Tag Archives: Havana

Havana Syndrome Attacks Widen With CIA Officer’s Evacuation From Serbia

WASHINGTON—The CIA evacuated an intelligence officer serving in Serbia in recent weeks who suffered serious injuries consistent with the neurological attacks known as Havana Syndrome, according to current and former U.S. officials.

The incident in the Balkans, which hasn’t been previously reported, is the latest in what the officials describe as a steady expansion of attacks on American spies and diplomats posted overseas by unknown assailants using what government officials and scientists suspect is some sort of directed-energy source.

Still more suspected attacks have occurred overseas and in the U.S., the current and former officials said, along with recently reported ones in India and Vietnam.

“In the past 60 to 90 days, there have been a number of other reported cases” on U.S. soil and globally, said

Dr. James Giordano,

a Georgetown University professor of neurology who is advising the U.S. government on the issue. “They are seen as valid reports with verified health indicators.”

The continuing attacks, which may cause dizziness, memory loss and other health issues, have sparked frustration within the U.S. government and sapped morale at the State Department and Central Intelligence Agency, the current and former officials said. Some professional diplomats and spies have become reluctant to take overseas postings for themselves and their families, the officials said.

CIA Director William Burns has tripled the number of medical staff focused on Havana Syndrome, the agency says.



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jim lo scalzo/Shutterstock

“The lights are blinking red now. This is a crisis for VIP travel, officers overseas,” said Marc Polymeropoulos, a veteran CIA operations officer who retired from the CIA in 2019 due to persisting symptoms he suffered following a 2017 visit to Moscow and has been critical of the federal government’s response.

Overall, the Biden administration has made finding the source of the attacks a “top priority,” an administration official said. Spokespersons for the CIA and State Department also said the issue was a primary concern and declined to discuss the Serbian case or other specific incidents.

“We take each report we receive extremely seriously and are working to ensure that affected employees get the care and support they need,” the State Department spokesman said.

The CIA spokesperson said that the agency is doing all it can to protect its officers. CIA Director William Burns has made leadership changes in the agency’s Office of Medical Services and tripled the number of medical staff focused on the issue, the spokesperson said. This summer, he tapped a veteran of the agency’s decadelong hunt for

Osama bin Laden

to lead a task force searching for the cause of the incidents.

The CIA in recent weeks also recalled the chief of the agency’s station in Vienna, where a large number of attacks have taken place, over management issues, including the individual’s handling of personnel who believe they had been struck, a source familiar with the issue said. The Washington Post first reported the recall.

Some recent attacks have come close to the top echelons of the Biden administration. When Mr. Burns traveled to India earlier this month, a member of his team reported symptoms consistent with Havana Syndrome and received medical attention, a U.S. official said. The incident was first reported by CNN.

In August, Vice President Kamala Harris temporarily delayed her arrival in Vietnam after the State Department made her office aware of a “possible anomalous health incident”—the U.S. government’s formal name for Havana Syndrome—in Hanoi.

Vice President Kamala Harris visited in Hanoi, Vietnam, in August after a temporary delay due to concerns over Havana Syndrome.



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evelyn hockstein/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

The unexplained health incidents are known as Havana Syndrome because they first surfaced among U.S. diplomats and intelligence officers in Cuba in late 2016. The symptoms include dizziness, headache, fatigue, nausea, anxiety, cognitive difficulties and memory loss.

Since then, attacks have been reported in China, Colombia, Austria and Germany, along with those in Serbia, India and Vietnam. While about 200 U.S. government employees have been affected, officials caution that a precise count is difficult to determine because each case must be medically verified and some individuals’ symptoms end up having other explanations.

Five years after the first symptoms emerged, the U.S. government has yet to determine who is behind the attacks and what mechanism or mechanisms are being used.

“In terms of have we gotten closer? I think the answer is yes—but not close enough to make the analytic judgment that people are waiting for,” CIA Deputy Director

David Cohen

said earlier this month at the annual Intelligence and National Security Summit.

In December, a panel of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine said that the abrupt onset of symptoms was most consistent with “a directed radio frequency (RF) energy attack” rather than inadvertent or environmental exposure. But it also said that more research was needed.

Director of National Intelligence

Avril Haines

has convened a task force made up of intelligence officers and outside scientists to try to pinpoint the mechanism or device used in the attacks. Its report is due later this fall, although it is unclear what will be made public.

Georgetown’s Dr. Giordano said the culprit could be some form of ultrasonic or acoustic device; a rapidly-pulsed microwave; or a laser-based system. The intent of those using it is also unclear, he said. They could be employing an electronic surveillance system with unusual side effects, or “a discrete form of disruptive instrument,” Dr. Giordano said.

“That’s a nice way of saying this is a weapon,” he said.

Avril Haines, the director of National Intelligence, has convened a task force to try to pinpoint the method of attack that causes Havana Syndrome.



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Bill Clark/Zuma Press

Earlier this month, the House passed and sent Mr. Biden legislation to sign which authorizes the CIA and State Department to provide financial compensation to employees who suffer brain injuries while on assignment.

“For so long, we suffered the moral injury of a silent wound, where the [U.S. government] medical staff did not believe us. This all changes now, and it is a watershed moment for the victims,” Mr. Polymeropoulos said.

The bill, he said, offers both a statement by the U.S. government that the attacks are real and remuneration “for victims who have spent thousands of dollars out of pocket for healthcare.”

The Biden administration’s efforts in dealing with the attacks include ensuring “any affected individuals get the care they need,” the administration official said. “In certain cases, these incidents have upended the lives of U.S. personnel who have devoted their careers to serving our country.”

A thorny question, the officials and policy specialists said, is how Washington should react if it pins the blame on a foreign adversary. Some current and former officials say they suspect Russia is behind the attacks, although no public evidence of that has emerged and Moscow has denied the allegations.

Jason Killmeyer, a counterterrorism and foreign policy expert formerly with Deloitte Consulting LLP, said the U.S. should act now and not wait for attribution. He called for increasing defensive measures, making Havana Syndrome a bigger issue in its diplomacy and upping the pressure on adversary intelligence services to see how they react.

“We’re five years into this thing,” he said. “There’s no ‘smoking gun’ coming.”

Write to Warren P. Strobel at Warren.Strobel@wsj.com

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Senators press Blinken to improve care for Havana Syndrome victims as task force leader departs

The letter comes amid the departure of the top diplomat overseeing State’s response to the burgeoning number of cases worldwide, and amid ongoing criticism from victims and lawmakers that the department has failed to do enough to protect and care for its workforce, CNN has previously reported.

“We write to convey our ongoing concern regarding access and equity of medical treatment for State Department employees and their family members who have reported symptoms consistent with anomalous health incidents (AHIs),” Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, Democrat of New Hampshire, and Sen. Susan Collins, Republican of Maine, wrote in the letter, a copy of which was obtained exclusively by CNN.

“We are particularly concerned that some State Department employees with such symptoms who have been recommended for treatment have been refused access to Walter Reed National Medical Military Care Center by the Department of State, despite their requests to be seen at Walter Reed.”

The lawmakers demanded that Blinken investigate the matter and “ensure State Department employees and their dependents have the same access to care as AHI victims from the Department of Defense.”

Access to Walter Reed has been a key sticking point for victims of the mysterious illness, some of whom suffer from traumatic brain injury — an injury for which Walter Reed has a renowned treatment center.

Amb. Pamela Spratlen, who was pulled out of retirement earlier this year to oversee State’s task force created in response to the incidents, departed after only six months on the job. A State Department official told CNN on Thursday that Spratlen “recently reached the threshold of hours of labor permitted” by the specific government status that she was hired under.

Sources tell CNN that some State Department victims of the illness have complained that Spratlen didn’t directly report to Blinken — suggesting that the department wasn’t prioritizing the issue as highly as it claimed to be. Multiple US officials also told CNN there has been ongoing frustration with Spratlen’s willingness to coordinate at the interagency level.

In any case, Spratlen’s departure leaves State’s task force without a leader, and raises questions about why the department would appoint someone subject to such limited work hours as a task force leader to address a problem that appears likely to be a long-term issue facing the US government. The State official said the department plans to name a replacement “soon.”

History of denial of care

Mark Lenzi, a member of the diplomatic security services and a victim of a series of incidents that took place in 2018 in Guangzhou, China, says that the State Department has denied him care at Walter Reed, despite his persistent symptoms.

“We have noted your request for you and your family to be seen at Walter Reed. At this time, Walter Reed is only able to accept patients who have recently reported UHIs,” the State Department’s medical services department wrote Lenzi in an August email viewed by CNN. “That being said, we are currently working with Walter Reed and the DOD on a process for patients who reported UHIs in the past to also be seen at Walter Reed and/or another similar center.”

Shaheen and Collins in their letter also demanded “a written explanation that details the situations in which qualifying victims are granted or denied assessment and treatment at Walter Reed, the factors that go into such a decision, and by whom such a decision is made and approved.”

The House on Tuesday passed legislation that widens access to medical care for victims of Havana Syndrome, including authorizing the CIA director and the secretary of state to financially compensate victims suffering from brain injuries and requiring them to create rules for “fair and equitable” treatment. The legislation was previously passed by the Senate and now heads to the {resident’s desk.

Lawmakers, including Shaheen and Collins, have also secured $30 million in funding for victims to access Walter Reed in annual defense legislation that has not yet been finalized.

Still a mystery

US intelligence officials still haven’t formally determined who or what is causing “Havana Syndrome,” a strange constellation of symptoms reported by spies, diplomats and service-members around the globe. Some US officials believe at least some of the incidents to be attacks by Russian military intelligence, perhaps using some kind of directed energy device, but the intelligence community is still actively investigating and some officials believe there may be multiple culprits.

The episodes have left some former officials ill enough that they were forced to retire.

“In terms of have we gotten closer, I think the answer is yes — but not close enough to make analytic judgment that people are waiting for,” CIA Deputy Director David Cohen said at a national security conference in Washington last week.

CNN has previously reported that suspected incidents have also taken place on US soil, including two staff members of then-President Donald Trump’s national security council who were struck near entrance points to the White House.

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Kamala Harris arrives in Vietnam after delay over possible ‘Havana syndrome’ case

Vice President Kamala Harris finally arrived in Vietnam from Singapore early Wednesday after a potential case of the mysterious “Havana Syndrome” was reported, causing her flight a three-hour delay.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said the case had not been confirmed and a safety assessment was completed before the vice president flew on to Hanoi, the Vietnamese capital, Reuters reported. 

“After careful assessment, the decision was made to continue with the Vice President’s trip,” a statement for the vice president said.

Harris left Washington on Friday for a brief tour of Southeast Asia. 

In Singapore, where she was delayed, she sharply criticized China, emphasizing U.S. support for a free Indo-Pacific region and condemning aggression there from Beijing’s communist regime.

Some U.S. intelligence officials believe Havana Syndrome may be intentionally caused. The syndrome has already sickened more than 200 U.S. government officials, according to Reuters. 

KAMALA HARRIS LANDS IN SINGAPORE FOR ASIA VISIT THAT WILL INCLUDE VIETNAM 

The delay of Harris’ flight came less than a week after news emerged that multiple U.S. officials at the embassy in Berlin have sought treatment for symptoms of the syndrome.

U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris is welcomed by Chairman of the Office of State President Le Khanh Hai, as she arrives for the second leg of her Asia trip, in Hanoi, Vietnam, Tuesday, Aug. 24, 2021. (Associated Press)

Those affected have included intelligence officers or diplomats working on Russia-related issues such as gas exports, cybersecurity and political interference, the Wall Street Journal reported.

Russia has denied any involvement. 

Starting in 2016, State Department and CIA officials in Cuba first complained of the strange symptoms, which include nausea, confusion and migraines. 

Harris arrived in Vietnam shortly after China asked for an impromptu meeting between Vietnamese Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh and Chinese Ambassador Xiong Bo.

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The Vietnam government later said in a statement, “The Prime Minister affirmed that Vietnam adheres to an independent, self-reliant, multilateral, and diverse foreign policy and is a responsible member of the international community. Vietnam does not align itself with one country against another.”

The vice president is making the trip to reassure the countries of the U.S.’ “enduring commitment to the region.” 

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‘Bloodied’ Little Havana demonstrator slams Biden: ‘Cubans don’t want vaccines, they want freedom’

A Little Havana, Fla., demonstrator covered in theatrical blood; gagged, handcuffed and chained told “Hannity” on Wednesday that his attire is a euphemism for the plight of the Cuban people who have suffered under 62 years of dictatorship – as well as a cry for help to a president he said seems uninterested in supporting Cuban civilians’ rights.

The man, who did not give his name, spoke through “Freedom”-embossed duct tape.

“These chains represent the dictatorship in Cuba. This blood represents the blood that is going to be on the hands of those who stand next to the dictatorship – and not next to the Cuban people,” he said.

MARCO RUBIO DEFENDS CUBA’S FIGHT AGAINST FAILED SOCIALIST GOVERNMENT: LEADERS ARE ‘EVIL,’ ‘INCOMPETENT’ 

“Joe Biden, Cuba wants freedom,” he said, addressing the president. “They need freedom. They don’t want vaccines, they don’t want food, they need freedom: That’s what the Cuban people deserve, and that’s what they want.”

The man said the United States must stand with the civilians of Cuba and not with Miguel Diaz-Canel’s autocratic rule, which he has held since younger Castro brother Raul, 90, ceded power to him in 2018.

A woman standing next to the man in similar attire reiterated his call: “The only vaccine the Cuban people need is freedom – please help!”

Host Sean Hannity turned to a delegation of Florida lawmakers standing beside him, and asked what they have heard or asked of the Biden White House in this regard.

Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar, a former Telemundo journalist who represents Miami Beach, Brickell, and the Little Havana neighborhood “Hannity” was visiting, said she has asked Biden for a meeting as many as “three times a day” to no response.

“We are very frustrated, we are very upset: because we have called respectfully and told Biden administration that this has nothing to do with political parties. He will not meet,” she said.

Salazar’s seat is notable in that regard, as hers is one of few Democrat-majority districts that flipped Republican in 2020 – when the longtime news anchor defeated former Clinton Foundation President Donna Shalala.

Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., who like Salazar is of Cuban ancestry, said that the world cannot forget the plight of the Cuban people, and that the activism in support of them “cannot stop until Cuba is free and has liberty.”

Miami Republican Mayor Francis X. Suarez added that the entire Western Hemisphere is impacted by the Cuban regime and its oppression.

“The Cuban people have no means to defend themselves,” he said. “It’s so sad to see a lack of U.S. leadership.”

HANNITY SHOWS SUPPORT FOR CUBA’S FIGHT FOR FREEDOM: ‘THEY SHOULD BE LIVING IN PARADISE’

Demonstrators have flocked to the landmark Versailles Restaurant, at the corner of Calle Ocho and S.W. 36th Ave., where “Hannity’ was filming, for weeks now – in protest of Diaz-Canel’s treatment of Cubans and in support of pro-democracy demonstrators now being targeted, arrested and punished by the regime.

The Versailles corner has been a rallying point for the Cuban-American community for decades, as it is also where celebrations popped up in 2016, as demonstrators celebrated dictator Fidel Castro’s death.

The White House was criticized after press secretary Jennifer Psaki, in calling the regime a failure, remarked that “a lack of access to economic opportunity, to medical supplies, to COVID vaccines” are all reasons for the historic protests.

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Critics countered that the true cause of the protests is the proliferation of Communism and left-wing governance on the island that has led to economic depression and recision of basic rights for the people of Cuba.

In a statement on July 12, Biden said the White House “stand[s] with the Cuban people and their clarion call for freedom and relief from the tragic grip of the pandemic and from the decades of repression and economic suffering to which they have been subjected by Cuba’s authoritarian regime.”

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Tropical Storm Elsa moving across west Cuba, then to Florida

HAVANA (AP) — Tropical Storm Elsa swept over western Cuba near Havana with strong rain and winds Monday night, and forecasters said it would move on to the Florida Keys on Tuesday and Florida’s central Gulf coast by Wednesday.

The storm was passing over mainly rural areas to the east of Havana after making landfall near Cienega de Zapata, a natural park with few inhabitants.

By evening, Elsa had maximum sustained winds of 50 mph (85 kph). Its core was about 30 miles (30 kilometers) east of Havana and moving to the northwest at 13 mph (20 kph).

“The wind is blowing hard and there is a lot of rain. Some water is getting under the door of my house. In the yard the level is high, but it did not get into the house,” Lázaro Ramón Sosa, a craftsman and photographer who lives in the Zapata Swamp, told The Associated Press by telephone.

Sosa said he saw some avocado trees fall nearby.

Though Havana was expected to miss the brunt of the storm, many people in the capital were staying in place.

“For now, I staying at home. We have to wait for the night and see exactly what happens,” Aida Herrera, who lives next to the Malecon boulevard facing the sea, told AP.

Elsa had spent Sunday and much of Monday sweeping parallel to Cuba’s southern coast before heading on to land, sparing most of the island from significant effects.

As a precaution, Cuban officials had evacuated 180,000 people against the possibility of heavy flooding from a storm that already battered several Caribbean islands, killing at least three people.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center said the storm was expected to move back over the sea before midnight Monday and then head for Florida. Tropical storm warnings were posted for the Florida Keys from Craig Key westward to the Dry Tortugas and for the west coast of Florida from Flamingo northward to the Ochlockonee River.

Elsa was a Category 1 hurricane until Saturday morning, causing widespread damage on several eastern Caribbean islands Friday as the first hurricane of the Atlantic season. The storm caused the deaths of one person on St. Lucia and of a 15-year-old boy and a 75-year-old woman in separate events in the Dominican Republic.

Elsa is the earliest fifth-named storm on record and also broke the record as the tropic’s fastest-moving hurricane, clocking in at 31 mph Saturday morning, said Brian McNoldy, a hurricane researcher at the University of Miami.

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