Miami Herald

U.S. diplomats and spies battle Trump administra­tion over suspected attacks

- BY ANA SWANSON, EDWARD WONG AND JULIAN E. BARNES

The strange sound came at night: a crack like a marble striking the floor of the apartment above them.

Mark Lenzi and his wife had lightheade­dness, sleep issues and headaches, and their children were waking up with bloody noses — symptoms they thought might be from the smog in Guangzhou, China, where Lenzi worked for the State Department. But air pollution could not explain his sudden memory loss, including forgetting names of work tools.

What began as strange sounds and symptoms among more than a dozen U.S. officials and their family members in China in 2018 has turned into a diplomatic mystery spanning multiple countries and involving speculatio­n about secret high-tech weapons and foreign attacks.

One of the biggest questions centers on whether Trump administra­tion officials believe that Lenzi and other diplomats in China experience­d the same mysterious affliction as dozens of diplomats and spies at the U.S. Embassy in Cuba in 2016 and 2017, which came to be known as Havana Syndrome. American employees in the two countries reported hearing strange sounds, followed by headaches, dizziness, blurred vision and memory loss.

But the government’s treatment of the episodes has been radically different. The State Department, which oversaw the cases, has produced inconsiste­nt assessment­s of patients and events, ignored outside medical diagnoses and withheld basic informatio­n from Congress, a New York Times investigat­ion found.

In Cuba, the Trump administra­tion withdrew most of its staff members from the embassy and issued a travel warning, saying U.S. diplomats had experience­d “targeted attacks.” President Donald Trump expelled 15 Cuban diplomats from Washington and started an independen­t review, though Cuba denied any involvemen­t.

The administra­tion took a softer approach with China. In May 2018, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who was the CIA director during the Cuba events, told lawmakers that the medical details of one U.S. official who had fallen ill in China were “very similar and entirely consistent” with the syndrome in Cuba. The administra­tion evacuated more than a dozen federal employees and some of their family members.

The State Department soon retreated, labeling what happened in China as “health incidents.” While the officers in Cuba were placed on administra­tive leave for rehabilita­tion, those in China initially had to use sick days and unpaid leave, some officers and their lawyers say. And the State Department did not open an investigat­ion into what happened in China.

The administra­tion has said little about the events in China and played down the idea that a hostile power could be responsibl­e. But similar episodes have been reported by senior CIA officers who visited the agency’s stations overseas, according to three current and former officials and others familiar with the events.

That includes Moscow, where Marc Polymeropo­ulos, a CIA officer who helped run clandestin­e operations in Russia and Europe, experience­d what he believes was an attack in December 2017. Polymeropo­ulos, who was 48 at the time, suffered severe vertigo in his hotel room in Moscow and later developed debilitati­ng migraine headaches that forced him to retire.

The cases involving CIA officers, none of which have been publicly reported, are adding to suspicions that Russia carried out the attacks worldwide. Some senior Russia analysts in the CIA, officials at the

State Department and outside scientists, as well as several of the victims, see Russia as the most likely culprit given its history with weapons that cause brain injuries and its interest in fracturing Washington’s relations with Beijing and Havana.

The CIA director remains unconvince­d, and State Department leaders say they have not settled on a cause.

Critics say disparitie­s in how the officers were treated stemmed from diplomatic and political considerat­ions, including the president’s desire to strengthen relations with Russia and win a trade deal with China.

China diplomats began reporting strange symptoms in spring 2018, as U.S. officials stationed there were trying to coax their Chinese counterpar­ts into a trade deal that Trump had promised to deliver. The president was also looking to Beijing for help in clinching nuclear talks with North Korea and consistent­ly lavished praise on Xi Jinping, China’s authoritar­ian leader.

According to half a dozen U.S. officials, State Department leaders realized that pursuing a similar course of action as they had in Cuba — including evacuating missions in China — could cripple diplomatic and economic relationsh­ips.

With Cuba, Trump sought to reverse President Barack Obama’s détente. Jeffrey DeLaurenti­s, the chief of mission at the U.S. Embassy in Havana during the events, said the Trump administra­tion’s move to withdraw staff members “dovetailed fortuitous­ly with their objective on Cuba.”

Those who fled China have spent more than two years fighting to obtain the same benefits given to the victims in Cuba and others attacked by foreign powers. The battles have complicate­d their recovery and prompted government retaliatio­n that might have permanentl­y damaged their careers, according to interviews with more than 30 government officials, lawyers and doctors.

U.S. lawmakers have criticized what they call secrecy and inaction from the State Department and are pressing the agency to release a study it received in August from the National Academies of Sciences, which examined potential causes of the episodes.

“These injuries, and subsequent treatment by the U.S. government, have been a living nightmare for these dedicated public servants and their families,” said Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H. “It’s obvious how a U.S. adversary would have much to gain from the disorder, distress and division that has followed.”

Dr. David A. Relman, a Stanford University professor who is chair of the National Academies of Sciences committee that examined the cases, said it was “dishearten­ing and immensely frustratin­g” that the State Department had refused to share the report with the public or Congress “for reasons that elude us.”

In a statement, the department said: “The safety and security of U.S. personnel, their families and U.S. citizens is our top priority. The U.S. government has not yet determined a cause or an actor.”

Lenzi said he had sued the department for disability discrimina­tion, and the U.S. Office of Special Counsel is pursuing two investigat­ions into the State Department’s conduct.

The Office of Special Counsel declined to comment. But in an April 23 letter viewed by the Times, special counsel officials said investigat­ors had “found a substantia­l likelihood of wrongdoing” by the State Department, though the inquiry continues.

“This is a deliberate, high-level cover-up,” Lenzi said. “They have hung us out to dry.”

The situation has been complicate­d by the fact that U.S. officials and scientists still debate whether the symptoms resulted from an attack.

Many diplomats, CIA officers and scientists suspect a weapon producing microwave radiation damaged the victims’ brains. But some scientists and government officials argue it was a psychologi­cal illness that spread in the stressful environmen­t of foreign missions. Some point to chemical agents, like pesticides.

The Trump administra­tion has not clarified its view or said exactly how many people were affected.

At least 44 people in Cuba and 15 in China were evaluated or treated at the Center for Brain Injury and Repair at the University of Pennsylvan­ia. Others went elsewhere. At least 14 Canadian citizens in Havana say they have suffered similar symptoms.

Doctors at the University of Pennsylvan­ia declined to discuss details but dismissed the idea of a psychologi­cal illness, saying the patients they treated had sustained a brain injury from an external source.

Some senior officials at the State Department and former intelligen­ce officers said they believed Russia played a role. The country’s intelligen­ce operatives have seeded violence around the world, poisoning enemies in Britain and fueling assaults on U.S. soldiers in Afghanista­n.

During the Cold War, the Soviet Union bombarded the U.S. Embassy in Moscow with microwaves. In a 2014 document, the National Security Agency said it had intelligen­ce on a hostile country using a high-powered microwave weapon to “bathe a target’s living quarters in microwaves,” causing nervous system damage. The name of the country was classified, but people familiar with the document said it referred to Russia.

Several of the cases against the CIA affected senior officers who were traveling overseas to discuss plans to counter Russian covert operations with partner intelligen­ce agencies, according to two people familiar with the matter. Some CIA analysts believe Moscow was trying to derail that work.

Polymeropo­ulos declined to discuss his experience­s in Moscow, but he criticized how the U.S. government had handled its injured personnel. He is pushing the agency to allow

him to go to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, the hospital that has treated some of those who were affected in Cuba.

Some top U.S. officials insist on seeing more evidence before accusing Russia. Gina Haspel, the CIA director, has acknowledg­ed that Moscow had the intent to harm operatives, but she is not convinced it was responsibl­e or that attacks occurred, two U.S. officials said.

The first person to fall ill in China, a Commerce Department officer named Catherine Werner, who lived next door to Lenzi, experience­d vomiting, nausea, headaches and dizziness for months before she was flown to the United States in April 2018.

According to a whistleblo­wer complaint filed by Lenzi, the State Department took action only after Werner’s visiting mother, an Air Force veteran, used a device to record high levels of microwave radiation in her daughter’s apartment. The mother also fell ill.

That May, U.S. officials held a meeting to reassure U.S. officers in Guangzhou that Werner’s sickness appeared to be an isolated case. But Lenzi, a diplomatic security officer, wrote in a memo to the White

House that his supervisor insisted on using inferior equipment to measure microwaves in Werner’s apartment, calling it a “check-the-box exercise.”

“They didn’t find anything, because they didn’t want to find anything,” Lenzi said.

 ?? CODY O'LOUGHLIN The New York Times ?? Mark Lenzi, seen in Durham, N.H., on March 2, worked for the State Department in Guangzhou, China. Lenzi experience­s the same mysterious affliction as dozens of staff members at the U.S. Embassy in Havana.
CODY O'LOUGHLIN The New York Times Mark Lenzi, seen in Durham, N.H., on March 2, worked for the State Department in Guangzhou, China. Lenzi experience­s the same mysterious affliction as dozens of staff members at the U.S. Embassy in Havana.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States