Compelling
new evidence suggests that a shadowy group within Russia’s GRU military
intelligence, known as Unit 29155, could be orchestrating attacks on
American personnel using directed energy weapons.
Previously implicated in high-profile assassination attempts and sabotage operations across Europe, the unit is now suspected of being behind the controversial and mysterious afflictions known as “Havana Syndrome,” which have plagued U.S. officials around the globe, according to a joint investigation by The Insider, 60 Minutes, and Der Spiegel.
Havana Syndrome, officially known
as “Anomalous Health Incidents” (AHI), describes a mysterious medical
condition reported by U.S. officials and military personnel mainly while
serving abroad.
First reported in 2016 among
embassy workers from the U.S. and Canada in Havana, Cuba, symptoms of
Havana Syndrome include sudden extreme headaches, ear pain, dizziness,
nausea, and cognitive issues. In some cases, long-term health consequences have ended careers and altered lives.
Victims of Havana Syndrome recount
nearly identical experiences, including sudden intense pain brought on
by a mysterious and unseen crippling force.
“It was like this piercing feeling
on the side of my head, and I got vertigo,” Olivia Troye, the Homeland
Security Advisor to Vice President Mike Pence, recounted to 60 Minutes about an experience she had outside the White House in 2019. “I was unsteady. I felt nauseous, and I was somewhat disoriented.”
Former covert CIA officer Marc
Polymeropoulos said he had a terrifyingly similar encounter in a Moscow
hotel room in 2017. “I couldn’t stand up,” Polymeropoulos noted in a
2020 interview with G.Q. “I was falling over. I had an incredible sense of nausea and ringing in my ears. I was, frankly, terrified.”
Troye and Polymeropoulos are among
the more than 1,000 U.S. officials who, over the past eight years, have
reported experiencing what seems to be an attack by a debilitating
directed energy weapon.
Yet, despite numerous reports
suggesting a pattern, the idea that a foreign adversary might be
intentionally targeting U.S. officials, or even the recognition of
“Havana Syndrome” as a genuine condition, has become a point of
contention in Washington, D.C.
Investigations into Havana Syndrome have frequently resulted in unclear and sometimes conflicting conclusions.
In February 2022, a White House panel of experts concluded that
radio waves could cause some of the injuries associated with the
mysterious incidents. However, the panel also found that most incidents
could be explained by stress or psychosomatic reactions.
In the same month, a report by
the JASON Advisory Group commissioned by the State Department found
that it was unlikely that Havana Syndrome incidents resulted from
directed energy attacks.
In March 2024, two major studies by
the National Institutes of Health examining the conditions of over 80
government employees and family members who experienced “anomalous
health incidents” found no consistent evidence of brain injury.
In an editorial published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, Stanford microbiologist Dr. David Relman, who has investigated cases of Havana Syndrome, criticized the NHI’s findings.
“One might suspect that nothing or
nothing serious happened with these cases. This would be ill-advised,”
Dr. Relman wrote. “Two detailed investigations of AHIs (in which I
played a role) found the cases with abrupt-onset, location-dependent
sensory phenomena to be unlike any disorder reported in the neurological
or general medical literature, and potentially caused by an external
mechanism.”
While the scientific community is
still uncertain about the legitimacy of Havana Syndrome as a medical
condition, a March 2023 report from seven U.S. intelligence agencies
deemed it “very unlikely” that the symptoms reported were caused by an
energy weapon or a foreign adversary. The Office of the Director of
National Intelligence (DNI), in its 2024 Annual Threat Assessment, reinforced this stance, dismissing the idea of foreign adversarial involvement.
“We continue to closely examine
anomalous health incidents (AHIs), particularly in areas we have
identified as requiring additional research and analysis,” the DNI’s
annual report reads. “Most I.C. agencies have concluded that it is very
unlikely a foreign adversary is responsible for the reported AHIs.”
Yet new unnerving details from a recent joint investigation by The Insider, 60 Minutes, and Der Spiegel
challenge these claims of no foreign adversary involvement. Journalists
reportedly uncovered persuasive evidence that a unit within Russia’s
GRU military intelligence, Unit 29155, may be responsible for the
contentious Havana Syndrome incidents.
In October 2021, U.S. officials at
the U.S. Embassy in Tbilisi, Georgia, reported experiencing anomalous
health incidents. According to The Insider,
travel logs and cell phone metadata reveal that during the time of
these attacks, a Russian intelligence operative and member of Unit
29155, Albert Averyanov, was in Tbilisi.
Averyanov’s presence in Tbilisi
offers some circumstantial evidence. However, journalists say that in
this case, they were also able to place the GRU operative at the scene
of the crime.
After experiencing a sudden
piercing headache and ringing in her ears, “Joy” (a pseudonym), the wife
of a Justice Department attaché in the U.S. Embassy, said she saw a
tall, thin man standing by a black Mercedes near the gate to her home.
When shown a photo of Averyanov, “Joy” described having a “visceral”
reaction, saying, “I can absolutely say that this looks like the man
that I saw in the street.”
According to reports, in addition
to being a Russian intelligence operative, Averyanov is also the son of
General Andrei Averyanov, an influential deputy director in GRU and the
founding commander of Unit 29155. The Insider, 60 Minutes, and Der Spiegel
say obtained phone and travel records revealed Averyanov was in
constant communication and in the company of other known members of
GRU’s Unit 29155.
Averyanov isn’t the only member of
Unit 29155 journalists tracked down and associated with instances of
Havana Syndrome attacks.
Through phone and travel records, The Insider was
able to identify seven alleged members of GRU’s Unit 29155 stalking
around Europe in the days leading up to a series of previously
unreported anomalous health incidents at the U.S. consulate in
Frankfurt, Germany, in 2014.
A U.S. consulate official in
Frankfurt named “Taylor” (a pseudonym) told reporters that on November
4, 2014, he suddenly heard a “high-pitched squeal,” accompanied by
intense pressure, which caused him to vomit and pass out. German doctors
diagnosed him with vestibular neuronitis and high blood pressure. Once
back in the U.S., “Taylor” was diagnosed with a traumatic brain injury.
Weeks before the attack, “Taylor”
said he had confronted a “tall, muscular man with a military bearing”
and a “strong Russian accent” acting suspiciously near the U.S.
consulate residential complex.
When shown several photographs,
“Taylor” identified Egor Gordienko as the suspicious man he’d seen
lurking near the consulate years prior. “Yes, that’s him,” “Taylor”
told The Insider. “I’m getting goosebumps looking at him now.”
A previous investigation by the outlets Bellingcat and The Insider linked Gordienko to GRU’s Unit 29155 and the 2015 attempted assassination of Bulgarian businessman Emelyan Gebrev.
Further bolstering the Kremlin
connections, journalists obtained a classified Russian document showing a
2017 commendation issued to Colonel Ivan Terentiev, commander of the
“Group for Special Tasks of Unit 29155.” The purpose of the commendation
was for research work Terentiev had done on the “potential capabilities
of non-lethal acoustic weapons in combat activities in urban
settings.”
In January 2024, the Bulgarian government issued a
European Arrest Warrant for Terentiev, accusing him of being involved
in the destruction of several Bulgarian arms facilities between 2011 and
2020.
Speaking publicly for the first
time, recently retired Army Lieutenant Colonel Greg Edgreen, who ran the
Defense Intelligence Agency’s (DIA) investigation into Havana syndrome
from 2021 to 2023, further affirmed Russia’s connections to AHI attacks
in an interview with 60 Minutes.
“One of the things I started to
notice was the caliber of our officer that was being impacted,” Edgreen
said. “This wasn’t happening to our worst or our middle-range officers.
This was happening to our top five percent, 10 percent performing
officers across the Defense Intelligence Agency.”
“And consistently, there was a
Russia nexus. There was some angle where they had worked against Russia,
focused on Russia, and done extremely well.”
Edgreen, who had access to
extensive classified intelligence regarding the mysterious health
incidents, firmly believes that the Kremlin is responsible for Havana
Syndrome.
“If I’m wrong about Russia being
behind anomalous health incidents, I will come onto your show. And I
will eat my tie,” Edgreen told 60 Minutes.
Edgreen’s assertions, corroborated
by journalists’ findings, suggest that the Havana Syndrome attacks are
part of a calculated campaign by Russia. This connection is underscored
by an eerie precision in targeting individuals with significant roles in
counteracting Russian operations, hinting at a deliberate strategy to
debilitate U.S. intelligence capabilities.
Marking a sophisticated dimension
of hybrid warfare, this also suggests that Russia is using technology
that remains at the fringes of the public’s understanding but has
devastating effects on its targets.
These recent revelations also
reveal a troubling undercurrent of denial and obfuscation within the
U.S. government’s response. This ultimately ignites a firestorm of
questions about the United States’ preparedness to confront and counter
unconventional tactics, the effectiveness of its response to protect its
personnel, and the broader implications for international norms
governing espionage and warfare.
In an interview with The Insider,
the first CIA officer to experience “Havana Syndrome” in Cuba openly
criticized the U.S. government’s handling of these disturbing incidents.
“What this long-term investigation
has shown is that either the intelligence community is incapable of
carrying out its most basic function,” the unnamed CIA officer said. “Or
it has worked to cover up the facts and gaslight injured employees and
the public.”
Tim McMillan is a retired
law enforcement executive, investigative reporter and co-founder of The
Debrief. His writing typically focuses on defense, national security,
the Intelligence Community and topics related to psychology. You can
follow Tim on Twitter: @LtTimMcMillan. Tim can be reached by email: tim@thedebrief.org or through encrypted email: LtTimMcMillan@protonmail.com.
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https://civil.ge/archives/589363
Source: US Embassy Tbilisi
Journalistic Investigation Reveals Alleged Russian Attacks on US Diplomats in Tbilisi
01/04/2024 - 15:45
On March 31, a year-long joint investigation by
60 Minutes,
The Insider, and
Der Spiegel identified two cases in which US diplomats were targeted by Russian spies using acoustic weapons in Tbilisi, Georgia.
60 Minutes focuses
on one of the cases in particular, with the prime suspect believed to
be an Albert Averyanov, a member of the Russian intelligence unit 29155,
which allegedly may have been involved in the attacks.
In the interview with 60 Minutes, the wife of the Justice
Department official at the US Embassy in Tbilisi reported that on
October 7, 2021, she believes that she was attacked while she was doing
laundry in her home. According to her statement, she heard a sharp noise
coming into the laundry room, specifying: “It just pierced my ears,
came in my left side, felt like it came through the window, into my left
ear.”
After the attack, the 40-year-old woman experienced severe headaches
and projectile vomiting, but the symptoms didn’t stop there. Brain fog,
loss of coordination and vestibular damage, holes in her inner ear
canals were the symptoms that continued to plague her. She had to
undergo two surgeries on her ear and metal plates were placed in her
skull.
Albert Averyanov was identified by the victim herself. According to
her, after the attack, she looked at the security camera and saw an
unknown vehicle parked in front of her house. She approached the vehicle
and saw an unknown man standing in front of it. Later, 60 Minutes investigative partner Christo Grozev, a head of the investigations for The Insider,
acquired the photo and additional evidence of Averyanov’s involvement
in the attacks. When shown the photo, the woman confirmed the
resemblance to the man she saw after the attack.
As for the additional evidence, Grozev was the one who discovered the
secret Russian intelligence unit 29155. The unit’s involvement can be
proven by an accounting document showing that a 29155 officer received a
bonus for work on “potential capabilities of non-lethal acoustic
weapons…”. Albert Averyanov’s name appears on travel manifests and phone
records alongside known members of 29155. He’s also the son of the
unit’s commander.
During the attack on the 40-year-old woman, Averyanov’s phone was
turned off in Tbilisi, and sources say there’s evidence that someone in
Tbilisi logged into Averyanov’s personal email during that time. Grozev
believes that it was most likely Averyanov himself – and that he was in
the city.
Cases of US officials being targeted by a microwave beam or
acoustic ultrasound have been documented for more than a decade. White
House staff, CIA officers, FBI agents, military officers, diplomats and
their families are among those who believe they have been affected by
the attacks, all of whom have some sort of connection to Russia. Their
cases have been dubbed the “Havana syndrome,” since the first recognized
case occurred in Cuba in 2016. US authorities have been reluctant to
pin the blame on Russia. A US intelligence assessment published in 2023
concluded that it was “very unlikely” that a foreign adversary was
responsible for the cases, but acknowledged that some intelligence
agencies had only “low” or “moderate” confidence in this conclusion. Vladimir Putin’s press speaker, Dmitry Peskov has denied Russia’s involvement in the attacks.
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