http://www.abcnews.go.com/onair/2020/transcripts/2020_990210weapons_trans.html

Weapons of the Future
                   20/20

                   Wednesday, February 10, 1999
                   (This is an unedited, uncorrected transcript.)

                   SAM DONALDSON, ABCNEWS Good evening, and welcome
                   to 20/20 Wednesday. Tonight, we’re going to take
                   you to a future already here. We’ll show you
                   strange and astonishing weapons that have already
                   been used against American soldiers and the
                   police in other countries. In fact, because of
                   these weapons, some people believe some day in
                   the future we may face a kind of electronic Pearl
                   Harbor, as you discovered, Diane.

                   DIANE SAWYER, ABCNEWS That is exactly the phrase
                   you hear people using. Because what we’ve been
                   investigating tonight is so new and so exotic,
                   much of it remains secret military information.
                   But tonight, some experts and a naval
                   intelligence officer have decided to go public —
                   for a simple reason, they say. It’s time to face
                   the facts.
                        (VO) It starts when the lights go out. Next,
                   the phones go dead. Misrouted trains collide. Air
                   traffic control screens go blank. Cars
                   mysteriously come to a dead halt. And in not one
                   instance is the cause visible to the naked eye.
                   Welcome to the brave new world of directed energy
                   warfare. It’s already begun to claim victims.
                   Just ask Jack Daly (ph), who says he’s a casualty
                   of a particularly terrifying new technology.

                   JACK DALY, NAVAL INTELLIGENCE OFFICER The doctor
                   at the emergency room told me, “I don’t know what
                   you have. I’ve never seen anything like this
                   before.”

                   DIANE SAWYER (VO) It happened two years ago.
                   Daly, a naval intelligence officer, was sent out
                   onboard a helicopter to photograph a Russian ship
                   called the Kapitan Man, which he says was
                   monitoring US submarines off Washington state.
                        (on camera) So you have suspicion that this
                   is a Russian spy ship?

                   JACK DALY Yes.

                   DIANE SAWYER In US waters?

                   JACK DALY Yes.

                   DIANE SAWYER (VO) Daly takes 30 surveillance
                   photos. He and his pilot fly back toward home.
                   They were on the ground when both feel their eyes
                   throbbing, their vision blurred, horrible
                   headaches. But why? It was a mystery until Daly’s
                   photos were developed.
                        (on camera) Do you recognize this?

                   JACK DALY Yes, I do.

                   DIANE SAWYER (VO) It’s one of his surveillance
                   pictures, frame 16. Look closely. Look closer
                   still. That red dot below the bridge.

                   JACK DALY This may be the first time that a laser
                   was actually ever photographed during routine
                   operations.

                   DIANE SAWYER (VO) And medical exams showed Daly’s
                   eyes had been burned, and the lesions were
                   consistent with laser exposure. We’re not talking
                   about those little pointers kids use, but a
                   blinding laser, much more powerful, that can be
                   used for pin—point attacks from hundreds of feet
                   away.
                        (on camera) Tell me what it was like and is
                   like to look out your eyes.

                   JACK DALY They always hurt. I’ve been in constant
                   pain since the 4th of April ’97, without a
                   moment’s relief.

                   DIANE SAWYER Constant pain?

                   JACK DALY Constant pain.

                   DIANE SAWYER What kind?

                   JACK DALY I get these surges of pain that can be
                   anything from being jabbed in the eye with an ice
                   pick to being hit in the face with a baseball
                   bat.

                   DIANE SAWYER Both eyes?

                   JACK DALY Both eyes.

                   DIANE SAWYER (VO) And it’s not just Daly. The
                   pilot of his helicopter also suffered eye damage.
                   And no one knows the long—term effects. Daly
                   fears he’ll go blind.
                        (on camera) You really seem to be saying
                   that this is the dawn of a new weapons era, and
                   everybody better wake up.

                   JACK DALY Well, this particular weapon has
                   indiscriminate effects. There’s no gaping hole in
                   the back of my head. There was no blood gushing
                   out of the front of my face when this incident
                   happened. If it’s a new device, if it’s a new
                   type of laser, we may not know anything about
                   that.

                   DIANE SAWYER And lasers that can blind people are
                   just the beginning. Tonight, we are going to tell
                   you about a wide range of weapons that don’t use
                   bullets, but beams of electromagnetic energy at
                   different frequencies.
                        (VO) Each different kind of energy is
                   defined by different frequencies. Lasers are
                   short waves at high frequencies. At their highest
                   levels, they are so hot they can burn through
                   metal.

                   AIR FORCE TEST CONDUCTOR Cleared to fire.

                   DIANE SAWYER (VO) The US military wants to use
                   them to shoot down enemy missiles, though in the
                   wrong hands, these lasers could slice open an
                   aircraft when it’s flying in the sky. And lasers
                   aren’t the only kind of energy that can do
                   serious damage. Radio waves and microwaves are
                   long waves at lower frequency. But they’re
                   perfect for penetrating computers and disrupting
                   the circuitry without exterior damage to the
                   machine. You could concentrate them on a computer
                   and set a fire inside, and no one would know how
                   it happened.

                   DAVID SCHRINER (PH), RETIRED NAVY ENGINEER I
                   think we have a problem, and I think we may have
                   a very, very big problem.

                   DIANE SAWYER (VO) Until recently it was thought
                   any kind of radio frequency — or RF — weapon
                   would have to be large, expensive and
                   sophisticated. But David Schriner, a retired Navy
                   engineer advising the military, says that idea is
                   wrong.

                   DAVID SCHRINER I’m trying to do things just like
                   a terrorist would.

                   DIANE SAWYER (VO) So Schriner gathered components
                   available in places like salvage yards and
                   hardware stores and catalogs. He says for a
                   tinkerer who knows engineering, RF weapons are
                   not hard to create or expensive. He used these
                   components to build a machine which is a kind of
                   direct-energy Uzi. He says he can take out not
                   just computers but whole computerized systems.

                   DAVID SCHRINER I can build the things here. I can
                   design them here. But when it comes down to the
                   turning them on, we have to go to a safe and
                   legal place to do that.

                   DIANE SAWYER (VO) He takes us far away from
                   people and towns and highways, to the China Lake
                   Navy desert test range north of Los Angeles. We
                   decided to test his device on a lot of things we
                   use every day. Schriner won’t let us reveal
                   exactly what’s in the machine. That’s classified.
                   Though it doesn’t have the look of a high—tech
                   weapon.
                        (on camera) You know, this is not a
                   beautiful thing. I don’t want to hurt your
                   feelings, but it’s not.

                   DAVID SCHRINER It’s rather crudely made. You
                   know, we just kind of used whatever we had in my
                   lab to build it.

                   DIANE SAWYER (VO) But will it work? We take
                   precautions with our cables and computerized
                   cameras by enclosing them in copper shielding.
                   Schriner and his assistant use copper mesh masks
                   to protect their eyes and face.

                   DAVID SCHRINER Ray one is ready for testing.

                   DIANE SAWYER (VO) The first target, two
                   computers. The objective — to crash them.

                   DAVID SCHRINER Going hot.

                   DIANE SAWYER (VO) Every short burst has the
                   energy of 100 radio stations, a million watts.
                   Watch the computer on the left. In just three
                   seconds, it crashes. And a few seconds later, so
                   does the other one.

                   DAVID SCHRINER We had a system kill.

                   DIANE SAWYER (VO) Next target? An IV pump,
                   provided by Dr Larry Cosner (ph) from the local
                   hospital.

                   DR LARRY COSNER (?) Someone with the power to
                   stop this suddenly or make it work wrong suddenly
                   would have the power to devastate a medical
                   facility.

                   DAVID SCHRINER High voltage going hot.

                   DIANE SAWYER (VO) The effect is almost
                   instantaneous.

                   DAVID SCHRINER Yeah, boy, it sure did kill it.

                   DR LARRY COSNER It stopped it dead, and it
                   totally reset all the delivery indicators.

                   DIANE SAWYER (VO) But if you wanted to cause
                   havoc in a large city, imagine someone out of
                   view able to shut down cars.

                   DAVID SCHRINER I have a shutdown.

                   DIANE SAWYER (VO) And it happened not once, but
                   every time he fired. The computerized engine in
                   this car started to stall.

                   DAVID SCHRINER Very erratic operation. You can
                   hear the jiggling and burning.

                   DIANE SAWYER (VO) And he doesn’t have to be this
                   close.

                   DAVID SCHRINER Going hot.

                   DIANE SAWYER (VO) We’re told there are other
                   devices that work from thousands of feet away.

                   DAVID SCHRINER I have a kill.

                   DIANE SAWYER (VO) Virtually any car with a
                   computer-controlled engine is vulnerable. Since
                   Schriner supplied that car, we asked him to test
                   one of our choice.
                        (on camera) All right, so just in case
                   there’s any chance you think some of this could
                   have been rigged with his car, let’s see what
                   happens with this one.

                   DAVID SCHRINER There’s a definite effect. It’s
                   dropped the rpm way low, and it’s intermittently
                   chugging.

                   DIANE SAWYER (VO) Watch the tachometer.
                   Schriner’s device gives the car an electronic
                   nervous breakdown. It sets off the car alarm.

                   DAVID SCHRINER Something bad happened.

                   DIANE SAWYER (VO) It makes the doors lock and
                   unlock and twice kills the engine dead.

                   DAVID SCHRINER I have a shutdown. I know that I
                   could put some of this stuff into a little
                   briefcase and go up to a airlines counter or to a
                   bank counter and probably take down their
                   computer. I know I could do that. I haven’t done
                   it yet, but I’m confident that I could do that.

                   DIANE SAWYER (on camera) We keep reading that the
                   Russians are very far ahead on this. What do you
                   think?

                   DAVID SCHRINER Well, for years we’ve been noting
                   that they have been probably ahead of us on
                   building high—powered microwave devices.
                   VICTOR SHEYMOV (PH), FORMER KGB COMMUNICATIONS
                   SECURITY EXPERT Russians certainly do have that
                   technology and highly developed technology. The
                   KBG had it.

                   DIANE SAWYER (VO) This is Victor Sheymov, a
                   Soviet defector. His job — communications
                   security for the KBG. He told us how Russia has
                   been developing RF devices for years. This is the
                   first time he’s given a television interview on
                   the subject. (on camera) And has the KBG ever
                   used it against the United States?

                   VICTOR SHEYMOV Yes.

                   DIANE SAWYER (VO) Sheymov told us something
                   shocking—that years ago, the KBG used a primitive
                   RF weapon to start a fire at the US embassy in
                   Moscow.
                        (on camera) Was the KBG aware that’s what
                   would happen?

                   VICTOR SHEYMOV Oh, they hoped it would. And it
                   did work, so ...

                   DIANE SAWYER That was their intention?

                   VICTOR SHEYMOV Oh, yes.

                   DIANE SAWYER (VO) And they did it, Sheymov says,
                   as a pretext for sending in so-called “firemen”
                   who were, in fact, KBG agents trying to plant
                   bugs. We asked the State Department about this.
                   “No comment” was the response. It’s not just the
                   KBG. 20/20 has also learned from a well-placed
                   Russian official that those rebels in Chechnya
                   also used an RF weapon to knock out police
                   communications during a hostage situation. And
                   not only that, Russian criminals have used an RF
                   weapon, we’re told, to disarm security and rob a
                   bank. There are actually Russian-made devices on
                   the market like this state-of-the-art “radan,”
                   which experts say could be sold and used as a
                   weapon against power plants, banks or aircraft.
                        (on camera) Paint a portrait for me of the
                   US vulnerability.

                   VICTOR SHEYMOV Everything. These days, virtually
                   everything is controlled by computers.

                   DIANE SAWYER We assume that if there is a growing
                   threat, that there’s at least some anxiety about
                   it.

                   VICTOR SHEYMOV Should be. Should be a lot of
                   anxiety.

                   DIANE SAWYER (VO) Back at the China Lake test
                   site, they’re worried.
                        (on camera) Consider what happened just a
                   year ago right here, when the military decided to
                   bombard this Huey Cobra helicopter, which isn’t
                   even a highly computerized machine, with some
                   high—powered pulses. The results — they’re
                   classified. All they’ll say is they were
                   surprised, and they didn’t like what they saw.
                        (VO) Finally, let us tell you about two
                   other weapons which could be ready in the
                   not-so-distant future. A company has created what
                   it calls a “vortex launcher” for the Air Force.
                   In time, the cannonball of air should be powerful
                   enough to knock someone down. And the Marine
                   Corps is intrigued by still another kind of
                   weapon. This is a videotape of recent military
                   war game. The weapon at issue — sound waves
                   which, at certain frequencies, can penetrate the
                   human body and vibrate the internal organs. Here,
                   soldiers simulate the expected effect, writhing
                   in pain and convulsions. Which brings us back to
                   the real-life experience of Jack Daly, who says
                   the US government is afraid to take on the
                   Russians for their use of laser weapons on his
                   eyes.
                        (on camera) You feel betrayed?

                   JACK DALY I feel very betrayed.

                   DIANE SAWYER (VO) He says after his eyes were
                   injured, the Navy ordered a search of that ship,
                   the Kapitan Man, but they gave the Russians 24
                   hours’ notice. No surprise, no laser was found.
                        (on camera) And you really believe it was a
                   calculated decision not to rock the boat?

                   JACK DALY Yes, exactly.

                   DIANE SAWYER With the Russians.

                   JACK DALY Yes, I do.

                   DIANE SAWYER You think they’re afraid of looking
                   vulnerable?

                   JACK DALY That’s a distinct possibility. Because
                   there are devices that are being produced that
                   current technology may not be able to counter.

                   DIANE SAWYER All the Pentagon will say is that
                   Daly probably suffered laser eye damage, but
                   there’s no proof it came from the Kapitan Man or
                   that this photo really captured a laser. Even
                   though just a few months ago, it seemed to happen
                   again. Another helicopter pilot and crewman, this
                   time in Bosnia. And the Pentagon confirms that
                   their eyes were damaged with lasers.

                   JACK DALY When I spoke with the pilot the other
                   night, he told me that the laser signature that
                   he saw was a red halo with a white center. That
                   was almost exactly what we saw in that picture.

                   DIANE SAWYER (VO) And Daly says even though he’s
                   been told by the Navy to keep silent about all
                   this, he’s speaking out because the US has to
                   face the reality of the future.

                   JACK DALY Even though I’m probably solidifying
                   the fact that my career is coming to an end by
                   going public like this, I feel the most important
                   thing is, if I can prevent this from happening to
                   someone else, then I need to do this. It’s my
                   duty. It’s my responsibility to do this.

                   DIANE SAWYER Lieutenant Daly is expected to
                   testify about his experience tomorrow before a
                   House Armed Services subcommittee. And by the
                   way, since that recent attack in Bosnia, US
                   forces there have been given special goggles
                   designed to protect their eyes against laser
                   attacks.

                   SAM DONALDSON What about other countries? I
                   assume they are working on this problem?

                   DIANE SAWYER The Europeans are already far ahead
                   of us. The components in their computers come
                   with better metal shielding than ours do. So they
                   are better protected already. By the way, the
                   Swedes sent word to us of something. They have
                   been testing all of these electromagnetic
                   weapons, and they told us that they recently
                   blasted a car from 3,000 feet away with
                   microwaves and not only disabled it, blew up the
                   headlights. So this new world is at hand.

                   SAM DONALDSON Thank you, Diane.

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