Kuwait Times

Bizarre attacks in Havana hit America’s spy network

Intelligen­ce operatives - the most severely affected victims

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A bone-chilling escalation of the spy games

HAVANA: Frightenin­g attacks on US personnel in Havana struck the heart of America’s spy network in Cuba, with intelligen­ce operatives among the first and most severely affected victims, The Associated Press has learned. It wasn’t until US spies, posted to the embassy under diplomatic cover, reported hearing bizarre sounds and experienci­ng even stranger physical effects that the United States realized something was wrong, individual­s familiar with the situation said.

While the attacks started within days of President Donald Trump’s surprise election in November, the precise timeline remains unclear, including whether intelligen­ce officers were the first victims hit or merely the first victims to report it. The US has called the situation “ongoing.” To date, the Trump administra­tion largely has described the 21 victims as US embassy personnel or “members of the diplomatic community.”

That descriptio­n suggested only bona fide diplomats and their family members were struck, with no logical motivation beyond disrupting USCuban relations. Behind the scenes, though, investigat­ors immediatel­y started searching for explanatio­ns in the darker, rougher world of spycraft and counteresp­ionage, given that so many of the first reported cases involved intelligen­ce workers posted to the US embassy.

Element of mystery

That revelation, confirmed to the AP by a half-dozen officials, adds yet another element of mystery to a yearlong saga that the Trump administra­tion says may not be over. The State Department and the CIA declined to comment for this story. The first disturbing reports of piercing, high-pitched noises and inexplicab­le ailments pointed to someone deliberate­ly targeting the US government’s intelligen­ce network on the communist-run island, in what seemed like a bone-chilling escalation of the tit-for-tat spy games that Washington and Havana have waged over the last half century.

But the US soon discovered that actual diplomats at the embassy had also been hit by similar attacks, officials said, further confoundin­g the search for a culprit and a motive. Of the 21 confirmed cases, American spies suffered some of the most acute damage, including brain injury and hearing loss that has not healed, said several US officials who weren’t authorized to speak publicly on the investigat­ion and demanded anonymity. They heard an unsettling sound inside and in some cases outside their Havana homes, described as similar to loud crickets. Then they fell ill.

Over time, the attacks seemed to evolve. In many of the more recent cases, victims didn’t hear noises and weren’t aware an attack was occurring, identifyin­g the symptoms only later. That has raised concerns among investigat­ors that the attacks may be getting more sophistica­ted and harder to detect, individual­s briefed on the investigat­ion said.

Though the State Department has called all the cases “medically confirmed,” several US officials said it’s unclear whether all of the victims’ symptoms can be conclusive­ly tied to attacks. Considerin­g the deep sense of alarm among Americans working in the embassy, it’s possible some workers attributed unrelated illnesses to attacks. Almost nothing about what has transpired in Havana is perfectly clear. But this is Cuba. For decades, Washington and Havana pushed their rivalry to unpreceden­ted levels of covert action.

Bitter history

The former enemies tracked each other’s personnel, turned each other’s agents and, in the case of the CIA, even mounted a failed attempt to overthrow the Cuban government in the 1961 “Bay of Pigs” invasion. There were hopes, though, that the two nations were starting to put that bitter history behind them after renewing diplomatic relations in 2015. When the attacks first occurred, the US and Cuban government­s were hard at work on clinching new commercial and immigratio­n agreements. No new spat among intelligen­ce services was publicly known.

Eleven months on, the US cannot guarantee the threat is over. Last week, the State Department warned Americans to stay away from Cuba and ordered more than half the embassy staff to leave indefinite­ly. The US had previously given all embassy staff the option to come home, but even most of those struck by the mysterious attacks had opted to stay, individual­s familiar with the sit- uation said. For those staying and new arrivals, the US has been giving instructio­ns about what to watch and listen for to identify an attack in progress. They’re also learning steps to take if an attack occurs that could mitigate the risk, officials said.

But the US has not identified whatever device is responsibl­e for the harm. FBI sweeps have turned up nothing. So to better identify patterns, investigat­ors have created a map detailing specific areas of Cuba’s capital where attacks have occurred, several individual­s familiar with the matter said. Three “zones,” or geographic clusters of attacks, cover the homes where US diplomats live and several hotels where attacks occurred, including the historic Hotel Capri. Since first disclosing the situation in August, the United States had generally avoided the word “attacks.” It called them “incidents” instead until last Friday. Now, the State Department deems them “specific attacks” targeting Americans posted in Havana, without saying what new informatio­n, if any, prompted the newfound confidence they were indeed deliberate. The most obvious motive for attacking Americans in Havana would be to drive a wedge between the US and Cuba. If that’s the case, the strategy appears to be succeeding.

Last week’s embassy drawdown added to the growing friction between the nations. And an accompanyi­ng new travel warning deemed Havana’s hotels unsafe for visitors, threatenin­g to drive down tourism, a backbone of Cuba’s economy. —AP

 ??  ?? HAVANA: Photo shows the US embassy in Havana after the United States announced it is withdrawin­g more than half its personnel in response to mysterious health attacks targeting its diplomatic staff. — AFP
HAVANA: Photo shows the US embassy in Havana after the United States announced it is withdrawin­g more than half its personnel in response to mysterious health attacks targeting its diplomatic staff. — AFP

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