Causes Beyond ‘Sonic Attacks’ Being Explored To Explain Cuba Health Attacks

Picture of the US embassy in Havana, taken on September 29, 2017 after the United States announced it is withdrawing more than half its personnel in response to mysterious health attacks targeting its diplomatic staf... Picture of the US embassy in Havana, taken on September 29, 2017 after the United States announced it is withdrawing more than half its personnel in response to mysterious health attacks targeting its diplomatic staff. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said Washington would maintain relations with Havana -- which were only fully restored in 2015, and which have deteriorated since President Donald Trump took office earlier this year. Routine visa operations will be suspended indefinitely in response to the attacks, which are of an unknown nature have targeted at least 21 US embassy staff over the past few months. / AFP PHOTO / Adalberto ROQUE (Photo credit should read ADALBERTO ROQUE/AFP/Getty Images) MORE LESS
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WASHINGTON (AP) — The United States is investigating a range of possibilities beyond “sonic attacks” for the cause of U.S. diplomats’ mysterious illnesses in Cuba, the Trump administration told Congress on Tuesday, including the possibility of a viral attack.

Top State Department officials testifying on Capitol Hill pushed back strongly on suggestions from some lawmakers that Americans had not been attacked in Cuba. A new FBI report said there’s no evidence backing up the initial theory of a sonic weapon.

“I’ve seen the range of what possibly could have taken place, beyond the acoustic element,” said Todd Brown, assistant director for the State Department’s Diplomatic Security service. He said one possibility was that a virus was deliberately deployed to harm Americans, but he offered no evidence for why investigators believed that might be the case.

The U.S. hasn’t publicly presented evidence to show that Americans were attacked in Cuba, and the government in Havana has said repeatedly that it believes nobody was attacked. But State Department officials told a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing that they had spent months examining all possibilities for how the U.S. Embassy workers grew ill, and that every theory had a major hole — with the exception of deliberate attacks.

Despite the FBI report, which was revealed Monday by The Associated Press but has not been released publicly, Brown said he would not rule out a sound component entirely. He said there had been an “acoustic element” associated with the sensations and feeling experienced by diplomats who fell ill. He said it’s possible the sound masked some other technology that caused the damage.

Dr. Charles Rosenfarb, medical director for the State Department’s medical bureau, said investigators are confident that something indeed caused medical harm to the Americans.

“The findings suggest this is not an episode of mass hysteria,” Rosenfarb said.

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