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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Thursday, Jan 20 2022

Full Issue

CIA Says Most 'Havana Syndrome' Cases Likely Not Malicious

A CIA investigation into a mysterious illness claimed to affect multiple U.S. officials working overseas showed the majority of cases were environmental or caused by prior medical conditions. But the probe is ongoing and it is still possible some cases were caused by foreign action.

The New York Times: Most ‘Havana Syndrome’ Cases Unlikely Caused By Foreign Power, C.I.A. Says 

The C.I.A. has found that most cases of the mysterious ailments known as Havana syndrome are unlikely to have been caused by Russia or another foreign adversary, agency officials said, a conclusion that angered victims. A majority of the 1,000 cases reported to the government can be explained by environmental causes, undiagnosed medical conditions or stress, rather than a sustained global campaign by a foreign power, C.I.A. officials said, describing the interim findings of a comprehensive study. (Barnes, 1/20)

The Washington Post: CIA Finds No ‘Worldwide Campaign’ By Any Foreign Power Behind Mysterious Havana Syndrome 

“We assess it is unlikely that a foreign actor, including Russia, is conducting a sustained, worldwide campaign harming U.S. personnel with a weapon or mechanism,” said a senior CIA official, speaking on the condition of anonymity under ground rules set by the agency. That leaves open the possibility that a foreign power could be responsible for cases that cannot be attributed to medical conditions or other factors, the official said. (Harris, 1/20)

Politico: U.S. Foe Or Specific Weapon Not Behind Sustained, Global Campaign Causing ‘Havana Syndrome,’ CIA Finds 

An intelligence community source separately cautioned that the CIA’s interim finding “does not reflect the unanimous consensus of the intelligence community.” President Joe Biden has not yet been briefed on the current assessment. The source added that the intelligence community’s “expert panel” on the issue is ongoing, and that the CIA finding was primarily a “narrowing-down” of cases and potential causes. (Ward and Desiderio, 1/19)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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