US intelligence community report says 'pulsed electromagnetic energy' could cause Havana Syndrome
An intelligence panel investigating the cause of a spate of mysterious incidents that have struck dozens of US officials across the globe has said that some of the episodes could "plausibly" have been caused by "pulsed electromagnetic energy" emitted by an external source, according to an executive summary of the panel's findings released Wednesday.
But
the panel stopped short of making a definitive determination, saying
only that both electromagnetic energy and, in limited circumstances,
ultrasound could explain the key symptoms -- highlighting the degree to
which the murky illness known colloquially as "Havana Syndrome" has remained one of the intelligence community's most stubborn mysteries.
"We've
learned a lot," an intelligence official familiar with the panel's work
told reporters, speaking on anonymity under terms set by the Office of
the Director of National Intelligence. "While we don't have the specific
mechanism for each case, what we do know is if you report quickly and
promptly get medical care, most people are getting well."
The
finding largely confirms a National Academies of Science report from
late 2020 that found "directed, pulsed radio frequency energy" to be
"the most plausible mechanism in explaining these cases" -- but also
stopped short of making a firm determination.
The
so-called experts panel is made up of medical, scientific and
engineering specialists who have access to classified information about
the incidents. Officials emphasized that its work was focused only on
uncovering the potential mechanism behind what the government calls
"anomalous health incidents" and did not examine who, if anyone, might
be responsible.
An interim report issued last month by
a separate CIA task force examining who might be behind the episodes
found that it was unlikely Russia or any other foreign adversary is
conducting a widespread global campaign designed to harm US officials.
But the agency also did not rule out that a nation state -- including
Russia -- might be responsible for roughly two dozen cases that
investigators have been unable to explain by any other known cause.
Cases 'genuine and compelling'
The
scientific panel emphasized that the cases it studied were "genuine and
compelling," noting that some incidents have affected multiple people
in the same space and clinical samples from a few victims have shown
signs of "cellular injury to the nervous system."
An
executive summary of the panel's work provided new details about how
the government is categorizing cases as possible Havana Syndrome, a
clinically vague illness that has long frustrated firm diagnosis because
victims have suffered from such a diverse array of symptoms.
Although
officials declined to say how many cases the panel examined as part of
its inquiry, they said they studied cases that met four "core
characteristics": the acute onset of sounds or pressure, sometimes in
only one ear or on one side of the head; simultaneous symptoms of
vertigo, loss of balance and ear pain; "a strong sense of locality or
directionality"; and the absence of any known environmental or medical
conditions that could have caused the other symptoms.
Victims
have reported being struck by this confluence of symptoms in embassies
and personal residences around the globe, and in at least one instance,
at open-air stoplight in a foreign country.
Both
pulsed electromagnetic energy, "particularly in the radiofrequency
range," and ultrasonic arrays could feasibly cause the four core
symptoms, the panel found. Both could originate from "a concealable
source." But ultrasound can't travel through walls, the panel found,
"restricting its applicability to scenarios in which the source is near
the target."
Sources
of radiofrequency energy, on the other hand, are known to exist, "could
generate the required stimulus, are concealable, and have moderate
power requirements," the panel said. "Using nonstandard antennas and
techniques, the signals could be propagated with low loss through air
for tens to hundreds of meters, and with some loss, through most
building materials."
But
intelligence officials familiar with the panel's work emphasized that
important information gaps remained, forestalling them from reaching
firmer conclusions.
"It's frustrating but we're just as persistent to help understand and elucidate what's happening," one official said.
Part
of the challenge, this person said, is that the cases not only vary,
but the combination of the four core characteristics is unique in
medical literature.
"When
we focus on the core characteristics, it's just a unique combination
that we don't have a lot of experience with in the medical and clinical
fields," the official said.
And
for ethical reasons, there is limited study of the impact of
radiofrequency energy or ultrasound on the human body. The experts panel
was limited to the accounts of people who had been exposed to either
"inadvertently" and were willing to describe their symptoms.
"There
is a dearth of systematic research on the effects of the relevant
electromagnetic signals on humans," the executive summary of the report
stated.
Victory for victim's advocates
In
a victory for victims' advocates, the experts panel also ruled out one
cause for those four characteristics: so-called psycho-social factors.
Some victims have long complained that the CIA in the past had failed to
take their reported symptoms seriously, brushing the cases aside as a
psychosomatic episode or mass hysteria.
Those
four core characteristics could not by explained by psycho-social
factors "alone," the report found -- although an intelligence official
explained that in some cases, a victim's symptoms might be "compounded"
by a stress reaction or other psycho-social response.
The
panel also ruled out "ionizing radiation, chemical and biological
agents, infrasound, audible sound, ultrasound propagated over large
distances, and bulk heating from electromagnetic energy."
The
panel made seven recommendations, including developing better
biomarkers that are "more specific and more sensitive for diagnosis and
triage" of cases. It also recommended utilizing "detectors" and
obtaining "devices to aid research." Details on those recommendations
were heavily redacted in the panel's executive summary.
Finally,
officials urged swift action by medical officials whenever a case is
reported, emphasizing that individuals who have been treated immediately
after an event have improved.
"I
think something the employee can do to help themselves is promptly
report and get medical care," the intelligence official said.
Officials stressed that the intelligence community will continue to investigate.
"We
continue to pursue complementary efforts to get to the bottom of
Anomalous Health Incidents — and to deliver access to world-class care
for those affected," Director for National Intelligence Avril Haines and
CIA Director Bill Burns said in a joint statement. "We are making
progress in both areas."
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