Congresswoman Calls For The Assassination
Of Cuban President
Clip from
documentary Film 638 Ways To Kill Castro
12/06/06 -
Video - Runtime 30 Seconds
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Congressman
Diaz-Balart Says U.S. Should Consider Assassination of Fidel Castro
Wayne Smith. CIP senior fellow.
As is well known, back in the 1960s, the CIA mounted a number of
assassination attempts against Fidel Castro, at one point even
involving the Mafia. The attempts all failed and over the years such
tactics came increasingly to be seen as an embarrassment. In
February of 1976 they were knocked off altogether by an executive
order signed by President Gerald Ford forbidding any employee of the
U.S. government from involvement in "political assassinations."
That executive order was rescinded by President Bush shortly after
9/11, apparently with the intention of going after known terrorists,
such as Osama bin Laden and other Al Qaeda leaders, who posed a
threat to the United States. A matter perhaps of fighting terrorists
with terror tactics, but under the circumstances it was - and is -
perfectly understandable. But going after terrorists is one thing,
going after the leaders of other countries who are considered to be
political enemies quite another. The position of the U.S. should be
above reproach; it must not be perceived as condoning such
assassinations. That is a particularly sensitive issue in the case
of Cuba, because of our record of past indiscretions and because of
the Bush Administration's almost frothing-at-the-mouth hostility
toward the Castro government. Hence, Republican Congressman Lincoln
Diaz-Balart's March 22 statement that the United States should
consider assassinating Fidel Castro was certainly not helpful. The
fact that Diaz-Balart suggested it doesn't mean it has or will
become U.S. policy. But coming as it does at a time when the
Administration itself is saying its primary objective is to bring an
end to the Castro regime, Diaz-Balart's statement will raise
suspicions internationally as to U.S. intentions - and tactics.
Further, the Diaz-Balart statement must be seen against Bush's
history of sheltering and supporting Cuban-American terrorists in
Miami. Bush has asserted over and over again that anyone who
supports or harbors a terrorist, is a terrorist. But by that
definition, there may be terrorists in the Bush family - perhaps
even George W. Bush himself.
In 1989, for example, the first President Bush went against the
advice of his own Justice Department and cancelled the deportation
of arch-terrorist Orlando Bosch. Shortly thereafter, he set him
free. Bosch was a Cuban exile who had been convicted in the U.S. of
terrorist activities and spent four years in prison. Released in
1972, he violated parole and fled to Latin America, ending up
eventually in Venezuela, where in 1976 he was imprisoned for
masterminding the bombing of a Cubana airliner with the loss of 73
lives, including virtually the entire Cuban fencing team. The
hard-line exiles in Miami loved it.
In 1983, the Miami City Commission declared a "Dr. Orlando Bosch
Day," apparently to honor him for his acts of terrorism. Released
from Venezuelan prison under strange circumstances in 1987, Bosch
returned to Miami in 1988 without benefit of a visa and was almost
immediately arrested for his earlier parole violation. The
Immigration and Naturalization Service began proceedings to deport
him. As the associate attorney general put it in 1989: "For 30
years, Bosch has been resolute and unwavering in his advocacy of
terrorist violence." Indeed, the Justice Department had information
linking him to more than 30 acts of sabotage and violence in the
United States, Puerto Rico, Panama and Venezuela. As the associate
attorney general pointed out: "The security of this nation is
affected by its ability to urge credibly other nations to refuse aid
and shelter to terrorists. We could not shelter Dr. Bosch and
maintain that credibility."
But shelter him we did, for Congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen and
the usual crowd of hard-line Cuban exiles demanded that we do so.
They lobbied unrelentingly for Bosch's release. Among those in the
forefront of the lobbying effort on Bosch's behalf was Jeb Bush,
then managing Ileana Ros-Lehtinen's re-election campaign. In the
face of this pressure, coming even from his own son, the first
President Bush decided it was politically expedient to harbor a
terrorist. Bosch was released and still lives freely and unrepentant
in Miami. In a TV interview in February of this year, far from
expressing any remorse over the deaths of those killed in the 1976
bombing of the Cubana airliner, Bosch insisted that "all the persons
traveling in the plane were criminals and Castro henchmen."
And then there is the case of Luis Posada Carriles, who along with
Bosch was responsible for the downing of the Cubana airliner in
1976. He also spent time in a Venezuelan prison, but escaped in 1985
and turned up in Central America working in Oliver North's secret
Contra operation, along with Felix Rodriguez, a key figure in the
Iran-Contra scandal with close ties to then Vice President George
H.W.Bush. In 1998, Posada Carriles acknowledged in an interview with
The New York Times that he had directed the bombing of a number of
hotels in Havana the previous year which had resulted in the death
of an Italian tourist. Though he had thus confessed his culpability,
no charges were ever filed against him in the U.S. Today, he is
being tried in Panama for involvement in a subsequent assassination
plot against Fidel Castro.
These elements in Florida who have been closely involved in
sheltering terrorists and in outright terrorist activities are
President George W. Bush's closest political allies in the state.
Indeed, two years ago, he nominated Ileana Ros-Lehtinen's chief of
staff, Mauricio Tamargo, for an important post in the federal
government. And at this moment, one Luis Zuniga Rey is a member of
the U.S. delegation to the U.N. Human Rights Commission's annual
meeting. According to the report of Enrique Bernales Ballesteros, a
U.N. special rapporteur, Zuniga was directly involved in the same
effort to bomb hotels in Cuba as Luis Posada Carriles, now being
tried in Panama. Just the sort of man we need on our human rights
delegation!
Wayne S. Smith is a Senior Fellow at the Center for International
Policy
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See our complete Comment Policy and use this link to notify us if you have concerns about a comment. We’ll promptly review and remove any inappropriate postings.