Hеllo, and welcome back to Tomorrow Will Be Worse!
A special greeting to my wonderful Puck subscribers, and if you are not one of them, that’s okay—you can change that by subscribing. If you become a subscriber, you’ll get to read not only the full, weekly installments of Tomorrow Will Be Worse, but also articles and private emails from my incredible colleagues: Tina Nguyen, Teddy Schleifer, William D. Cohan, Matt Belloni, Baratunde Thurston, Peter Hamby, and Dylan Byers. You’ll also get access to private events, exclusive swag, and our new podcast, The Powers That Be, available for free on Apple Podcasts and on Spotify. Truly, it’s an offer you can’t refuse.
In the meantime, here's a free preview of my latest reporting, on Washington's evolving response to the mystery illness known as Havana Syndrome, the mounting evidence pointing to an old geopolitical adversary, and the deepening suspicions pushing Congress to act. You can sign up here to read the whole story.
Members of the intelligence community are increasingly convinced that the Russian government is behind the hundreds of terrifying directed-energy attacks on diplomats and spies known as the Havana Syndrome. Will Congress respond to the “medium confidence” intelligence with countermeasures? As one member of the community told me, “We got bin Laden with medium confidence.” In the summer of 2019, I met a newly retired C.I.A. officer named Marc Polymeropoulos for lunch at the Jefferson Hotel in Washington, D.C. One of my sources was his friend, and he had brokered an introduction. As we sat in the echoing and empty restaurant, Polymeropoulos told me about what he had been doing in the clandestine service before he left Langley for good: he had overseen the Agency’s efforts to expose and push back against Russian active measures in Europe and Eurasia, areas that are of utmost geopolitical and symbolic significance to the Kremlin.
As we talked, I couldn’t square two things: Marc’s retirement and his age. He had just turned 50, and, by his own account, he had been on the up-and-up at the C.I.A. Why had he left so soon? I asked him. Donald Trump was still president, and, given Marc’s work foiling the Russian security apparatus, I expected to hear something about the White House’s interference, given the president’s affinity for Vladimir Putin. After all, it was a constant during the Trump years: U.S. government apparatchiks resigning in protest over such meddling—or reaching out in private to journalists to warn them about it. But Marc’s answer surprised me: Havana Syndrome. He told me, off the record, that he had been “hit” while visiting Moscow and that the attack had undermined his health so badly that he physically couldn’t work anymore. A promising career in an organization he loved, and had come of age in, was over.
I had been hearing and reading about Havana Syndrome since late 2016, when American diplomats stationed in Cuba as part of President Obama’s detente with the Castro regime started falling ill. Many of them reported hearing a loud, piercing sound and then suffering from vertigo, nausea, tinnitus, headaches, insomnia, cognitive difficulties, vision and hearing problems. A couple dozen U.S. diplomats and spies (as well as some Canadian embassy workers) had been affected, and no one could understand what was happening to these people. Was it chemical exposure? A virus? Mass psychosis? Was it some kind of attack? And if it was, who could have perpetrated it and how?
Soon, stories like this had started popping up at the U.S. consulate in Guangzhou, China. One woman, who represented the Commerce Department, told NBC’s Andrea Mitchell something that really stuck with me: Not only did this woman become so ill that she had to be evacuated from China, but her dogs also felt the effects of whatever this thing was. They started vomiting blood and avoiding the room where this woman had heard that paralyzing sound. If people could be accused of faking it, surely the dogs couldn’t be. I always suspected that these illnesses were the product of deliberate attacks and that the Russian government was behind them—it was exactly the kind of weird thing they’d be both into and capable of—but it was early days, and no one seemed to know much of anything.
The fact that Marc had been hit while in Russia, while doing a job that countered the work of Russian intelligence services, seemed like a tantalizing clue...
FOUR STORIES WE'RE TALKING ABOUT Bob Chapek has asked some of his closest deputies to explore the strategic rationale for potentially decoupling from the sports network. DYLAN BYERS A right-wing finishing school for conservative media personalities outside of Los Angeles has spawned an unlikely academic movement to preserve Trumpism after Trump. TINA NGUYEN The streamer's rationale for defending Chappelle’s transphobic routine has deepened an internal crisis that is not going away. MATTHEW BELLONI Most financial projections are rosy, as Wall Street well knows. But winning the case may prove more troublesome than having opened it at all. WILLIAM D. COHAN
You received this message because you signed up to receive emails from Puck.
Was this email forwarded to you?
Sent to {{customer.email}}
Puck is published by Heat Media LLC.
For support, just reply to this e-mail. For brand partnerships, email [email protected] |
-
Join Puck
Directly Supporting Authors
A new economic model in which writers are also partners in the business.
Personalized Subscriptions
Customize your settings to receive the newsletters you want from the authors you follow.
Stay in the Know
Connect directly with Puck talent through email and exclusive events.