale. I don’t know if that reminds you of anything.

Whether the cause of the earthquake is a former USSR machine employing a Cold War nuclear technology actually in the hands of the US Deep State either the High-Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) currently the most important facility used to generate extremely low frequency (ELF) electromagnetic radiation in the ionosphere or the combined action of both of them it seems that one or more US black science secret technologies are the cause of the recent earthquake in Turkey and Syria.

Also because the detail is not irrelevant, it seems that this earthquake has presented anomalous characteristics which lead us to consider it to be of non-natural origin.

Without considering the coincidence that Turkey is running to counter US foreign policy agendas and goals.

Arguments that can support this thesis are the following.

24 hours before the earthquake ten Western countries withdrew their ambassadors from Ankara. Five days before the earthquake, several Western countries, including Romania, advised against travel to Turkey, without however providing explanations.

As many as 15 Turkish companies export material, purchased in the United States for 18.5 million dollars, to a dozen Russian companies subject to unilateral US coercive measures.

Moreover, Turkey has rejected requests by US Treasury Undersecretary in charge of Terrorism and Financial Intelligence, Brian Nelson, who demanded an end to both Turkish military exports to Russia and opposition to Sweden’s NATO membership.

             Claudio Resta

Claudio Resta was born in Genoa, Italy in 1958, he is a citizen of the world (Spinoza), a maverick philosopher, an interdisciplinary expert, oh, and an artist, too.


Why was there no earthquake warning in Turkey?

By Anders Moen Kaste, Journalist,Thursday 09. February 2023 - 13:29

And why is Turkey at such high risk of earthquakes? 

“I woke up to the fact that my apartment in Beirut was shaking and swaying,” reporter for ScienceNorway.no Ingrid Schou said.

By Thursday it was reported that more than 17,000 people have been killed by the earthquakes that struck Turkey and Syria on Monday February 6. Several tens of thousands are injured and the numbers are rising - by February 16 the death toll is nearing 42 000 according to Al Jazeera.

The earthquake's epicentres are located near the city of Gaziantep with over 2 million inhabitants.

Collapsed buildings

The first earthquake happened Monday night, followed by more quakes in the morning.

ScienceNorway.no’s reporter Ingrid Schou is currently living in Beirut in Lebanon, situated 400 kilometres from the epicentre.

“I woke up to the fact that my apartment in Beirut was shaking and swaying. I also heard loud cries from the apartment above me,” Ingrid Schou said.

“At first I was a bit confused, but then it dawned on me that it could be an earthquake. The only thing I thought was that I wanted out of the fifth floor of the brick building and out on the open street.”

“We are far from the epicentre, but we felt it strongly anyway”, Schou said.

Can't warn an earthquake in advance

The earthquake had a magnitude of 7.8 on the Richter scale. Shocks between 7 and 8 are defined as powerful shocks with major damage.

Mathilde Bøttger Sørensen is a professor of geophysics at the University of Bergen in Western Norway.

We asked her why no one has managed to predict last night's major shock with modern monitoring systems.

“You can only measure the earthquake after it has happened,” she said.

“You can build as many monitoring stations as you want, but you only get a result when the quake has already happened,” she said.

This means that it is impossible to warn of an earthquake in advance.

The monitoring systems can primarily help to understand earthquakes and to create statistics, she says. These statistics can be used to better prepare for the next quake and to assess where it is likely to occur.

These systems monitor, among other things, where and when the earthquake occurs, how big it is, and what movements in the earth's crust cause it.

Plates colliding

Turkey is particularly exposed to the risk of earthquakes because there is a so-called plate boundary there. Several large tectonic plates meet.

“Africa is moving north and collides with Europe and Asia, which are located towards the north,” Professor Mathilde Bøttger Sørensen said.

The Anatolian microplate makes up most of Turkey. It is in the middle, complicating it all.

“Due to a collision between Africa and Europe, the Anatolian plate is being squeezed westward. That's why we have most of the major earthquakes in Turkey,” she said.

Bigger than the 1999 earthquake

In 1999, there was another large earthquake in Turkey. The earthquake in Izmit claimed the lives of more than 17,000 people. In addition, half a million were made homeless.

The earthquake on February 6 was bigger than the 1999 earthquake. The earthquake 24 years ago had a strength of 7.4. Last night's earthquake had a strength of 7.8.

She finds it difficult to say at this stage what the extent of the new earthquake will be.

“I think there will be quite significant losses.”

Energy that propagates

An earthquake is a form of breakage within the earth's crust, Sørensen explained.

“In connection with this break, a lot of energy is released, and it propagates through the earth's crust. That's why it can be felt in large areas.”

The strength of the earthquake and its location are factors that determine the size of the damage.

Another important factor is the amount of infrastructure in the area and how vulnerable the infrastructure is. For example, an earthquake that affects many apartment blocks that are not built to withstand earthquakes, will result in many lost lives.

Refugee camps likely hit

Many vulnerable people live in the area where the earthquake hit.

“Many vulnerable people live in buildings of poor quality. This makes the situation much worse, Sørensen said.

It is also located in an area with many vulnerable buildings. The earthquake also occurred near the border to Syria, where there are large refugee camps.

Afraid of more earthquakes

In Lebanon, people react very differently to the earthquake, reporter Ingrid Schou explained.

“Some people stayed in their apartments, while others took to the streets. There were also some who got in their car,” Schou said.

An elderly woman she spoke to said she had been awakened by all the shaking.

“But she shrugged and said she had gone through the Lebanese civil war earlier. Younger people I have talked to are affected by the event. They are afraid of aftershocks,” she said.

Is there a risk of more earthquakes?

A few hours after the first earthquake, a new earthquake of 7.5 hit. We asked professor Sørensen what we can expect in the future.

"There will definitely be many aftershocks in the area from now on, and it may last for weeks and months to come, and gradually subside," she said.

"You will have a redistribution of tensions in the area that creates a domino effect."

Generally, it is assumed that aftershocks will become weaker.

According to Sørensen Turkey was not prepared for this earthquake to come right now.

"This is not an earthquake that they have been waiting for. But they know that it is an area with many earthquakes, so it's not very surprising that it came."

This article was updated on February 16 to add the most recent death toll.

         Anders Moen Kaste, Journalist


'HAARP': Was the earthquake in Turkey created by the United States?

A shakemap represents the ground shaking produced by an earthquake. The information is different from the earthquake‘s magnitude and epicentre as a shakemap focuses on the variation in ground shaking produced by the earthquake, rather than describing the earthquake‘s source or strength.— United States Geological Survey via Reuters

Several social media users are engaged in what some are calling a "conspiracy theory" where they believe that the earthquake in Turkey and neighbouring Syria was created by the United States using the American "HAARP" technology.

Since last night, the hashtag #HAARP has been trending on Twitter, receiving more than 100,000 tweets.

Another Twitter user wrote: “Three weeks ago, Serkan Karabakh of FETO said there would be a 7.4 magnitude earthquake. The American ship anchored in Turkey and the button was pressed! The embassies were closed and members were recalled.”

Another user wrote: “These clouds appeared as a result of the US weapon Haarp energising the ionosphere to create an artificial earthquake on February 2, 2023. Wanting to create an artificial earthquake in Istanbul, they deliberately closed the consulates."

"Those who still say conspiracy theory, you will understand by experience," warned another.

However, the truth is that nobody really knows. Neither any official statement on the matter has been released nor any scientist has approved the theory.

What is HAARP?

It stands for “High-Frequency Active Auroral Research Programme”.

The American research initiative called HAARP has been active since the early 1990s. Although the project has a number of goals, radio communication technology advancement is considered to be its primary focus.

"HAARP is the world's most capable high-power, high-frequency transmitter for study of the ionosphere," a university release by the Univerity of Alaska reads.

"Operation of the research facility was transferred from the United States Air Force to the University of Alaska Fairbanks on August 11, 2015, allowing HAARP to continue with the exploration of ionospheric phenomenology via a land-use cooperative research and development agreement," it continues.

Many people who use social media think that HAARP is being used to punish Turkey for refusing to work with the West.

"No such thing as coincidence," a user said.

Several users pointed to lighting that was visible before the disastrous quake hit.

Frank Hoogerbeets, a Dutch seismology expert, foresaw the earthquake. How he foresaw the catastrophe just three days earlier is another question people are asking.

However, all the allegations and remarks come from social media users and no Turkish official has recorded any such statement. Therefore, the United States has not responded to the accusations.

A 2017 study published in Science Advances came to the conclusion that both naturally occurring and human-caused earthquakes have a similar potential for shaking and damage.

The research programme currently at the centre of the rumours has not claimed anywhere to have the power to induce quakes. In October 2022, HAARP began its largest set of experiments at its new observatory but did not mention earthquakes.