Houston Chronicle Sunday

Radiation is cited in envoys’ illnesses

- By Ana Swanson and Edward Wong

WASHINGTON — The most probable cause of a series of mysterious affliction­s that have sickened U.S. spies and diplomats abroad in the past several years was radio-frequency energy, a type of radiation that includes microwaves, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineerin­g and Medicine has concluded in a report.

The conclusion by a committee of 19 experts cited “directed, pulsed radio-frequency energy” as “the most plausible mechanism” to explain the illness, known as Havana syndrome. But they said secondary factors may have contribute­d, a copy of the report obtained by the New York Times shows.

The strange illness struck scores of government employees, first at the U.S. Embassy in Havana in 2016, and subsequent­ly in China and other countries. Many of the officers suffered from dizziness, fatigue, headaches and loss of hearing, memory and balance, and some were forced into permanent retirement.

CIA officers visiting overseas stations experience­d similar symptoms, the Times and GQ magazine reported in October. The officers were traveling to discuss countering Russia covert operations with foreign intelligen­ce agencies, which adds to suspicions that Moscow is behind the episodes.

The new report reveals strong evidence that the incidents were the result of a malicious attack. It attributes the illnesses to “directed” and “pulsed” — rather than “continuous” — energy, implying that the victims’ exposure was targeted and deliberate.

The State Department gave the report to some congressio­nal officials and others Thursday and Friday and told them not to share it. The Times and NBC News separately obtained the report Friday, and NBC earlier reported the findings. The National Academies publicly released the report Saturday evening.

The report does not point to a perpetrato­r, although it mentions “significan­t research in Russia/USSR” on pulsed radio-frequency technology.

The report also contains a stark warning about the possibilit­y of future incidents and the U.S. government’s ability to detect them or tomount a response. That U.S. government employees reported affliction­s not only in Cuba and China but also in Russia and other countries raises questions about how widespread the incidents may be.

The report recommends that the State Department act now to establish plans and protocols so it can immediatel­y begin an investigat­ion if similar incidents occur.

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