Was the U.S. Embassy targeted by nefarious foreigners using some sort of unknown energy weapon?
What you can see, peeking out through the overcautious nincompoop redactions, is that the U.S. government spent a fortune using engineering and intelligence methods to try and find any positive evidence whatsoever of an electromagnetic attack.
What seems clear is that the alphabet-soup folk were focused on physics. Whatever might be learned from medical images and histories of patients seems to have depended on which doctor you were talking to, and there is no indication that pesticides or other toxins were implicated. The “intelligence community,” which consists of no fewer thanthe public sort of knows about, was left doing its best to rule out an untraceable energy weapon.
The director of national intelligence’s executive summary of agency opinions is thus a bit like the result of an election in a weird, backward country or perhaps a dysfunctional boardroom. Sample quote: “Most IC agencies judge it is very unlikely a foreign adversary played a role, although confidence in the judgment related to this line of inquiry varies, with two agencies having moderate-to-high confidence; three agencies having moderate confidence; and one agency abstaining.
Fortunately, “Havana syndrome” has dissipated gradually. If you’re a believer in the energy-weapon hypothesis, it was only to be expected that whoever was behind the attacks would dismantle their secret diplomat death ray before they got caught with it. Many experts, perhaps most, believe that “Havana syndrome” has actually just been aamong people far from home in high-stress, high-security environments. The dwindling of the syndrome is consistent with that, too.
Nowhere in the national intelligence briefing documents is infectious hysteria mentioned explicitly. You have to read between the lines and the black censorship bars: the assessment tells us “the evidence points away” from foreign activity or even any “causal mechanism” as the source of the illnesses. Haines sums up by saying, “IC agencies assess that symptoms reported by U.S.
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