Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Mystery attacks prompt warning

Avoid Cuba, tourists told

- By Brian Bennett Los Angeles Times

WASHINGTON – The State Department said Friday it had ordered more than half the U.S. Embassy staff and all diplomatic family members to leave Cuba because of a mysterious series of what it called “specific attacks” that have caused myriad health problems to 21 U.S. diplomats.

The State Department issued an advisory for Americans not to visit Cuba, although no tourists or other travelers have been affected by the still-unexplaine­d attacks. The embassy, an iconic building on Havana’s waterfront, also will suspend processing U.S. visa applicatio­ns.

Only those who carry out the main U.S.

diplomatic and consular duties, including providing emergency assistance to American travelers in Cuba, will stay at the embassy in Havana, officials said.

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said he had decided to trim staff and warn Americans in response to what he called “attacks of an unknown nature.” He emphasized that the moves were intended to ensure the health and safety of personnel, not to punish Cuba.

“Until the government of Cuba can ensure the safety of our diplomats in Cuba, our Embassy will be reduced to emergency personnel in order to minimize the number of diplomats at risk of exposure to harm,” Tillerson said.

Still, the dramatic moves were a blow to Washington’s delicate relations with Havana, which were restored in 2015, more than half a century after they were broken in the Cold War.

Tillerson issued the statement in Beijing, where he is meeting Chinese officials to discuss efforts to restrain North Korea and to help set up Trump’s visit in November.

Aides said he made the decision on the flight from Washington, after considerin­g options that included temporaril­y closing the embassy.

In all, 21 U.S. diplomats in Cuba have exhibited a wide range of physical symptoms, including ear complaints, hearing loss, dizziness, headache, fatigue, cognitive issues and difficulty sleeping. Several Canadian diplomats also have reported unusual physical ailments.

“Investigat­ors have been unable to determine who is responsibl­e or what is causing these attacks,” Tillerson said. Moreover, he said, the State Department “is unable to recommend a means to mitigate exposure.”

U.S. officials said the attacks occurred in the diplomats’ residences and in local hotels they frequent. The attacks began in mid-2016, and the most recent was in August.

The government mostly has referred to “incidents” rather than attacks in the past. But officials said Friday the U.S. now believes “specific attacks” targeted the diplomats in Cuba.

Tillerson emphasized that the U.S. is not breaking diplomatic relations with Cuba, noting that Havana “has told us it will continue to investigat­e these attacks and we will continue to cooperate with them in this effort.”

Cuba has allowed FBI agents in to help investigat­e the rash of health problems. And the Trump administra­tion has stopped short of blaming Cuba for the attacks, leaving open the possibilit­y that another country or group is responsibl­e.

Experts have theorized that the attacks have been carried out by a machine that sends high-powered sound waves at a person, vibrating brain tissue and parts of the ear.

Russian intelligen­ce agents have been known to use audio weapons, but the U.S. has not definitive­ly determined who is responsibl­e for the attacks in Cuba.

Investigat­ors have struggled to unravel the mystery. FBI agents and other agencies have found devices in or near the homes and hotels that were affected.

In a telephone briefing, a State Department official said the decision was aimed at reducing “the number of Americans who are vulnerable to exposure” from possible attacks.

The State Department notified Cuba of the moves early Friday via its embassy in Washington. Cuba’s embassy had no immediate comment.

Tillerson’s decision followed the highest-level diplomatic contacts between Washington and Havana since Trump took office in January.

The Cuban official who helped lead the diplomatic opening with the U.S., Josefina Vidal, came to the State Department last week to press for more time to investigat­e the attacks.

But when concerns grew about a possible embassy shutdown, Cuba requested an urgent meeting Tuesday between Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez and Tillerson at the State Department.

Rodriguez insisted his government was not behind the attacks and was trying to find the cause. He also said Cuba would not permit a third country to use Cuban soil to attack diplomats, according to a statement from the Cuban government.

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