Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Medicine Government United States

'Russia Might Have Caused Havana Syndrome' (washingtonpost.com) 188

An anonymous reader quotes an opinion piece from the Washington Post, published by the Editorial Board: A just-published investigation by Russian, American and German journalists has unearthed startling new information about the so-called Havana syndrome, or "Anomalous Health Incidents," as the government calls the unexplained bouts of painful disorientation that U.S. diplomats and intelligence officers have suffered in recent years. The new information suggests but does not prove that Russia's military intelligence agency is responsible. Earlier, agencies in the U.S. intelligence community had concluded that "it is very unlikely a foreign adversary is responsible." They need to look again. [...]

[T]he new investigation by the Insider, a Russian investigative news outlet, in collaboration with CBS's "60 Minutes" and Germany's Der Spiegel, paints a different picture. It identifies the possible culprit as Unit 29155, a "notorious assassination and sabotage squad" of the GRU, Moscow's military intelligence service. Senior members of the unit received "awards and political promotions for work related to the development of 'non-lethal acoustic weapons'" -- a term used in the Russian military-scientific literature to describe both sound- and radiofrequency-based directed energy devices. The investigation found documentary evidence that Unit 29155 "has been experimenting with exactly the kind of weaponized technology" experts suggest is a plausible cause. Moreover, the Insider reported, geolocation data shows that operators attached to Unit 29155, traveling undercover, were present in places where Havana syndrome struck, just before the incidents took place.

Even more concerning, the investigation found that a commonality among the Americans targeted was their work history on Russia issues. This included CIA officers who were helping Ukraine build up its intelligence capabilities in the years before Russia's full-scale invasion in 2022. One veteran of the CIA Kyiv station was named the new chief of station in Vietnam and was hit there. A second veteran of the CIA in Ukraine was hit in his apartment in Tashkent, Uzbekistan. Both these intelligence officers had to be medevaced and were treated at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. The wife of a third CIA officer who had served in Kyiv was hit in London. "Of all the cases" examined by the news organizations, they said, "the most well-documented involve U.S. intelligence and diplomatic personnel with subject matter expertise in Russia or operational experience in countries such as Georgia and Ukraine," both of which were the scene of popular pro-Western uprisings in the past two decades. The news organizations point out that Russian President Vladimir Putin has often blamed these "color revolutions" on the CIA and the State Department. They conclude, "Putin would have every interest in neutralizing scores of U.S. intelligence officers he deemed responsible for his loss of the former satellites."
The Editorial Board is advocating for a thorough and aggressive investigation by the U.S. intelligence community that "takes into account all aspects of the incidents."

"If the incidents are a deliberate attack, the perpetrator must be identified and held to account. Along with sending a message to those who might harm American personnel, the United States needs to show all those who might join the diplomatic and intelligence services that the government will protect them abroad and at home from foreign adversaries, no matter what."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

'Russia Might Have Caused Havana Syndrome'

Comments Filter:
  • This is not news. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Eunomion ( 8640039 ) on Tuesday April 02, 2024 @10:43PM (#64365638)
    It's not a shock. Russia has been at war with Western civilization for several years, and on every level, on our own soil. Our governments don't want their own apple carts upset, so they resort to increasingly desperate gaslighting of our own people to avoid admitting the obvious.

    Russia has lost the plot and can no longer be reasoned with.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Brett Buck ( 811747 )

      Make that several decades, or rather. 8+ decades. Only wishful thinking from 1990-2021 ever made anyone think otherwise.

    • by allcoolnameswheretak ( 1102727 ) on Wednesday April 03, 2024 @05:18AM (#64366056)

      Russia has been at war with Western civilization for several years, and on every level, on our own soil.

      Their biggest victory are the successful splitting and polarization of Western societies, by co-opting conservatives and the right-wing in several countries of the EU and in the United States.
      Ask an average FN supporter in France, or an AfD supporter in Germany, or a MAGA republican in the US, what they think about Putin and Russia, and you will hear praises of how a great leader Putin is that really cares about his people, and that Russia is this honorable society of conservative values.

      The truth is of course that Putin is a brutal dictator who murders political opponents, suppresses all dissidents and free media in the country, and starts wars and invades his neighbours as soon as they start leaning towards the West. The corrpution of the elites in Putin's inner circle has been bleeding the country dry for decades, while a majority of the population barely has access to sanitation facilities, with dilapitaded infrastructure as soon as you move out of the Disneyland cities of Moscow and St. Petersburg. The two major cities are the only part of Russia the leadership really cares about. The rest of the Russian Land Empire is subservient to that, and non-heartland Russian (non-white) minorities in the provinces suffer discrimination and arbitraryness, such as being sent to Ukraine as cannon-fodder. Putin's rule is enforced through violence and mafia tactics. Basically, shut up and play along or you will disappear or experience a tragic incident, such as 'suicide' by falling out of a window. People tend to forget that Putin was a KGB agent who hates the fact that the West "won" the cold war, and has declared the Anglo-Saxon culture to be his own personal, greatest enemy.

      Putin and his secret services has managed to align himself with the values of conservatives in the West, like anti-wokeness, anti-GLBTQ, pro "tough guy image", and the conservative right-wing has become so enraptured by these charms through propaganda networks like RT and social media channels, and uses this as a weapon to sow ever larger division and polarization and thereby civil unrest in Western countries. We where very close to the types of outcomes the Russian leadership is looking for on January 6th.
      I'm not being partisan, it's just a matter of fact that Russia helped propell Trump to victory because they knew he was the kind of character they had a hold on, and who could be influneced and uses as a tool to further divide US society, which is exactly what Trump has been doing for the last decade.
      Remember how they reacted to Trump's victory
      https://theworld.org/stories/2... [theworld.org]

      Putin and Russia, they are not our friends. Not even of Trump, Republicans or MAGA. They pretend to be, but their goals are to polarize, disrupt, weaken, divide and conquer.

      • by noodler ( 724788 )

        Needs more mod points.

    • It's not Russia that has lost the plot, it's the Western populace. And it's no wonder either. Ever since the orange guy got elected we have had non-stop Russia hate thrown at us from every angle, only paused to make room for the bi-weekly China hate. It was going to get to us sooner or later, you cannot live in this pressure forever without getting cooked, and it has done us in, and nobody can see anything but the red of their bloodshot eyes anymore. I might even say that it has reached brain damage levels

      • No way am I reading that Berlin Wall of translated Russian beyond a cursory glance.

        Ukraine did nothing to Russia other than elect leaders who represent them rather than Moscow, as is the right of all human beings (including all Russians). No one on Earth is obligated to submit to the grotesque, orc-like tyrants of the Moscow cult. Russia is in violation of the entire system of international law by its actions in Ukraine, and for goddamn sure by its assaults on Americans both abroad and on our soil.

        T
  • Members of the journalism community were saddened by the obituaries of three reporters from Russia's "Insider" news organization, who accidentally fell to their death from windows in a high rise apartment block next week.

  • Of course it might not have been responsible.
  • by technosaurus ( 1704630 ) on Wednesday April 03, 2024 @02:14AM (#64365832)
    If you said this a year ago, the same "journalists" would have called you a conspiracy theorist. Lately the "news" is just last year's mis/dis/mal-information pushed through a woke filter.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      This demonstrates just how bad things have got. Even when you have journalists doing actual journalism, doing the investigations and hard work they should be putting in, it gets dismissed just the same as a Breitbart or Daily Mail article.

      • by iAmWaySmarterThanYou ( 10095012 ) on Wednesday April 03, 2024 @06:49AM (#64366138)

        Anecdote from my college years: on my way home after class this girl walks up to me asking for help finding a building for her next class. She's a junior transfer journalism major. She's on the wrong side of campus, long walk.

        Along the way she explains her reason to go into journalism is she "wants to change the world". Uhm, ok, odd, so I clarify and ask if she means by investigating and revealing something important like the pentagon papers. No. Not that. She wants to push a particular agenda and use journalism as her tool to achieve that end.

        I suspect this is quite common given the horrific not-reporting we get and that the majority of people recognize it and don't trust news media the way they did in previous generations.

        • Nice anecdote.

        • She wants to push a particular agenda and use journalism as her tool to achieve that end.

          My Intro to Journalism class in high school was like this. Everything we wrote was scrutinized to ensure it was focused through the proper, correct lens. Our teacher was a raging Feminazi, of the ERA and NOW type. Stickers everywhere on her car. Loved wearing Che Guevara shirts. Basically a Commie bluehair before technicholor hair was permissible in society.

          One semester and I walked. And along the way lost whatever respect I had for journalists / newspapers. That was 1987. Every year since then has

      • Even when you have journalists doing actual journalism, doing the investigations and hard work they should be putting in, it gets dismissed just the same as a Breitbart or Daily Mail article.

        That pretty much started the day CNN came into being in 1980. 24 hours to fill.. with what? There's not enough news in the world... then or now.. to fill 24 hours of news channel. So, they did what journos do best -- spout opinion in the hopes The Plebes will consider it fact. Judging by the state of the world, they were successful.

        Shall we talk about the BBC? I peruse their site every now and then, as a counter-balance to American news outlets. Why is the BBC so preoccupied with Africa? I'd say 70% of

    • by cmseagle ( 1195671 ) on Wednesday April 03, 2024 @04:59AM (#64366026)

      If you said this a year ago, the same "journalists" would have called you a conspiracy theorist.

      Rightly so, if you made such bold allegations without the evidence and investigation to back it up.

      The difference between "investigative journalism" and "conspiracy theory" isn't necessarily the rightness or wrongness of the allegation. I'm sure many conspiracy theorists will happily point to "conspiracy theories" which turned out to be true. It turns into "investigative journalism" when you back up your allegation with an intellectually honest analysis of evidence that can be vetted.

    • If you said this a year ago, the same "journalists" would have called you a conspiracy theorist. Lately the "news" is just last year's mis/dis/mal-information pushed through a woke filter.

      Nah, they would have said "it's possible, but there's not enough evidence", similar to now except there's a bit more evidence.

      The difference between this and classic conspiracy theories is there's actually a bit of evidence, not enough to be conclusive, but enough to be suspicious.

      The proponents of normal conspiracy theories act like they're all but certain when there's very little evidence for and some very strong evidence against, and so they just ignore the evidence against.

    • If you said this a year ago, the same "journalists" would have called you a conspiracy theorist. Lately the "news" is just last year's mis/dis/mal-information pushed through a woke filter.

      Probably not. Why would journalists investigate it if they didn't think it was possible? Also real news is generally not on 24/7 cable networks. At best, they have filler, speculation and fluff. This might include your woke filter, but again it's not really news...

  • the simple fact they're using "MIGHT" shows that they're just lying.

  • These investigative journalists have turned up a lot of pretty compelling evidence. It's not a smoking gun, but it is very persuasive circumstantial evidence. The interesting thing to me is that if they could find it, surely US intelligence agencies could find it... and probably more. But intelligence agencies who looked at it concluded that there was nothing to see here.

    Or that's what they told us, anyway. So I wonder, did they actually miss this, or did they find it and decide that it was better not to

  • by WaffleMonster ( 969671 ) on Wednesday April 03, 2024 @09:37AM (#64366590)

    Watched the 60 minutes interview. My personal guess/theory these incidents could be side effects of spy gear akin to "the thing" from the 40s perhaps incompetently implemented/used.

    The reports didn't seem credible to me. I kept waiting for them to tie the cook to something but in the end all we have was a lady talking about how she feels when she sees a picture. I didn't understand how she had video surveillance, said she saw the cook outside yet there is no video record of anyone getting out of the car.

    " I went downstairs. I first looked on our security camera, which is right beside our front door, to see if anyone was outside. There was a vehicle right outside of our gate. I took a photo of that vehicle and noticed that it was not a vehicle that I recognized. And I went outside. "

    "Did you see anyone around the vehicle?
    I did
    We sent you a photograph of Albert Averyanov. And this is the picture that we sent you.
    And I wonder if that looks anything like the man you saw outside your home.
    It absolutely does. And when I received this photo, I had a visceral reaction. It made me feel sick.
    "

    My understanding is most security cameras at the very least record frames with motion for some period of time. If the guy parked and got out of his car she has nothing? This makes no sense to me.

    I also didn't understand the conflicting assertions. There is no physical evidence... yet:

    ". And now doctors say she has holes in her inner ear canalsâ"the vestibular system that creates the sense of balance. Two surgeries put metal plates in her skull. Another surgery is likely. "

    "This month, the National Institutes of Health reported results of brain scans. NIH said there's no evidence of physical damage. "

    I just don't know how to square these things.

    • I'll try. I think the security system was old and hardwired. I don't know anything about this interview, only based on what you reported of it. I looked up the time period of "Havana Syndrome", the topic. It's reporteded 2016-2022, so modern times. But in Georgia, in a diplomatic setting (probably a custom built house, somewhen), I can see a closed circuit video system with a manual, perhaps hard-wired, photo capturing method. Old-style, analog and expensive so constant storage or maybe even tape may have n
  • "The Insider said senior members of the unit received awards and political promotions for work related to the development of “non-lethal acoustic weapons” that include both sound and radio frequency-based directed energy devices."
    This is the thing that makes me think there might be something to all this.

  • in soviet Russia, Cuban smoke you
  • This looks like a good time to roll out the new sig.

    Twelve songs and counting that are about the current war and the overall state of affairs in and around Russia.

  • That's unpossible!

  • There have been two extensive medical studies that found no reports of incidents were the same and there was no evidence of any medical illnesses. They both concluded there were no attacks and it was the nocebo effect caused stories making people think that they were unwell and were attacked. People who didn't believe in the attacks report no symptoms and were fine.

    This article presents not a single piece of medical evdience, not any evidence for a sonic weapon.

    Every country has reasearched sonic weapons. O

You know you've landed gear-up when it takes full power to taxi.

Working...