The Tuscaloosa News

Report ties Russia to ‘Havana Syndrome’

Ex-CIA spy calls for congressio­nal hearings

- Josh Meyer and Dan Morrison

A former senior CIA officer who was forced to retire over a brain injury caused by a suspected “Havana Syndrome” attack has called for congressio­nal hearings after a new report linked Russia to mysterious neurologic­al symptoms that have plagued U.S. diplomats and spies for nearly a decade.

The report comes a little more than a year after the U.S. intelligen­ce community concluded it was “very unlikely a foreign adversary is responsibl­e” for the sometimes-debilitati­ng headaches, dizziness, memory loss and buzzing in the ears reported by dozens of American personnel.

“It’s not conclusive, but it’s certainly compelling that the Russians are involved,” former intelligen­ce officer Marc Polymeropo­ulos told USA TODAY, reacting to the new report. Polymeropo­ulos has become a public face and advocate for current and former U.S. officials who say they suffer from Havana Syndrome.

A joint investigat­ion by “60 Minutes,” the Latvia-based news site The Insider, and the German newsmagazi­ne Der Spiegel reported Sunday that senior members of Unit 29155 of the Russian GRU military intelligen­ce agency have received awards and promotions for their work related to the developmen­t of “non-lethal acoustic weapons.”

The reporting points to attacks by Russian intelligen­ce against American diplomatic personnel and their families that victims have long alleged. The reports said that U.S. intelligen­ce officers who had served in Kyiv in 2014 − as Ukraine and the U.S. moved closer together and Russia first began to seize territory in eastern Ukraine − appear to have been tracked and targeted in subsequent postings.

American personnel in Cuba, China, Vietnam, Germany and elsewhere have all reported similar symptoms. Among those personnel were members of a team that traveled to Vietnam ahead of a visit by Vice President Kamala Harris in August 2021. Harris’ touchdown in Hanoi was delayed as security officials worked to confirm she could land in safety.

‘Anomalous Health Incidents’

The strange symptoms reported by U.S. personnel have been described as “Anomalous Health Incidents,” but are commonly known as “Havana Syndrome,” because they first gained prominence among American diplomats in Cuba in 2016.

Officials reported headaches, nausea, dizziness and pain. Reports then emerged of similar unexplaine­d symptoms from U.S. diplomats and spies in China.

While the incidents left victims with enduring symptoms of concussion and other brain trauma, exams showed scant signs of injury, though doctors for some victims have reported unexplaine­d damage to the bones of the inner ear.

Some researcher­s have suggested Havana Syndrome was akin to mass hysteria – a cluster of brain injuries caused by the very fear of an attack.

Two reports by the National Institutes of Health published in March found “no significan­t difference” when comparing MRI brain images of 81 Havana Syndrome victims with those from 48 members of a control group.

But Dr. David Reiman of Stanford University published an accompanyi­ng opinion piece noting that he had participat­ed in earlier studies that said the symptoms were “potentiall­y caused by an external mechanism.”

A Russian assassinat­ion unit

Much of the new reporting focused on the GRU’s Unit 29155, which was implicated in the nerve agent poisoning of former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter in London in 2018.

Using leaked mobile phone data and other informatio­n, reporters were able to place members of Unit 29155 at locations where American government personnel experience­d signs of a Havana Syndrome – just before or at the time of the attack. These include incidents in Frankfurt, Germany; Guangzhou, China; and Tblisi, Georgia, from 2014 to 2021, the three news outlets reported.

Two senior members of the unit were rewarded with promotions to plum political jobs in Russia’s Far East.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov called the reports “nothing more than baseless, unfounded accusation­s by the media.”

Avoiding confrontat­ion?

Greg Edgreen, the Pentagon official who ran the military’s investigat­ion into Havana Syndrome, told “60 Minutes” that the U.S. government set the bar for proof of foreign actors impossibly high.

“If my mother had seen what I saw, she would say, ‘It’s the Russians, stupid,’ ” he told the program

Molly McKew, an expert on informatio­n warfare who served as an advisor to former Georgian president Mikhail Saakashvil­i from 2009 to 2013, said Edgreen’s comments and the new report underscore how reluctant Washington is to point the finger at Moscow.

“No U.S. administra­tion wants to have a response to Russian aggression, so they decide not to recognize it for what it is,” McKew said on social media. “Which leaves Americans undefended in crucial aspects, and our policy on Russia fundamenta­lly nonsensica­l.”

Rep. Jim Himes of Connecticu­t, the ranking Democrat on the House Intelligen­ce Committee, said in a statement to USA TODAY he “will make appropriat­e inquiries with the intelligen­ce community based on the informatio­n presented publicly.”

“Since the earliest reports, the committee has been focused on ensuring that those who experience AHIs receive all the care and support they need. We will continue to oversee this important issue.”

In a statement, the office of the director of national intelligen­ce stood by its 2023 assessment that Havana Syndrome symptoms are probably not the result of a foreign actor. “These findings do not call into question the very real experience­s and symptoms that our colleagues and their family members have reported,” the statement said.

The White House said in a statement that it had ordered agencies to “prioritize investigat­ions” into the cause of Havana Syndrome and “to ensure that U.S. government personnel and their families ... receive the support and timely access to medical care that they need.”

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 ?? YAMIL LAGE/AFP, GETTY IMAGES ?? The symptoms reported by U.S. personnel are commonly known as “Havana Syndrome” because they first gained prominence among American diplomats in Cuba in 2016.
YAMIL LAGE/AFP, GETTY IMAGES The symptoms reported by U.S. personnel are commonly known as “Havana Syndrome” because they first gained prominence among American diplomats in Cuba in 2016.

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