News

A CIA interim report is sparking controversy after concluding that "Havana Syndrome"—an unexplained group of symptoms experienced by hundreds of Western spies and diplomats—is not the result ...
In a new intelligence assessment, the CIA has ruled out that the mysterious symptoms known as Havana Syndrome are the result of a sustained global campaign by a hostile power aimed at hundreds of ...
CIA physician Dr. Paul Andrews was one of the first people sent to Havana, Cuba, to investigate a spate of mysterious health incidents that were impacting embassy and agency personnel in 2017 when ...
The CIA has assessed in an interim finding that the spate of mysterious incidents sickening US officials around the globe – known colloquially as Havana syndrome – is unlikely to represent ...
The CIA has determined that most cases of Havana syndrome were not caused by a sustained global campaign by a foreign power against US diplomats and spies, according to a new report.
Wednesday’s report comes more than a year after the CIA said that a majority of the 1,000 cases of “Havana Syndrome” were not caused by a foreign adversary and instead caused by ...
A CIA doctor dispatched to investigate the so-called Havana syndrome opened up about his own illness. The anonymous doctor told CNN he started experiencing symptoms of the syndrome himself while ...
CIA Director William Burns previously defended the agency's efforts to address Havana Syndrome and emphasized the CIA's commitment to supporting affected personnel vowing to prioritize their care ...
‘Havana syndrome’ not caused by energy weapon or foreign ... The new intelligence assessment caps a years-long effort by the CIA and several other U.S. intelligence agencies to explain why ...
Indeed, I understand that the CIA has failed to investigate the circumstantial but compelling evidence suggesting that George W. Bush may have been a victim of Havana syndrome during the 2007 G7 ...
A bipartisan Senate report released Friday faulted the CIA’s response to the mysterious ailment known as “Havana syndrome,” saying many employees “faced obstacles to timely and sufficient ...