Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Illnesses of Cuba-based U.S. diplomats still go unexplaine­d

- By Tracy Wilkinson Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — The mystery surroundin­g strange symptoms of illness experience­d by at least two dozen U.S. diplomats stationed in Havana has still not been resolved.

More than a year after the symptoms were first reported, and the U.S. government blamed them on “attacks” against the diplomats, a new report by U.S. medical experts can find no explanatio­n.

The study by a team from the University of Pennsylvan­ia, published last week in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n, concluded the diplomatic personnel suffered brain injuries without evidence of head trauma.

The Americans reported symptoms including hearing loss, headaches, dizziness, nausea and loss of concentrat­ion. Initially, the U.S. government blamed the symptoms on “sonic” or “acoustic” attacks but has backed off those labels. Yet the Penn group could not determine a cause, saying that any “sensory phenomena” was of “unclear origin.” “These individual­s appeared to have sustained injury to widespread brain networks without an associated history of head trauma,” the study said. “Nonetheles­s,” the JAMA added in an attached report, “the similariti­es among the 21 cases merit considerat­ion of a common medical, environmen­tal, or psychologi­cal event as the potential cause.”

The State Department has said 24 people reported symptoms after hearing strange, high-pitched sounds, or a kind of pressure on their ears, at their diplomatic homes in Havana or in hotels. The study’s authors said they looked at only 21 cases of people who submitted to “multidisci­plinary evaluation.”

The symptoms were first reported in late 2016 but not disclosed by the State Department until August. In response, Washington expelled 17 Cuban diplomats from Washington and ordered most of its own diplomatic personnel from Havana back to U.S. soil and restricted travel there to emergency personnel.

The two government­s at first said they were cooperatin­g in the investigat­ion but soon fell into mutual recriminat­ion. The government of President Raul Castro condemned the purported attacks and denied any involvemen­t but later called into question the veracity of the incidents.

The Trump administra­tion, after first welcoming Havana’s cooperatio­n, later blamed Castro’s government for failing in its duty to keep foreign diplomats safe on the island as per internatio­nal treaty.

The chill in diplomatic relations followed a major opening between Washington and Havana under President Barak Obama, which ended half a century of Cold War hostilitie­s. The U.S. reopened its embassy in Havana, and Cuba did the same in Washington, in 2015.

Trump had pledged to roll back that opening but so far has taken only limited steps to restrict some travel to and trade with Cuba by U.S. citizens.

And despite the tension over the embassy illnesses, the two government­s have been meeting regularly.

 ?? EMILY MICHOT/MIAMI HERALD 2017 ?? At least 24 Americans stationed in Havana experience­d strange symptoms of illness.
EMILY MICHOT/MIAMI HERALD 2017 At least 24 Americans stationed in Havana experience­d strange symptoms of illness.

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