For years, hundreds of American diplomats, intelligence officers, and military personnel reported the same thing: sudden onset of debilitating neurological symptoms — vertigo, hearing loss, cognitive impairment, searing headaches — often while stationed overseas. For years, they were told it was nothing. Psychosomatic. Mass hysteria. The official intelligence community assessment concluded it was “very unlikely a foreign adversary is responsible.” Anyone who suggested otherwise was labeled a conspiracy theorist.
That assessment, it turns out, was a lie. And the people who told it knew it was a lie when they told it.
What the Investigation Found
Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard has now stated publicly that previous intelligence assessments “wrongly concealed” Russia’s responsibility for the attacks. The House Intelligence Committee released an unclassified summary of its investigation that does not merely challenge the prior conclusions — it accuses the intelligence community of “stonewalling, slow-walking, and cherry-picking of information” to reach a predetermined result.
The investigation tied the incidents to Unit 29155 of Russia’s GRU — a military intelligence unit with a documented history of sabotage, poisonings, and assassinations across Europe. This is not an obscure outfit. Unit 29155 has been linked to the attempted assassination of Sergei Skripal in the United Kingdom and destabilization operations across the Balkans. The idea that this unit was attacking American personnel and the CIA simply failed to notice strains credulity past its breaking point.
The Weapon
Perhaps the most extraordinary detail to emerge is that the United States government now possesses what investigators believe to be the weapon itself. The Pentagon spent over a year testing a device that was purchased in an undercover operation. The Department of Homeland Security’s Homeland Security Investigations unit acquired the device “for millions of dollars” during the final days of the Biden administration.
Consider the timeline. The attacks began in 2016. For eight years, victims were dismissed, mocked, and denied adequate medical care. Their own government told them nothing was happening to them. And in the final days of the administration that oversaw much of that denial, a federal agency quietly purchased what may be the very weapon used against American personnel — for millions of dollars — as though preserving evidence that someone, somewhere, knew needed preserving.
The Coverup
What makes this story particularly corrosive is not that intelligence agencies made an error. Errors happen. It is that they appear to have made a deliberate choice. The House Intelligence Committee’s language is unambiguous: stonewalling, slow-walking, cherry-picking. These are not words that describe incompetence. They describe intent.
Even Biden’s own National Security Council, according to reports, conceded that something was “rotten in the intelligence community, particularly in the CIA.” When an administration’s own national security apparatus acknowledges institutional rot in the agency responsible for protecting American intelligence officers, the scale of the failure — or the betrayal — becomes difficult to overstate.
Why would the CIA cover up attacks on its own personnel? The possible answers range from institutional embarrassment to something far darker. Did acknowledging the attacks require acknowledging a failure to protect assets? Did it threaten intelligence-sharing relationships? Did it risk escalation with Russia at a moment when certain factions preferred de-escalation at any cost — including the health and safety of their own people?
The Conspiracy Theorists Were Right
There is a particular cruelty in what was done to those who spoke up. Victims who reported their injuries were subjected to skepticism from their own chain of command. Journalists who pursued the story were told by authoritative sources that the science did not support the claims. The intelligence community’s assessment — that a foreign adversary was “very unlikely” responsible — was not presented as one possibility among several. It was presented as settled fact, wielded to discredit anyone who disagreed.
Now the government has the weapon. It knows who built it. It knows which unit deployed it. It has the committee findings, the DNI’s acknowledgment, and the purchased device sitting in a Pentagon testing facility. Every person who was told they were imagining things, every journalist who was told to move on, every analyst who was pressured to reach the approved conclusion — they were right. The conspiracy theorists were right. And the institutions that called them conspiracy theorists knew it all along.
The victims are owed more than vindication. They are owed accountability — not from Russia, whose hostility was at least predictable, but from the American officials who chose to hide it.





