- The Washington Times - Thursday, June 3, 2021

Marc Polymeropoulos was a senior CIA case officer on a routine visit to Moscow in 2017 when he awoke in his hotel room with a severe case of vertigo.

His first inclination was that he had food poisoning and that the symptoms would soon wear off. Instead, it was the beginning of a brain-rattling affliction that would last for years and eventually force him out of the CIA.

“It’s incredibly unsettling,” Mr. Polymeropoulos said of that night. “The room was spinning. I couldn’t stand up. I was falling over. I felt like I was going to be physically sick. I had ringing in my ears. And so I knew something pretty significant had happened.”



Mr. Polymeropoulos had fallen victim to Havana syndrome, a debilitating affliction that U.S. Embassy staff suffered in 2016 in Cuba. The mysterious symptoms “are consistent with the effects of directed, pulsed radio frequency (RF) energy,” said a National Academy of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine report published in December.

Many believe the syndrome is a result of attacks with a microwave weapon or directed energy device, but the U.S. intelligence community doesn’t officially know any more now than it did five years ago.

After the diagnoses of more than 40 cases from Havana, the number of U.S. officials around the globe reporting symptoms, including on U.S. soil, swelled to 130.

Last month, reports revealed information about two U.S. officials struck by Havana syndrome near the White House.

Mr. Polymeropoulos said he believes Russia is behind the affliction because it has the capability to carry out such attacks and many of the officials affected have been involved in Russian operations. He said the attacks seem to be in line with Russia’s treatment of U.S. diplomats.

“There has been a long line of U.S. officials who have developed some pretty severe health symptoms after serving in Moscow,” he said. “That’s something that is worth looking into again as well. Whether it’s the old kind of signals intelligence systems that were turned up too high or the old spy dust, you know, the Russians are very aggressive against U.S. government personnel.”

Nonetheless, he said, this is just his theory. He is not involved in the investigation into the matter and has no insight into the classified discussions about the cases of Havana syndrome.

U.S. diplomats in China also had episodes.

The House and Senate intelligence committees recently held closed-door hearings on Havana syndrome. Representatives from both committees declined to comment on the closed discussions, but a spokesperson for Sen. Mark R. Warner, Virginia Democrat and chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, said the senator “welcomes the IC’s renewed focus on these mysterious attacks and that he’ll continue to work with the IC to understand the cause and the attribution.”

In a joint statement after the hearing, Mr. Warner and committee Vice Chairman Marco Rubio, Florida Republican, vowed to find the culprit.

“Ultimately, we will identify those responsible for these attacks on American personnel and will hold them accountable,” they said.

The State Department, CIA and Pentagon have all started investigations. The National Security Council has begun leading what it called a whole-of-government inquiry into the anomalies. No official determination has been made as to the cause or who may be behind it.

“The Intelligence Community is taking these anomalous health incidents (AHI) very seriously and is committed to investigating the source of these incidents, preventing them from continuing, and caring for those affected,” said a spokesperson for the Office of the Director of National Intelligence. “As of now, we have no definitive information about the cause of these incidents, and it is premature and irresponsible to speculate.”

The intelligence community has not determined whether a foreign actor is responsible but the spy agencies have redoubled their efforts in recent months, the spokesman said.

Mr. Polymeropoulos said he understands why intelligence officials are taking a methodic approach. For him, however, supporting those affected by the attacks takes priority.

Because of little understanding of these attacks, Mr. Polymeropoulos said, he endured a long journey to receive the treatment he needed.

After spending most of his career as a case officer in the Middle East, he said, he did not expect a career-ending attack on his trip to Moscow — especially from within the walls of his five-star hotel near the U.S. Embassy. The symptoms persisted, even after he returned to the U.S., so he knew he had experienced something more serious than food poisoning. 

He reported his symptoms to the CIA‘s office of medical services soon after returning.

“I couldn’t even go to work for more than several hours a day because of the headaches, the dizziness and the brain fog,” he said.

With no treatment available to him, Mr. Polymeropoulos decided to retire from the agency in 2019 and, still seeking treatment, hired a lawyer to press the agency.

“I want nothing more than to get to Walter Reed,” he said he told his attorney and other senior former agency officials who weighed in on his behalf. “And that was communicated to the CIA very specifically. And it worked.”

He said he had no interest in receiving a financial settlement. He just wanted treatment, which the agency refused.

In October, Mr. Polymeropoulos took an unusual step for someone who led an entire career in the shadows. He approached GQ journalist Julia Ioffe to make his case public.

He told the CIA he would do so and said the agency was not surprised, but he did not make the decision lightly after a 26-year career.

“It caused me a lot of stress and anxiety. A lot of people I work with, my former colleagues, were very upset with me and certainly shunned me after that.”

But ultimately, it worked.

The published story put enough public pressure on the CIA to send him to a monthlong program at Walter Reed’s National Intrepid Center of Excellence, he said.

When he arrived, he carried not only the symptoms from the attack but also persistent anxiety, which he blamed on skepticism about his story. The program helped him deal with the headaches and with what he described as the moral injury of feeling shunned.

He felt his claims were finally validated.

Mr. Polymeropoulos chalks up the agency’s denials to what he describes as a leadership failure on the part of the office of medical services. He said CIA Director William J. Burns pledged in his confirmation hearing to prioritize the attacks, and the agency has established a task force to further examine the incidents.

“I think he just understands leadership,” Mr. Polymeropoulos said of Mr. Burns. “I was asked to do some really unique things by the U.S. government as a CIA Operations Officer, but I always knew that you have this pact with leadership that they would have my back if something went wrong. And they really didn’t. And I think he understands that they should have.”

Mr. Polymeropoulos also credits lawmakers for beginning an inquiry into the incidents and for taking the claims seriously.

Sens. Susan M. Collins, Maine Republican, Jeanne Shaheen, New Hampshire Democrat, Mr. Warner and Mr. Rubio introduced the Helping American Victims Afflicted by Neurological Attacks (HAVANA) Act last month to provide financial support to those injured by the attacks.

“This is the way the system is supposed to work,” Mr. Polymeropoulos said about congressional oversight. “I think it’s an effort to kind of right some wrongs that were done. I and others who’ve been affected are incredibly grateful to the senators and House members on both sides of the aisle.”

• Joseph Clark can be reached at jclark@washingtontimes.com.

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