A Norwegian government scientist built a microwave pulse device to prove Havana Syndrome was psychosomatic. He aimed it at his own head. The Pentagon flew to Oslo to examine the wreckage. Then they went and bought one.
The story broke on February 14, 2026, in the Washington Post. A Norwegian government scientist — a prominent skeptic of directed-energy weapon theory — constructed his own device capable of emitting powerful pulses of microwave energy. His goal was to self-administer exposure, experience nothing, and publish a debunking. Instead, he experienced severe head pressure, vertigo, cognitive disruption, memory loss, and hearing loss. He was diagnosed with brain damage. The paper was never published. His identity is being treated as sensitive by both Norwegian and U.S. officials.
In 2024, delegations from the Pentagon and the White House traveled to Norway to examine the device firsthand. In December 2024, a team from the U.S. intelligence community followed. The CIA opened an investigation. What they saw in Oslo apparently confirmed something they had already suspected — because within weeks, they went shopping.
THE PENTAGON BOUGHT ONE
In January 2026, CNN and CBS reported that Homeland Security Investigations — funded by the Defense Department — completed an undercover operation to purchase a device believed by investigators to be linked to Havana Syndrome. The operation cost approximately $15 million. The device is man-portable and concealable (backpack-sized), emits pulsed radio-frequency/microwave energy, has an effective range of several hundred feet, can penetrate windows and drywall, and its vital components were manufactured in Russia.
The U.S. military then spent more than a year testing the device on rats and sheep at a military laboratory. According to sources who briefed CBS 60 Minutes in March 2026, the injuries in the test animals matched the symptom profile of Havana Syndrome victims — debilitating headaches, vertigo, memory loss, and cognitive damage. The Trump administration has since briefed top congressional intelligence officials and shown them a classified photograph of the device.
Directed-energy targeting: the science behind the coverup
60 MINUTES: “THE BIGGEST COVERUP OF MY ADULT LIFE”
On March 7–8, 2026, CBS 60 Minutes aired “Targeting Americans” — a major investigation drawing together the full picture. An unnamed high-level CIA source stated on record: “This is the biggest coverup I’ve seen in my adult life.”
The House Intelligence Committee has reached similar conclusions. Under Chairman Rep. Rick Crawford, the committee determined the official intelligence community assessment was wrong and sent criminal referrals to the Department of Justice in late 2025, targeting intelligence officials for potentially illegal conduct. The committee accused the Office of the Inspector General of the Intelligence Community of actively concealing evidence from Congress.
Marc Polymeropoulos — former CIA Deputy Chief of Operations for Europe and Eurasia — was struck by symptoms in Moscow in December 2017. Walter Reed National Military Medical Center gave him a formal military diagnosis: line-of-duty traumatic brain injury. He retired early from a 26-year career and has publicly stated the CIA failed to defend him.
GRU UNIT 29155: THE PAPER TRAIL
In April 2024, a joint investigation by The Insider, CBS 60 Minutes, and Der Spiegel obtained a classified Russian military document: a 2017 commendation issued to Colonel Ivan Terentiev, commander of the “Group for Special Tasks of Unit 29155,” for research into “the potential capabilities of non-lethal acoustic weapons in combat activities in urban settings.”
Unit 29155 is the GRU unit behind the 2018 Salisbury nerve agent poisonings, the attempted coup in Montenegro, and a documented string of assassinations across Europe. Its operatives were geolocated to cities worldwide immediately before or during reported incidents. Investigators assessed with 60–70% confidence that Unit 29155 deployed directed-energy weapons against U.S. personnel. The first documented case may have occurred in Frankfurt in 2014 — years before the Havana incidents that gave the syndrome its name.
WHAT THE NAS TOLD THEM IN 2020
None of this should have been a surprise. The National Academy of Sciences published its assessment in December 2020. Nineteen experts across neurology, epidemiology, and directed-energy physics reviewed all available case data. Conclusion: pulsed radiofrequency energy was the most plausible explanation for acute cases. Mass psychogenic illness was explicitly ranked secondary. The official intelligence community assessment continued to say “very unlikely” for three more years anyway.
THE SCALE: 1,500 PERSONNEL, COUNTING
Approximately 1,500 U.S. government personnel have reported symptoms since 2016 — diplomats, CIA officers, military personnel, and family members across dozens of countries. In March 2026, four American diplomats fell ill with suspected cases in Paris and Geneva. Congress passed the HAVANA Act in 2021 requiring financial support for affected personnel. Compensation legislation does not pass for mass hysteria.
ANALYSIS
The Norwegian self-experiment demolished the last institutional escape route. The core skeptical argument was that pulsed microwave radiation at achievable power levels could not produce the documented symptoms. A government scientist built the device, tested it on himself, and proved the opposite. The Pentagon then acquired the actual weapon and tested it on animals. The animals got Havana Syndrome.
The GRU had a classified program. The NAS identified the mechanism in 2020. A Russian-made device was acquired and validated in 2025. The House Intelligence Committee has sent criminal referrals over the cover-up. Insiders describe it as the largest suppression operation of their careers.
The siege on the human nervous system is not a theory. It is a documented operational program with a paper trail, a military unit, purchased hardware, animal test data — and a Norwegian scientist who thought he was doing the debunking and is no longer able to do much of anything at all.
Sources: Washington Post (Feb 14, 2026); CNN/CBS News (Jan 2026); CBS 60 Minutes “Targeting Americans” (Mar 7–8, 2026); The Insider / 60 Minutes / Der Spiegel joint investigation (Apr 2024); National Academy of Sciences NASEM Report (Dec 2020); HAVANA Act, Public Law 117-46 (2021); House Intelligence Committee (2025–2026)
