The study considered whether chemicals, viruses or psychological factors caused the symptoms, and it could not rule out that psychological factors have impacted some of the cases. That's the nature of how this kind of energy can be delivered.” In other words, it could be focused on one room and not another room in the same house. And that was pulsed directed radio frequency energy, or microwave energy. That literature does mimic and is consistent with a number of the clinical findings that we noted.”Īnd, he added, “the view of some of the world's most-renowned neurologists” was that “among the various possible mechanisms that would explain these cases, there was one that stood out. “And that literature now goes back a number of decades, and was published largely by the former Soviet Union. David Relman, a professor of medicine at Stanford University who led the study, told Mitchell in an interview. “What we found was that there is a literature that describes health effects of a particular form of microwave energy, which is pulsed and directed,” Dr. The study didn’t directly conclude that Americans were targeted in a Russian attack by a microwave device, as some American intelligence officials believe, but it raised the possibility, because Russians have done the most work on microwave energy. It validates the belief by those affected that something significant happened to them, and repudiates skeptics who chalked “Havana Syndrome” up to psychosomatic illness or distorted the findings of a research paper to blame the symptoms on sounds made by crickets. While not definitive, the report by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine is the most authoritative examination of what may have caused the mysterious illnesses. Now, a study by some of the world’s most prominent brain experts - first reported Friday night by NBC News – has validated what some American intelligence officials have long believed, by concluding that the most plausible explanation for the symptoms suffered by at least some of the affected American officers is “directed, pulsed radiofrequency energy,” a type of energy that includes microwaves. He became so debilitated from fatigue and chronic headaches that he retired from the CIA last year, still unsure of what exactly had hit him. Former CIA officer Marc Polymeropoulos, who said fatigue and chronic headaches forced him to retire. Polymeropoulos, who granted his first television interview to NBC’s Andrea Mitchell for the TODAY show Monday, never felt right again, and he came to believe he was among the American diplomats and spies who suffered from the so-called Havana Syndrome, the mysterious affliction that first cropped up among officers at the American embassy in Cuba in 2016. I had an incredible sense of nausea and ringing in my ears.
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