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Vol. I Β· No. 169 Β· 1138 Reports Friday, June 19, 2026
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NewsNation clip revives unverified anecdote on CIA ticks and Lyme origins

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Topics in This Edition

Lyme diseaseCIA operationsbiological weaponsOperation Mongoose

Summary

The segment features a reporter recounting an overheard story from a retired CIA operative at a family party who claimed he dropped boxes of infected ticks on Cuba during the Cold War. It links the anecdote to Operation Mongoose, Colonel Lansdale, and a separate interview with Willy Burgdorfer conducted by documentarian Tim Gray suggesting a bioweapons connection to Lyme disease near Lyme, Connecticut. The piece relies on the reporter's personal recollection and references to Burgdorfer's alleged statements, without presenting documents, official records, or opposing scientific views.

Editorial Assessment

The broadcast amplifies a long-standing conspiracy theory without noting that Borrelia burgdorferi has been found in pre-1954 tick specimens and ancient remains, predating any alleged Plum Island or Fort Detrick work. Congressional inquiries prompted by similar claims produced no confirmation of weaponized ticks causing U.S. outbreaks. The segment omits documented U.S. bioweapons research limits and Cuba-related programs that focused on other agents such as swine fever. Viewers receive an unchallenged personal anecdote presented as potentially revelatory while missing the consensus from infectious-disease experts and historical records that the claims lack substantiation.

Key Moments

unsupported

Ex-CIA operative claimed he dropped boxes of infected ticks on Cuba as part of Operation Mongoose

Anecdote originates from Kris Newby’s book Bitten; no declassified documents or official records confirm tick-dropping operations

disputed

Willy Burgdorfer’s work on ticks was connected to a biological weapons project

Burgdorfer discovered the Lyme bacterium; claims of bioweapons admissions appear in activist interviews but are rejected by scientific consensus and his documented career

disputed

Lyme disease outbreak near Connecticut may stem from escaped bioweapon ticks

Museum and ancient DNA evidence shows the pathogen predates U.S. labs by centuries; 2019 congressional review found no supporting evidence

Notable Concerns

  • Relies on anecdotal, unverified testimony without corroboration
  • Omits peer-reviewed evidence against lab-origin theory for Lyme disease

Sources Consulted

  1. Weaponized ticks: Investigation ordered into whether insects were used as biological weapons
  2. Did Lyme disease originate in the eastern U.S. from Borrelia burgdorferi-infected ticks that escaped from a laboratory at the Plum Island Animal Disease Center
  3. Fact Sheet: RFK Jr. Spread Conspiracy That Lyme Disease Came From a Military Bioweapon
  4. Operation Mongoose
  5. How ticks became bioweapons