Albert Stubblebine

Birthday February 6, 1930

Birth Sign Aquarius

Birthplace Fort Sill, Oklahoma

DEATH DATE 2017-2-6, New Brunswick, New Jersey (87 years old)

Nationality United States

#58470 Most Popular

1930

Albert "Bert" Newton Stubblebine III (February 6, 1930 – February 6, 2017) was a United States Army major general whose active-duty career spanned 32 years.

Beginning as an armor officer, he later transferred to intelligence.

1952

Stubblebine graduated from the United States Military Academy in 1952 and subsequently received an M.S. in chemical engineering from Columbia University in 1961.

He married his wife, Geraldine, in 1952; they would ultimately adopt two children.

Beginning his military career as an armor officer, he later transferred to military intelligence.

1968

In 1968, Stubblebine was transferred to the staff of the Military Assistance Command, Vietnam and later was assigned to the 25th Infantry Division as its G-2 (intelligence officer).

For his service in the Vietnam War, Stubblebine was awarded the Legion of Merit and the Bronze Star Medal.

As a colonel, Stubblebine participated in a special task force that defined the requirements of the U.S. Army for future conflict.

1979

Stubblebine was strongly influenced by Lieutenant Colonel Jim Channon's New Age-inspired First Earth Battalion Field Manual (1979).

1980

By 1980, General Stubblebine commanded the Electronic Research and Development Command (ERADCOM).

1981

He is credited with redesigning the U.S. Army intelligence architecture during his time as commanding general of the U.S. Army Intelligence and Security Command (INSCOM) from 1981 to 1984, after which he retired from active service.

Over the course of his retirement, it became widely known that Stubblebine maintained a keen interest in psychic warfare throughout his service.

He sought to develop an army of soldiers with special powers, such as the ability to walk through walls.

He is a posthumous recipient of the LTC Thomas Knowlton Award - medal and certificates.

Stubblebine became a proponent of psychic warfare and initiated a project within the U.S. Army Intelligence and Security Command (INSCOM), which he commanded from 1981 to 1984, to create "a breed of 'super soldier'" who would "have the ability to become invisible at will and to walk through walls".

1983

Stubblebine was a key leader in the U.S. military invasion of Grenada (1983).

1984

After some controversy involving the experiments with psychic phenomena, Stubblebine took "early retirement" from the Army in 1984.

In addition to alleged security violations from uncleared civilian psychics working in Sensitive Compartmented Information Facilities (SCIFs), Stubblebine offended then-U.S. Army Chief of Staff General John Adams Wickham, Jr. by offering to perform a spoon-bending feat at a formal gala; Wickham, a devout Presbyterian, associated such phenomena with Satanism.

Stubblebine's successor as the INSCOM commander was Major General Harry Soyster, who had a reputation as a much more conservative and conventional intelligence officer.

1990

He retired from that job in 1990.

The same year, he was inducted into the Military Intelligence Hall of Fame.

1994

In 1994 his wife Geraldine was granted a divorce on grounds of adultery.

Shortly thereafter, he was remarried to conspiracy theorist Rima E. Laibow.

He also acted as a part-time consultant to two government contractors, ERIM and Space Applications Corporation.

Stubblebine, whose interests included UFOs and parapsychology, was a member of the Oath Keepers.

He and his wife Rima Laibow were active in the Patriot movement, and appeared together as guests on The Alex Jones Show.

Stubblebine and Laibow established a nonprofit organization called "Natural Solutions Foundation" which disseminated conspiracy theories about vaccinations, pharmaceutical companies and genetically modified foods.

Stubblebine believed that an airplane did not crash into the Pentagon in the September 11 terrorist attacks, but said he did not know what did.

According to Stubblebine, after analyzing the damage done to The Pentagon by the hijacked aircraft during the September 11 attacks, he concluded "(an) airplane did not make that hole".

Stubblebine's statements have been cited by David Ray Griffin.

1995

Soyster was not amenable to continuing paranormal experiments and the Army's participation in the Stargate Project ended during his tenure, though not until 1995.

After Stubblebine retired from the Army he worked as a vice-president for BDM Corporation.

2004

He attempted to walk through walls himself —but failed, as he himself described in a 2004 interview.

(These activities feature prominently in Jon Ronson's 2004 book The Men Who Stare at Goats. )

A key sponsor of the Stargate Project (a remote viewing project) at Fort Meade, Maryland, Stubblebine was convinced of the reality of a wide variety of psychic phenomena.

He required that all of his battalion commanders learn how to bend spoons in the manner of celebrity psychic Uri Geller, and he himself attempted several psychic feats, in addition to walking through walls, such as levitation and dispersing distant clouds with his mind.

2009

In 2009, Stubblebine said he believed the H1N1 swine flu was "a genetically engineered virus that is part of a World Health Organization-United Nations-United States scheme to sterilize untold numbers of people".