Using an advanced intelligence technology capable of detecting human heartbeats from miles away, the CIA rescued a U.S. pilot whose aircraft had crashed in Iran. This sensational information was reported by New York Post. According to the report, the CIA deployed a highly classified system called “Ghost Murmur” for the first time in a direct operation. After a U.S. warplane was downed in Iran, the pilot hid in rugged mountainous terrain, prompting the use of this futuristic technology to locate him.
A source familiar with the operation told the New York Post, “It’s like being able to pick out a single voice in a stadium full of thousands of screaming spectators. If your heart is beating, we will find you.” The report further states that the system uses long-range quantum magnetometry to detect the electromagnetic signals of human heartbeats and then, with the help of artificial intelligence, isolates that specific signal from surrounding noise.
During a White House briefing, CIA Director John Ratcliffe said, “One of our bravest members was alive and hiding in a mountain crevice—something invisible to the enemy, but not to the CIA.” U.S. President Donald Trump also praised the technology, telling reporters that the CIA was able to locate the pilot from nearly 40 miles away. In Trump’s words, “It’s like finding a needle in a haystack; the CIA did an incredible job.”
According to the New York Post, the technology was developed by Lockheed Martin’s highly secretive Skunk Works division. It has already been tested on various military platforms, including the Black Hawk helicopter, and may be integrated into next-generation fighter jets in the future. Sources stated that the sparsely populated desert region of southern Iran was considered “ideal” for the system’s first operational use, due to minimal signal interference. An official explained that the technology was named “Ghost” because it can locate someone who has seemingly “vanished” from the visible world. Source: India Today.