Once again, it has been stressed that the
symptoms of the 'syndrome' sufferers are real, but since one can't prove a negative they avoid saying outright that even though the symptoms are real, the alleged sonic and/or microwave DEW attacks aren't:
Symptoms of the mysterious ailment, first reported by U.S. embassy officials in the Cuban capital Havana and later afflicting diplomats, spies and other personnel worldwide, have included hearing noise and experiencing head pressure followed by headache, migraines, dizziness, and memory lapses.
"These individuals have
symptoms that are real, distressing and very difficult to treat," Dr. Leighton Chan, NIH Clinical Center acting chief scientific officer and lead study author, said on a call to discuss the findings published in JAMA.
(...)
The MRI brain imaging results "should be some reassurance for patients," since
researchers did not find a link between unusual symptoms and neurodegenerative changes, said Louis French, study investigator from Walter Reed National Military Medical Center.
“The post-traumatic stress and mood symptoms reported are not surprising given the ongoing concerns of many of the participants,” he said.
No evidence of Havana syndrome brain injury, US studies find (Reuters, Mar 18, 2024)
People with 'Havana Syndrome' Show No Brain Damage or Medical Illness (Scientific American, Mar 18, 2024)
New study finds no brain injuries among 'Havana syndrome' patients (Washington Post, Mar 18, 2024)
NIH probe of 'Havana Syndrome' finds no sign of brain injuries (MSN.com, Mar 18, 2024)
For some reason, CNN's article about the NIH reports is accompanied by an old video with the first CIA investigator of the 'syndrome' to arrive in Cuba where he stayed at the
Hotel Nacional:
CIA doctor investigating mysterious injuries suddenly injured himself (CNN, Sep 25, 2024)
Dr. Paul Andrews: I hadn't seen this before: Between every set of rooms there was a service chase. It was unusual.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta: Did you think there was somebody in that space?
Dr. Paul Andrews: I don't know.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta: This is that service chase. Potentially big enough for a person to stand inside.
Dr. Paul Andrews: I looked out the window. I was on a high floor. And I saw nothing out there to concern me. There was no other building at a height that would have a direct ability to shine something in my room, say.
I think I went to bed probably around 11:30. I slept in my jeans and a T-shirt, in case I had to evacuate quickly.
Despite symptoms, NIH research finds no evidence of ‘Havana syndrome’ in brain scans (CNN, Mar 18, 2024)
It's reminiscent of the story about the white van told by Adam Entous and Jon Lee Anderson: It is
possible to
imagine that a Russian might be able to hide in a service chase like that, wielding a directed-energy weapon, aiming it (blindly!) through two doors at the CIA doctor in the room across the hallway.
We don't even know if the service chase is
actually big enough since the footage doesn't show how much space is actually there. The door remains closed! (Why didn't they ask a Cuban maid or janitor to open it? I assume they didn't since that would have been a story in and of itself: 'Cubans refuse to open a broom closet full of Russian agents and ray guns!') But as long as the door remains closed, it's possible to imagine that
anything might be hiding behind it.
I find it more interesting to hear about the CIA doctor's
state of mind as he comes down with the 'syndrome':
"I slept in my jeans and a T-shirt, in case I had to evacuate quickly."
How do you say that the suffering of the AHI victims was mass psychogenic illness, caused by stress and the
idea of an attack rather than by a real attack - without actually saying so?!
Forty-one percent of participants in the AHI group, from nearly every geographic area, met the criteria for
functional neurological disorders (FNDs), a group of common neurological movement disorders caused by an abnormality in how the brain functions, or had significant somatic symptoms.
FNDs can be associated with depression and anxiety, and high stress. Most of the AHI group with FND met specific criteria to enable the diagnosis of persistent postural-perceptual dizziness, also known as PPPD. Symptoms of PPPD include dizziness, non-spinning vertigo and fluctuating unsteadiness
provoked by environmental or social stimuli that cannot be explained by some other neurologic disorder.
“
The post-traumatic stress and mood symptoms reported are not surprising given the ongoing concerns of many of the participants,” said Louis French, Psy.D., neuropsychologist and deputy director of the National Intrepid Center of Excellence at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center and a co-investigator on the study. “Often these individuals have had
significant disruption to their lives and continue to have
concerns about their health and their future. This
level of stress can have significant negative impacts on the recovery process.”
NIH studies find severe symptoms of “Havana Syndrome,” but no evidence of MRI-detectable brain injury or biological abnormalities (National Institutes of Health, Mar 18, 2024)
FND according to Wikipedia:
Functional neurologic disorder or
functional neurological disorder (FND) is a condition in which patients experience neurological symptoms such as weakness, movement disorders, sensory symptoms, and blackouts. As a functional disorder, there is by definition no known disease process affecting the structure of the body, yet the person experiences symptoms relating to their body function. Symptoms of functional neurological disorders are clinically recognisable, but are not categorically associated with a definable organic disease.
The intended contrast is with an organic brain syndrome, where a pathology (disease process) can be identified which affects the body's physiology.
Functional neurologic disorder (Wiki)
So real
symptoms but no sign of actual brain injury or any other kind of
physiological damage.
As could be expected,
David Relman isn't pleased with the new NIH reports about what he likes to call
"abrupt-onset, location-dependent sensory phenomena" (i.e. the scary sound of crickets). He writes a much-too-long editorial about how awfully complicated the whole thing is, referring primarily to his own NAS and 'expert panel' reports and ignoring the JASON reports.
This is how he summarizes the ODNi report:
The US Intelligence Community has discounted this possibility [i.e. "pulsed radiofrequency energy as a plausible mechanism"] and concluded that reported symptoms were probably the result of “preexisting conditions, conventional illnesses, and environmental factors,”
influenced by their assessment that no foreign adversary played a role in these cases.
Neurological Illness and National Security - Lessons to Be Learned (JAMA, Mar 18, 2024)
In other words, he insinuates that the result of the ODNI investigation was biassed ('influenced') by their assessment as if the assessment wasn't a
result of the investigation but was the established bias guiding the investigation - the way Relman would do it.
But mainly the whole thing is all so very
complex that it is almost impossible to understand for mere mortals:
Third, the effort to explain AHIs, as with other enigmatic and highly publicized clinical syndromes such as Gulf War syndrome, has been hampered by our collective difficulty in dealing with uncertainty, complexity, the need for transdisciplinary approaches, insufficient information or misinformation, and a topic that is politically charged and divisive, in part because of the implications of different explanatory hypotheses, especially the possible involvement of malefactors.
Whereas David Relman's superiority made him not only willing but
eager to expose
"the possible involvement of malefactors" from the get-go.
It's worth remembering this WP article from as long ago as 2018:
Scientists and doctors zap theory that microwave weapon injured Cuba diplomats (Washington Post, Sep 6, 2018).
It is one of the mainstream-media articles that have aged well.