Call & Times

From Cuba emerges a literal secret weapon

AS OTHERS SEE IT

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In nations that have known the horror of dictatorsh­ip or foreign occupation, there are often long traditions of what Poland’s national poet once called “patriotic treason.” In Polish history, this kind of activity has ranged from armed resistance – in the 19th century against Russian occupation, in the 20th century against the Nazis – to peaceful efforts by bureaucrat­s who quietly tried to work “within the system” on behalf of their country. I once researched the story of a Polish culture ministry official who churned out Stalinist prose but also used her position, during the years of communist terror, to quietly help dissident artists.

In occupied countries, large public events can spontaneou­sly take on political overtones, too. When the Czech hockey teambeat the Soviet Union at the world championsh­ips in 1969, one year after the Soviet invasion of the country, half a million people flooded the streets in a celebratio­n that became a show of political defiance. In 1956, 100,000 people came to the reburial of a Hungarian politician who had been murdered following a show trial. The funeral oratory kicked off an anti-communistr­evolution a few days later.

I am listing all these distant foreign events because at the moment they have strange echoes in Washington. Sen. John McCain’s funeral felt like one of those spontaneou­s political events. As in a dictatorsh­ip, people spoke in code: President Donald Trump’s name was not mentioned, yet everybody understood that praise for McCain, a symbol of the dying values of the old Republican Party, was also

A disturbing new possibilit­y has emerged to explain the injuries suffered by 26 U.S. diplomats serving in Cuba in recent years, and one in China. The diplomats reported symptoms such as hearing loss, dizziness, tinnitus, visual difficulti­es, headaches, fatigue, and cognitive, balance and sleeping difficulti­es. The New York Times, quoting medical experts, suggested in an article last Sunday that the illnesses could have been caused by the use of invisible microwave beams aimed at the diplomats.

Previously, there had been speculatio­n about the use of some kind of “sonic” or acoustic weapon - those affected recalled hearing noises, such as a chirping. But the Times quoted experts as suggesting the sounds could have been caused by a phenomenon in which microwaves can delude the human brain into hearing sounds. This is not confirmed; other experts saymicrowa­ves could not be the case. Either way, the impact has been health damage in the form of brain injury. criticism of the authoritar­ian populist in the White House. As in an occupied country, people spoke of resistance and renewal in the funeral’s wake. Since then, public officials have also described, anonymousl­y, new forms of “patriotic treason” within the White House, in comments to Bob Woodward and the New York Times. As in an unlawful state, these American officials say they are quietly working “within the system,” in defiance of Trump, for the greater good of the nation.

There can be only one explanatio­n for this kind of behavior: White House officials, and many others in Washington, really do not feel they are living in a fully legal state. True, there is no communist terror; the president’s goons will not arrest public officials who testify to Congress; no one will be murdered if they walk out of the White House and start campaignin­g for impeachmen­t or, more importantl­y, for the invocation of the 25th Amendment, the procedure to transfer power if a president is mentally or physically unfit to remain in office. Neverthele­ss, dozens of people clearly don’t believe in the legal mechanisms designed to remove a president who is incompeten­t or corrupt. As the anonymous oped writer put it in the New York Times, despite “early whispers within the cabinet of invoking the 25th Amendment,”none of the secret patriots “wanted toprecipit­ate a constituti­onal crisis” and backed off.

You can imagine why this would be. Leading members of Congress might resist invoking the 25th Amendment, which would of course be described by Trump’s supporters as a “Cabinet coup.” The mob – not the literal, physical street mob, but the online mob that has replaced it – would seek revenge. There may not be any

Who did this? Cuba has denied involvemen­t and says it does not know who is responsibl­e. A Cuban scientist has claimed it might be “psychologi­cal contagion” among the U.S. diplomats. The FBI has investigat­ed, but the U.S. government has not officially accused anyone. It seems improbable that Cuba, with its extensive police-state surveillan­ce, could fail to know what is going on.

What would be the motive? The attacks occurred after the United States and Cuba restored diplomatic relations in 2015 and could have been an attempt to disrupt that rapprochem­ent. To some extent, it did cause a setback, with the United States pulling back nonessenti­al personnel and family members, about 60 percent of the U.S. Embassy staff. Raúl Castro, then president and still a powerful figure, carried out the normalizat­ion, so presumably he did not condone this. But is there a rogue faction in Cuba trying to harm Americans? Or could a third party be staging the attacks?

In Moscow during the Cold War, the Soviet Union bombarded the U.S. presidenti­al goons, but any senior official who signs his or her name to a call for impeachmen­t or removal will certainly be subjected to waves of hatred on social media, starting with a denunciati­on from the president. Recriminat­ions will follow on Fox News, along with a smear campaign, a doxing campaign, attacks on the target’s family and perhaps worse. It is possible we have underestim­ated the degree to which our political culture has already become more authoritar­ian.

Maybe we have also underestim­ated the degree to which our Constituti­on, designed in the 18th century, has proved insufficie­nt to the demands of the 21st. In 2016, we learned why it matters that our electoral college – originally designed to put another layer of people between the popular vote and the presidency, or as Alexander Hamilton wrote, to ensure “that the office of President will never fall to the lot of any man who is not in an eminent degree endowed with the requisite qualificat­ions” – has become a stale fiction. Now an important constituti­onal amendment seems, to the men and women who are empowered to use it, too controvers­ial to actually use.

The result: institutio­nal and administra­tive chaos; our military chain of command is compromise­d; people around the elected president feel impelled to act above the law and remove papers from his desk.

The mechanisms meant to protect the state from an incompeten­t or dictatoria­l president are not being used because people in power no longer believe in them, or are afraid to use them.

Washington feels like the capital of a state where the legal order has collapsed because, in some ways, it is. Embassy with microwave beams, perhaps for espionage. From 1953 to May 1975, the beams were emitted from a source in an apartment building some 330 feet west of the embassy, with highest intensitie­s between the third and eighth floors. A second source from the south was detected after that, and in February 1976, screens were put on the windows to reduce the exposure of people inside.

Russia might have a motive in the latest Cuba attacks: to spoil the rapprochem­ent with Washington and thus open the way to closer ties with Moscow. But such a microwave weapon would require a bulky apparatus and relatively close proximity to the targets, who were in different locations. Could that be done clandestin­ely? And the motive in China is certainly not clear.

Still, the microwave explanatio­n has again raised a question about whether the United States has discovered more than is being said about the perpetrato­rs. If there are known culprits, they should be identified and held to account.

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