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Seized Russian Device EXPOSES Havana Syndrome Cover-Up…
A backpack-sized device with Russian-origin components is forcing U.S. intelligence to reexamine years of dismissing Havana Syndrome victims—and it could expose how badly Washington got this threat wrong.
A Physical Device Changes the Stakes for Havana Syndrome
U.S. officials told CBS News that the government acquired a portable, backpack-sized device in late 2024 containing Russian-origin components and believed capable of emitting pulsed radio-frequency energy. The reported significance is straightforward: unlike years of inconclusive theories, the government now has a tangible item that can be tested. Pentagon funding reportedly exceeded eight figures for the purchase and subsequent testing, and the device has been under evaluation for more than a year.
Reported symptom profiles associated with these incidents—severe headaches, vertigo, nausea, and high-pitched sounds—have been described for years by affected U.S. diplomats, intelligence officers, and military personnel. Cases began in Havana in 2016 and later spread across dozens of countries, with more than 1,500 U.S. officials affected, according to the reporting. For families who watched careers derail and medical bills pile up, the existence of a testable device matters more than bureaucratic labels like “Anomalous Health Incidents.”
Why the New Evidence Collides with Past Intelligence Judgments
U.S. intelligence assessments previously leaned heavily against foreign adversary involvement. A 2023 assessment concluded such responsibility was “very unlikely,” and a January 2025 review reaffirmed that overall judgment. The new wrinkle is that two agencies reportedly moved toward a “roughly even chance” view that a foreign device could be involved. That split matters because it suggests the evidence is not being weighed uniformly across the intelligence community.
The current conflict is less about partisan talking points than process and accountability. If investigators can reproduce AHI-like effects from the device under controlled testing, it strengthens the argument that at least some incidents could involve a technical capability rather than mass misdiagnosis, stress, or coincidence. If testing fails to match real-world cases, skepticism remains justified. Either way, Americans deserve clarity—especially when U.S. personnel may have been targeted overseas.
Gabbard’s ODNI Review Puts Pressure on a Closed System
ODNI, under DNI Tulsi Gabbard, is conducting a review of prior AHI investigations that officials described as largely complete but not yet finalized for public release. An ODNI spokesperson said Gabbard remains committed to sharing the findings while avoiding the release of incomplete information. In practical terms, that signals a tension familiar to voters tired of Washington’s “trust us” culture: transparency takes time, but endless delay looks like self-protection.
CIA Havana Syndrome Patient Zero speaks on the Pentagon allegedly acquired a Havana Syndrome device on the black market
"The Biden administration said they don't believe it all the while they had a device in hand" pic.twitter.com/w6TmpA0Oq7
— Red Panda Koala (@RedPandaKoala) January 15, 2026
Former CIA officer Marc Polymeropoulos—who reported being affected in Moscow in 2017—has publicly argued that earlier CIA assumptions were “blown up” by the existence of a device capable of producing similar effects, and he has pushed for a new analytic review. That demand tracks with a basic conservative principle: government agencies should not grade their own homework. If the CIA’s prior conclusions were formed without access to key physical evidence, oversight must correct the record.
What’s Known, What Isn’t, and What Congress Should Demand Next
The reporting does not establish public, definitive attribution to the Russian government; it describes Russian-origin components and a device believed capable of producing effects consistent with the symptoms. That distinction matters because Americans have watched too many national-security narratives swing between certainty and silence. Congress has reportedly been briefed, and lawmakers should press for declassified technical findings: what the device can do, what it cannot do, and how confidently it matches real AHI cases.
If U.S. personnel were harmed by a directed-energy capability, the policy implications extend beyond intelligence debates. Defensive measures at embassies and overseas posts, medical support for victims, and clear interagency accountability become immediate priorities. If the government can buy and test a suspected device with significant Pentagon funding, it can also ensure affected Americans are treated with seriousness rather than shuffled into administrative limbo. The public now has enough verified reporting to demand answers.
Brain Cooked Alive.
Crazy how most of these victims think this 'Havana Syndrome' kind of scalar microwave-type weapon attack are from foreign adversaries when they are all connected to US secret Ultrasonic Acoustic Heyerodyne DEW V2K weapons development.
“I woke up with a… pic.twitter.com/0eJcAp2vOP
— SynCronus (@syncronus) March 9, 2026
Sources:
Device that may be tied to Havana Syndrome obtained by U.S. government
Press Release: PR-19-25
DNI Director Tulsi Gabbard on the Russia hoax: “there is irrefutable evidence”
Havana Syndrome Breakthrough: US Tests Suspected Device