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    Australian BMX star suffers van break-in on way to Paris Olympics

    00:37
  • Deadly blast at Jose Cuervo tequila plant kills six people

    01:55
  • Fiery plane crash kills 18 in Nepal

    01:13
  • Netanyahu addresses joint meeting of Congress

    01:53
  • 10-year-old ‘Ziko’ volunteers at Gaza hospital

    01:37
  • Netanyahu rebukes the ICC and warns ‘America will be next’

    00:46
  • Netanyahu thanks President Biden for 'heartfelt support of Israel'

    01:17
  • Deadly plane crash in Nepal kills at least 18 people

    00:37
  • Echoes of the past in Paris Olympics

    02:01
  • Dozens killed by mudslides in southern Ethiopia

    00:56
  • Israeli forces strike eastern Khan Younis as Palestinians flee

    01:09
  • Team USA members share their tips on where to go when visiting Paris Olympics

    01:18
  • Palestinian factions agree to end yearslong division after Beijing talks

    00:48
  • Netanyahu heads to D.C. as Israel launches deadly strikes in Yemen

    02:53
  • Scratch and sniff stamps enable Olympic visitors to send home essential French cuisine

    01:38
  • Veteran anti-whaling campaigner Paul Watson arrested in Greenland

    00:56
  • Watch: Migrant caravan leaves south Mexico border heading for U.S.

    00:49
  • European allies and Russia react to Joe Biden's decision not to seek re-election

    01:39
  • Gaza healthcare workers say Israel is targeting hospitals

    02:58
  • Russian court sentences Wall Street Journal reporter to 16 years

    01:44

Foreign adversaries not responsible for 'Havana syndrome,' say U.S. intel agencies

03:21

A newly declassified review by U.S. intelligence agencies says that the so-called “Havana syndrome” was most likely not caused by the actions of a foreign adversary. The syndrome refers to when diplomats and spies working in Cuba said they experienced bizarre sounds and sensations followed by unexplained illnesses and symptoms. NBC’s Ken Dilanian has the details of the investigation.