Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

CIA creates task force on ‘Havana Syndrome’

- Michael Wilner and Nora Gámez Torres McClatchy Washington Bureau TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

WASHINGTON – The Central Intelligen­ce Agency has set up a task force bringing together experts to advance the investigat­ion into a series of mysterious attacks on Americans in Havana, according to a source familiar with the matter.

The task force was launched late last year and involves doctors, human resources profession­als and counterint­elligence agents working jointly in a centralize­d probe into the events that became a major stumbling block in U.S.Cuba relations.

Diplomats stationed at the U.S. Embassy in Havana first began reporting strange symptoms in 2017, including dizziness, tinnitus, visual problems, vertigo and cognitive difficulties. Doctors at the University of Pennsylvan­ia and the University of Miami found evidence of brain injury and damage to the inner ear’s vestibular system in diplomats and their family members. Similar events were reported in China.

Alongside the establishm­ent of a distinct CIA office, President Joe Biden’s new national security team has also made the investigat­ion a priority, a senior administra­tion official said Friday. The Biden administra­tion is currently reviewing Cuba policy, but the incidents in Havana are a significant hurdle to further normalizat­ion of relations with the Cuban government.

“While we won’t address specifics at this time, the National Security Council has taken this very seriously since the beginning of this administra­tion,” the official told McClatchy. “This concerns the health and well-being of American public servants from across the government, and we will continue to act with urgency to bring a whole-of-government response to these issues.”

The official who confirmed the task force’s existence spoke on condition of anonymity because it has not been publicly announced. The developmen­t was first reported by CNN on Wednesday.

The State Department also will be devoting additional resources to the investigat­ion, a spokespers­on said. Secretary of State Tony Blinken plans to announce the appointmen­t of a senior adviser devoted to the investigat­ion “soon.”

“This adviser will be positioned in a senior role and report directly to the department’s senior leadership to ensure that we continue to make significant strides to address this issue and to ensure our people are receiving the treatment they need,” the spokespers­on said.

The creation of the CIA task force comes after a study by the National Academies of Sciences concluded that directed microwave energy may have harmed U.S. officials in Cuba and China. Another investigat­ion by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention failed to identify a cause for the injuries.

The Cuban government has denied that attacks ever happened in Havana and complained of lack of access to the medical informatio­n of those injured.

The State Department has publicly confirmed 26 cases in Cuba and one case in China, and has recently said it is still investigat­ing. The U.S. government has not determined a cause for the ailments, now known as the “Havana Syndrome.”

A statement put out in December 2020 by Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Florida, who is the current vice chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligen­ce and who has filed legislatio­n to ensure victims receive proper health coverage, indicates the number of those affected could be higher, involving more than 40 diplomats and family members at the U.S. Embassy in Havana and at least a dozen diplomats at the U.S. consulate in Guangzhou, China.

The statement sent by Rubio and other senators backing the bill was the first official acknowledg­ment that CIA agents were targeted too. Reports that the agency decided to withdraw its personnel from Havana in 2017 were confirmed by a redacted State Department internal review published by the National Security Archive.

Ever since, the CIA, FBI and State Department have been investigat­ing the mysterious episodes.

A former CIA officer, Marc Polymeropo­ulos, also came forward and said he believed he suffered a similar attack in Moscow, increasing suspicion that Russia

“While we won’t address specifics at this time, the National Security Council has taken this very seriously since the beginning of this administra­tion.” Senior Biden administra­tion official speaking on condition of anonymity

might be behind the mysterious events.

The new task force mostly comprises experts who were already involved in the response to the events in Havana. The purpose of the new office is to bring those experts together in a formal way, streamlini­ng their work.

“CIA is working alongside other government agencies to double down on our efforts to find answers regarding the unexplaine­d global health incidents that have impacted personnel,” CIA press secretary Timothy Barrett said in a statement. “The Agency’s top priority has been and continues to be the wellbeing of all of our officers.”

Bill Burns, Biden’s nominee for CIA director, told senators during his confirmation hearing Wednesday that getting to the bottom of the Havana attacks was a priority for the agency under his leadership. Sen. Bob Menendez’s office said the legislator, who is the chairman of the foreign relations committee, has not been updated on the creation of the task force but was seeking more informatio­n.

The unexplaine­d incidents have also affected thousands of Cuban American families hoping to reunite with relatives on the island, as the State Department suspended visa processing in Havana since 2017, when most personnel were evacuated from the island.

With the hashtag #FamiliesBe­longTogeth­er, hundreds of Cuban and Cuban American Twitter users have posted messages asking the Biden administra­tion to resume the Cuban Family Reunification Program, also suspended after the withdrawal of embassy staff.

“It’s time to end the pain,” a Twitter user identified as Mayelin wrote. “It’s time for all those Cuban families to be together.

 ?? EMILY MICHOT/MIAMI HERALD/TNS ?? The CIA has set up a task force to continue the investigat­ion of “Havana Syndrome,” unexplaine­d symptoms experience­d by American diplomats in Cuba starting in 2017.
EMILY MICHOT/MIAMI HERALD/TNS The CIA has set up a task force to continue the investigat­ion of “Havana Syndrome,” unexplaine­d symptoms experience­d by American diplomats in Cuba starting in 2017.

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