
iStockphoto
According to recently declassified CIA documents, the Ark of the Covenant was actually located in the 1980s. The Ark of the Covenant, also known as the Ark of the Testimony or the Ark of God, supposedly contained the Ten Commandments from the Bible.
The Ark of the Covenant also contains, according to the Bible, the Tablets of the Law, by which God delivered the Ten Commandments to Moses at Mount Sinai, Aaron’s rod (a walking stick carried by Moses’ brother, Aaron), and a pot of manna (an edible bread-like substance that God bestowed upon the Israelites during their 40-year journey through the desert between the Exodus and the conquest of Canaan).
No one knows the current location of the Ark of the Covenant, though some have claimed to have possession of it over the years. The Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church claims to have it stored in a treasury near the Church of Our Lady Mary of Zion in the town of Axum. The Lemba people of South Africa and Zimbabwe claim their ancestors hid it in a deep cave in the Dumghe mountains. British Israelites believed the Ark was located at the grave of the Egyptian princess Tea Tephi.
All of them are apparently wrong. Because CIA documents about a remote viewing project known as “Sun Streak” claim to have found the Ark of the Covenant in a different location in the 1980s.
Remote viewing, the ability of some people to see a distant or unseen subject using just their minds, was a secret subject of experimentation by the CIA in the 1980s. Earlier this month, retired U.S. Army Chief Warrant Officer Joe McMoneagle claimed he was a psychic spy for the CIA and that he saw proof of life on the planet Mars. He claims to have been the CIA’s “Remote Viewer No. 1.”
In the “Sun Streak” CIA documents, “Remote Viewer No. 032” was given coordinates and ended up finding the Ark of the Covenant hidden somewhere in the Middle East.
“The target is a container. This container has another container inside of it,” DailyMail.com reports the CIA document states. “The target is fashioned of wood, gold and silver…. and it is decorated with [a six-winged angel].”

CIA

CIA
The remote viewer claimed to see people in the area speaking Arabic, individuals clothed in virtually all white with black hair and dark eyes, and buildings that resembled Mosque Domes.
“The target is hidden, underground, dark and wet were all aspects of the location of the target,” the remote viewer claimed.
“The purpose of the target is to bring a people together. It has something to do with ceremony, memory, homage, the resurrection. There is an aspect of spirituality, information, lessons and historical knowledge far beyond what we now know.
“The target is protected by entities and can only be opened (now) by those who are authorized to do so. This container will not/cannot be opened until the time is deemed correct.”
The remote viewer also claimed the “mechanics of the lock system will be found to be fairly simple,” but anyone who attempts to open it using any other method will be “destroyed by the container’s protectors through the use of a power unknown to us.”
Unfortunately, these declassified CIA documents don’t go on to say whether anyone with the U.S. government took the psychic’s claims seriously and went to find and claim the Ark of the Covenant. Perhaps that will be in the next set of documents that President Donald Trump will make public.