The White House contradicts a new intelligence assessment on the mysterious ailments that diplomats and spies have reported for years.
Less than a week before leaving the White House, President Joe Biden is lifting the state sponsor of terrorism designation for Cuba.
After long denying the possibility, some intelligence agencies are no longer willing to rule out a mystery weapon.
Contradicting what U.S. spy agencies have publicly said, senior National Security Council officials told a group of Havana Syndrome victims in a meeting at the White House that they have seen information that undercuts the intelligence community’s assessment that no foreign adversary was behind the incidents.
Some intelligence agencies are now suggesting a foreign adversary may be behind the mysterious "Havana Syndrome" injuries reportedly sustained by U.S. officials overseas.
New intelligence has led two US intelligence agencies to conclude that it’s possible a small number of mysterious health ailments colloquially termed as Havana Syndrome impacting spies, soldiers and diplomats around the world may have been caused by a “novel weapon” wielded by a foreign actor,
The White House said President Joe Biden was removing Cuba from the list of state sponsors of terrorism in one of his last official acts before Donald Trump is sworn in next Monday
New intelligence about weapons research by American adversaries opens the possibility of a foreign actor behind the mysterious incidents that have injured hundreds of U.S. personnel serving overseas.
A split has emerged between U.S. spy agencies over whether a foreign adversary may be responsible for “Havana Syndrome” injuries to Americans stationed overseas.
A White House statement said President-elect Donald ... The ailments were first reported by personnel at the U.S. embassy in Havana in 2016, leading to suspicions they might have been deliberately ...
An updated assessment calls foreign involvement in the ailments to U.S. personnel ‘very unlikely,’ although two agencies refuse to rule it out