(1) Sharon Weinberger, Microwave Weapons are Real, But They Can't Explain Havana Syndrome. My own experience being zapped years ago dpesn't chamge the fact: it's very unlikelky that high-energy devices are behind the stmptpms reported by A,ericans abroad. at page C4 (on Saturday, section C is "Review").
https://www.wsj.com/politics/nat ... a-syndrome-171c6efa
Excerpt o the wonfow of print: If a foreign adversary developed an advanced weapon, why waste it on random attacks?
Note:
(a) In print, atop the essay is a quotation: 'It is not in the still calm of life, or the repose of a pacificstation, that great characters are formed.' -- ABGAIL ADAMS
(b) Quantico, Virginia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantico,_Virginia
("is a town in Prince William County, Virginia, United States. The population was 480 at the 2010 census. Quantico is approximately 35 miles southwest of Washington, DC, bordered by the Potomac River to the east and the Quantico Creek to the north. The word Quantico is a corruption of the name of a Doeg village recorded by English colonists as Pamacocack. Quantico is surrounded on its remaining two sides by one of the largest US Marine Corps bases, Marine Corps Base Quantico. The base is the site of the HMX-1 presidential helicopter squadron, the FBI Academy * * * "
But FBI itself is headquartered at J. Edgar Hoover Building in Washington, DC.
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In 2007, I stood in an open field in Quantico, Va., bracing myself for the blast of a microwave weapon. When the invisible beam switched on, my first sensation was mild warmth, not the intense burning that had been promised. The weapon was a clunky, noisy device that sat on a Humvee. It required many hours to power up and was generally fickle. And as I found out that day, when I volunteered to be hit by the weapon during a Pentagon demonstration, it didn’t work well in wet conditions, because moisture attenuated the beam.
Ten years later, when claims of exotic energy weapons were first publicly raised in connection with “Havana Syndrome”—the unofficial name given to an array of symptoms suffered by spies, diplomats and other U.S. personnel abroad—my first thought was that soggy field in Quantico. How could someone trundle a device that unwieldy down the street in Havana unnoticed?
The cases that the U.S. government now calls Anomalous Heath Incidents started in Cuba in 2016 and quickly spread. Hundreds of instances have been reported in countries such as China, Russia and even Vietnam, where it briefly delayed a visit by Vice President Kamala Harris in 2021.
A “60 Minutes” report on March 31, part of a joint investigation with the Insider and Der Spiegel, revealed new cases, including an unnamed FBI agent who says she heard a high-pitched noise, followed by symptoms that range from dizziness to headaches. Decked out in a wig to disguise her identity, she described how she had been hit in her home in Florida: “It’s next-generation weaponry. And unfortunately, it’s been refined on some of us, and we’re the test subjects.”
The “60 Minutes” investigation offers tantalizing details and some impressive sleuthing, including tracking the movements of a suspected Russian intelligence agent who may have been in Tbilisi, Georgia, at the time of a reported attack. But it shies away from delving into the type of technology that may have been used. Understandably so.
Microwave weapons have often been suggested as the best explanation for these attacks. Such a weapon—not exactly the type that was tested on me in 2007—would supposedly involve pulsed microwaves designed to cause cognitive problems, such as the sensation of hearing noises in your head.
But there have long been serious problems with this theory. These include the technical implausibility of building a device that could be easily transported; the lack of any evidence that such weapons were built or used; and the seeming absurdity of a hostile country randomly zapping diplomats and spies with their most advanced weaponry for no discernible reason other than harassment.
Size remains the most prosaic but fundamental of these problems. The microwave theory supposes a weapon that can be ferried around the world, targeting unsuspecting victims, often inside buildings, without ever being spotted. In one case, a senior aide to then Vice President Mike Pence says that she was struck near the White House, one of the most closely monitored places on Earth.
When I asked Kenneth Foster, emeritus professor of bioengineering at the University of Pennsylvania, what a microwave device capable of producing an auditory effect would look like, he described doing experiments on himself in the 1970s with a transmitter the size of a fridge. “Since the intensity of the radiation falls off as a square of the distance, well, if I wanted to produce that sensation more than a few feet from the transmitter, I would have to have a much bigger transmitter,” he told me. The technology has gotten smaller over the decades, but not that much smaller.
“You know these shipping containers you see being dragged by trucks down the highway? Something like that,” Foster told me, when I asked him how large a device would be needed to target people over the distances suggested by Havana Syndrome scenarios. “A small transmitter might look like a big refrigerator. This is not something that you can just pick up, put in the back of your car and drive away.”
David Relman, a Stanford microbiologist who appeared on “60 Minutes” and co-chaired an expert panel that studied Havana Syndrome for the intelligence community, said he believes that theoretical microwave devices designed for certain biological effects could be made small enough to conceal. But there is, he said, no peer-reviewed scientific literature to show that such devices are possible.
The panel nonetheless concluded that attacks might have caused the symptoms. “There are other kinds of evidence that we relied on, including foreign language reports, open source reports, classified reports and personal accounts from people who suffered accidental exposures to known devices,” Relman said. The panel failed to convince the intelligence community, however, which “basically just ignored our findings,” he added.
Another problem is that no one in these cases appears to have ever detected actual microwaves, which are invisible to the eye but can be spotted with the proper electronics. In 2018, the State Department tasked an elite advisory group of scientists known as JASON to look at Havana Syndrome, and they built detectors that could pick up microwaves in Cuba, a scientist familiar with their work said. “They designed some stationary ones that could sit in your apartment or office and some others that you could wear,” the scientist said. “Nobody ever got a recording of a microwave.”
Allan Frey, a biophysicist whose Cold War-era work is cited as the basis for the theoretical microwave weapon, says that the lack of detection was a showstopper for him. He recounted speaking with the CIA about the cases: “I said, ‘First of all, there was never a measurement done. So we know nothing about whether or not there were any microwaves there.’”
Frey, who in the early 1960s demonstrated that pulsed low-energy microwaves could cause a sensation of sounds in the head, sees an even bigger flaw in the weapons theory: common sense. If a foreign adversary had developed an advanced weapon, managed to shrink the components in a way that defies modern engineering, and done it all in secret, why waste it on random attacks?
“It doesn’t make sense logically,” he said, when I interviewed him amid the Havana Syndrome frenzy in 2022. If Russia had built a newfangled microwave weapon, why roll it out in Cuba? “The last thing that you want to do, if you’re the military, is to give out information on a weapon you might use in a war,’” Frey recalled telling the CIA.
None of that logic is likely to resolve the debate, and as the “60 Minutes” episode shows, people continue to come forward saying they were targeted. Microwave weapons are an irresistible narrative for the media and, for those affected, offer a simple explanation for a confusing array of symptoms.
As an attempted way out of this conundrum, President Biden has allowed the CIA and other agencies to provide financial support to personnel they determine have been afflicted by Anomalous Health Incidents, even though the U.S. intelligence agencies found “no credible evidence” that any foreign adversary had used a weapon or device linked to the symptoms.
What is actually behind the many accounts is impossible to say. Some have suggested mass psychogenesis—essentially a social contagion—a theory that is insulting, of course, to those who say they have suffered life-altering injuries. Others say we should keep looking for a cause.
I spoke again to Foster following the “60 Minutes” investigation, and he thinks that some more compact device, like a pulsed laser, could perhaps explain some of the incidents. He says the government created a mess by withholding information in the early days and focusing on microwave weapons, and now the large number of Havana Syndrome reports make it impossible to determine who was affected, and by what.
“Something’s going on we don’t know about,” Foster said. “But it’s not someone walking around with a microwave oven zapping people.”
Sharon Weinberger is the national security editor at The Wall Street Journal.
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