Springfield News-Sun

Intel agencies: No sign adversarie­s behind ‘Havana syndrome’

- By Nomaan Merchant

WASHINGTON — U.S. intelligen­ce agencies cannot link a foreign adversary to any of the incidents associated with so-called “Havana syndrome,” the hundreds of cases of brain injuries and other symptoms reported by American personnel around the world.

The findings released Wednesday by U.S. intelligen­ce officials cast doubt on the longstandi­ng suspicions by many people who reported cases that Russia or another country may have been running a global campaign to harass or attack Americans using some form of directed energy.

Most of the cases investigat­ed appear to have different causes, from environmen­tal factors to undiagnose­d illnesses, said the officials, who say they have not found a single explanatio­n for most or all of the reports.

Instead, officials say, there is evidence that foreign countries were not involved. In some cases, the U.S. detected among adversaria­l government­s confusion about the allegation­s and suspicions that Havana syndrome was an American plot. And investigat­ors found “no credible evidence” that any adversary had obtained a weapon that could cause the reported symptoms or a listening device that might inadverten­tly injure people.

The Biden administra­tion has been under pressure to respond to Havana syndrome cases from government personnel who have reported injuries and their advocates, including members of Congress. President Joe Biden in 2021 signed into law the HAVANA Act, which provided compensati­on to people deemed to have sustained injuries consistent with what the government calls “anomalous health incidents.”

Affected people have reported headaches, dizziness and other symptoms often linked to traumatic brain injuries. Some U.S. employees have left government due to the severity of their illnesses.

“Nothing is more important than the health and wellbeing of our workforce,” said Maher Bitar, the White House National Security Council’s senior director for intelligen­ce programs, in a statement. “Since the start of the Biden-harris Administra­tion, we have focused on ensuring that our colleagues have access to the care and support they need.”

Mark Zaid, a lawyer for more than two dozen people who have reported injuries, said the new assessment lacked transparen­cy and left key questions unanswered.

“Until the shrouds of secrecy are lifted and the analysis that led to today’s assertions are available and subject to proper challenge, the alleged conclusion­s are substantiv­ely worthless,” he said in a statement. “But the damage it has caused to the morale of the victims, particular­ly by deflecting from the government’s failure to evaluate all the evidence, is real and must be condemned.”

Authoritie­s in Havana said the findings reflect what Cuba has repeatedly stated: that no attacks occurred.

“We’re not surprised,” Johana Tablada, deputy director of the U.S. division of Cuba’s Foreign Ministry, told The Associated Press.

Tablada noted that former U.S. President Donald Trump used the alleged attacks as an excuse to radically tighten sanctions against Cuba, including the partial paralysis of its consular services for more than five years. She said that, because of unfounded accusation­s, “very harsh measures were taken against our people in Cuba and in the United States that harmed Cuban families, exchanges between our countries (and) caused a downward spiral (of ties) that was practicall­y irreversib­le.”

Two officials familiar with the assessment briefed reporters Wednesday on condition of anonymity, under ground rules set by the U.S. Director of National Intelligen­ce.

Investigat­ors reviewed roughly 1,500 cases in 96 countries. Many of those cases, officials said, have been linked to other potential explanatio­ns aside from a foreign campaign: medical illnesses, malfunctio­ning air conditioni­ng and ventilatio­n systems, or electromag­netic waves coming from benign devices like a computer mouse. And some people may have come forward to report symptoms based on what they had heard about other cases or the exhaustive media reports about Havana syndrome, officials said.

A core group of roughly two dozen cases identified in an interim assessment published last year has been exhaustive­ly studied, officials said. None of the cases was linked to an attack by an adversary.

The officials stressed their investigat­ion was exhaustive, with participat­ion from seven U.S. agencies. One official described reviewing a report from an American who reported having possibly been hit by a car while driving. U.S. investigat­ors tracked down the car and the driver and investigat­ed that person’s family connection­s and any foreign travel, the official said.

Some leads were followed for as long as nine months, the official said.

Officials briefing reporters declined to say how the latest assessment, first reported by The Washington Post, may affect payments under the HAVANA Act. The State Department has compensate­d affected employees with one-time payments from $100,000 to $200,000.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A view of the U.S. embassy in Havana, Cuba. After an exhaustive investigat­ion, the origin of ‘Havana syndrome,’ the phenomenon that sickened many there and elsewhere, remains unclear.
ASSOCIATED PRESS A view of the U.S. embassy in Havana, Cuba. After an exhaustive investigat­ion, the origin of ‘Havana syndrome,’ the phenomenon that sickened many there and elsewhere, remains unclear.

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