Anti-Castro Cuban exiles
who have been linked to bombings and assassinations are living
free in Miami. Does the U.S. government have a double standard
when it comes to terror?
By Tristram Korten and Kirk
Nielsen
15/01/08 "Salon"
-- - On a hot subtropical Sunday, deep in the humid brush
bordering the Everglades west of Miami, Osiel Gonzalez squints
down the worn barrel of an AK-47 rifle and squeezes the trigger.
With a crack and kick the bullet whizzes over a field of neatly
trimmed grass and hits a human silhouette on a paper target 40
yards away.
Gonzalez wipes the sweat off his brow and smiles.
Perspiration stains the neck and armpits of his camouflage
jacket. All around him are men in fatigues, some flat-bellied on
the grass shooting rounds, others cleaning their weapons or
picking through ammunition boxes. The air is thick with cigar
smoke. At age 71, Gonzalez is still one of the best marksmen at
this training camp for Alpha 66, the paramilitary Cuban exile
group formed in 1961 "with the intention of making commando type
attacks on Cuba,"
as the organization's Web site
baldly puts it. Gonzalez hopes to put his skills to use when the
second revolution comes, the one that will tear his homeland
free from the grip of communist dictator
Fidel Castro.
At that point Gonzalez hopes to have a Cuban soldier in his
sights, not a paper silhouette.
Plans to attack Cuba are constantly being hatched in South
Florida. Over
the years militant exiles have been linked to everything from
downing airliners to hit-and-run commando raids on the Cuban
coast to hotel bombings in Havana. They've killed Cuban
diplomats and made numerous attempts on Castro's life.
But, other than an occasional federal gun charge, nothing
much seems to happen to most of these would-be revolutionaries.
They are allowed to train nearly unimpeded despite making
explicit plans to violate the 70-year-old U.S. Neutrality Act
and overthrow a sovereign country's government. Though separate
anti-terror laws passed in 1994 and 1996 would seem to apply
directly to their activities, no one has ever been charged for
anti-Cuban terrorism under those laws. And 9/11 seems to have
changed nothing. In the past few years in South Florida, a newly
created local terrorism task force has investigated
Jose Padilla
and the hapless Seas of David cult, and juries have delivered
mixed reviews, but no terrorism charges have been brought
against anti-Castro militants. The federal government has even
failed to extradite to other countries militants who are
credibly accused of acts of murder. Among the most notorious is
Luis Posada Carriles, wanted for bombing a Cuban jet in 1976 and
Havana hotels in 1997. It is, perhaps, a testament to the power
of South Florida's crucial Cuban-American voting bloc -- and the
political allegiances of the current president.
Video: Photos and audio from Alpha 66's training camp
In Greater Miami, home to the majority of the nation's 1.5
million Cuban-Americans, the presence of what could credibly be
described as a terrorist training camp has become an accepted
norm during the half-century of the anti-Castro Cuban diaspora.
Alpha 66 and numerous other paramilitary groups -- Comandos F4,
Brigade 2506, Accion Cubana -- are so common they've taken on
the benign patina of Rotary Clubs with weapons.
But Alpha 66 members are eager to remind you that even if
they are graying and prosperous they are not toothless old
tigers. Their Web site boasts that "in recent years" they've
sabotaged Cuba's tourist economy by attacking hotels in the
beach resort of Caya Coco. At the group's headquarters in the
Little Havana neighborhood of Miami, the walls are hung with the
portraits of dozens of men who have died on Alpha 66 missions.
To reach Alpha 66's South Florida camp you have to drive to
the farmlands west of Miami's sprawl, then wait for a guide. You
follow the guide down a winding, pitted dirt road for a few
miles until you get to a gate and a yellow watchtower hung with
an old-fashioned school bell. Behind a wall of trees and shrubs
is a compound that looks like a hunting lodge. A low-slung
wood-plank bunker with a deck and awning provides refuge from
the sun.
Before hitting the range, the men -- there are no women here
today -- had done maneuvers, marching in double file around the
field, while a short, barrel-chested former Cuban army officer
named Ivan Ayala barked directions: "Columna izquierda!" Many of
the aging, uniformed men laboring to make it around the field
are veterans of the failed CIA-backed Bay of Pigs invasion of
1961 and alumni of Castro's jails. Some, like Osiel Gonzalez,
even fought alongside Castro against Cuban dictator Fulgencio
Batista, before Castro's turn toward communism. Most, if you
believe them, have a "commando" mission or two with Alpha under
their belts -- landing on a remote beach and burning sugar cane
fields, or strafing a shoreline with machine-gun fire. In other
words, they've walked the walk of counterrevolutionary violence,
even if it's now reduced to a shuffle.
They deny they have anything in common with the militants
hiding in the caves of Afghanistan and Pakistan. "No, we are not
terrorists," says Gonzalez, the second-in-command and a
co-founder of the group who, when he is not donning fatigues and
shouldering a rifle, is a financial consultant. "We don't want
to kill civilians."
"Our goal is to free our country for our children and
grandchildren," drawls Al Bacallao, who has already retreated to
the porch's shade behind Gonzalez and the shooting range. The
61-year-old Bacallao was raised in Georgia after arriving from
Cuba at age 8, and is the rare Cuban exile with a Southern
twang. "The United States fought for its liberty, why can't we?"
But Alpha members may have a fluid definition of what a
civilian is. Raking the coast with .50-caliber machine-gun fire
certainly does not exclude civilian casualties, nor does
attacking tourist spots. By his own admission, Bacallao, who
joined Alpha 66 23 years ago, has gone on several missions to
Cuba. In 1993 U.S. authorities arrested him and a boatload of
other men setting out for the island.
"Our plan was to land and make a hit and run -- those are the
best actions, you know," recounts Bacallao, as rifle shots
punctuate the air. "And we had everything on board; a .50
caliber gun, hand grenades, AK-47s, plastic explosives. We had
enough to blow up Florida, Georgia and Alabama!" He lands hard
on the "bam" in Alabama. Then he laughs. "But we broke down. The
motor started failing and the currents were strong. Eventually
we were picked up."
"Let me tell you, we were treated like animals," he says.
"And all we were trying to do was liberate our country."
But if he was treated like an animal, he is not in a cage.
Federal prosecutors charged him and his companions with illegal
weapons possession but a judge dismissed the case against most
of the men, and a jury found the rest not guilty. Like other
anti-Castro exiles before him, despite violent acts he is free
to continue reporting to the training camp, and free to continue
preparing for counter-revolution.
When it comes to South Florida and terror, the official line
from current and former federal law enforcement officials is
that the law is enforced without fear or favor. The U.S.
attorney for the Southern District of Florida, R. Alexander
Acosta, declined comment for this story, but several of his
predecessors insisted to Salon that the law is applied
objectively and without regard to local or national politics.
"I don't think there has ever been or is presently a refusal
to consider more aggressive charges if the evidence truly
sustains them," asserts Kendall Coffey, who was the Southern
District's U.S. attorney from 1993 to 1996 and is now a
prominent defense lawyer. Coffey adds that he never experienced
pressure from his bosses in Washington regarding Cuban
militants. "Not at all," he says.
"The politics of a case simply do not come into play," states
Guy Lewis, U.S. attorney in South Florida from 2000 to 2002.
Judy Orihuela, spokeswoman for the FBI's Miami office,
insists the agency will investigate any group that intends to
violate U.S. law and poses a violent threat. At the Department
of Justice in Washington, Dean Boyd, a spokesman for the
national security division, rejects the notion that federal law
enforcement shows leniency toward exile militants. Boyd
maintains the DOJ would never attempt to influence a local case
for political reasons and is blind to community or political
pressure. "We pursue charges based on the evidence, not on other
considerations," he says.
"That's sheer bullshit," counters Wayne Smith, who was chief
of mission at the U.S. Interests Section in Cuba under
Presidents Carter and Reagan from 1979 to 1982, making him the
de facto U.S. ambassador to Havana. Smith, who now runs the Cuba
Program at the D.C.-based Center for International Policy,
invokes the names of two of the most notorious Cuban exiles to
argue that the U.S. does, in fact, play favorites. "We are
certainly not applying these laws objectively in the case of
Luis Posada Carriles, Orlando Bosch and a whole lot of others
who have been involved in terrorist activities. We say that
countries must take action against terrorists, but we're clearly
not. And I think it's because we're sympathetic to their
actions."
At the beginning of Castro's reign, the U.S. was more than
sympathetic to the militant exiles. In the 1960s, the U.S.
government actively encouraged and supported anti-Castro
violence, including the ill-fated Bay of Pigs invasion.
"Throughout most of the 1960s, rolling back the Cuban revolution
through violent exile surrogates remained a top U.S. priority,"
says Peter Kornbluh, director of the Cuba Documentation Project
at the National Security Archive and a specialist on U.S. policy
toward Cuba. With exile involvement, the U.S. government made
numerous attempts to assassinate Fidel Castro between 1961 and
1975, though the number cited in the title of the British
documentary
"638 Ways to Kill Castro" may be an exaggeration. Many
anti-Castro Cubans went to work for U.S. intelligence and
compiled long résumés of covert activity. In the 1980s, some
assisted with the Reagan administration's covert effort to arm
the Contra rebels in Nicaragua.
Cuban-American entanglement with the CIA eventually bled into
U.S. politics; two of the five "plumbers" who broke into the
Democratic Party's national headquarters at the Watergate in
1972 were Cuban-American. Tolerance for anti-Castro militancy,
meanwhile, also had domestic consequences. Throughout the '60s
and '70s and into the '80s, exiles carried out dozens of
bombings and assassinations in Miami and other American cities,
targeting people they deemed too accommodating to the Castro
government.
Over time, as Kornbluh notes, the exiles seemed to change
their approach somewhat as they aged and as they prospered
economically -- and as the CIA backed away. By the 1980s, says
Kornbluh, support for militancy "shifted from official funding
to private backing from wealthy Cuban-Americans." Much of the
anti-Castro activism among Cuban-Americans was directed by a
Miami businessman named Jorge Mas Canosa, head of the Cuban
American National Foundation. Cuban intelligence, and even
anti-Castro militants, have linked CANF to violent plots
targeting Cuba.
Still, however, the militants continued to train within the
borders of the U.S., and to amass weaponry. Retired Army Col.
Larry Wilkerson remembers attending briefings during Caribbean
war game exercises from 1992 to 1997 where he learned of the
exiles' capabilities. "We would always be fed this intelligence
and I was astounded at how many suspected caches of arms they
had access to not just in Florida, but in California, New Jersey
and other places; light machine guns, grenades, C4, dynamite,
all manner of side arms and long arms," recalls Wilkerson, who
was former Secretary of State Colin Powell's chief of staff from
2002 to 2005. "It was a veritable terrorist haven. This is
Hezbollah in Florida, if you're looking at it through Havana's
eyes."
In general, it would be hard to deny that the U.S. government
has at least created the appearance that it is willing to
tolerate a great deal of legally questionable behavior. But to
be fair, even if federal prosecutors want to be objective, they
are part of a political culture where such decorous sentiments
aren't always honored. Juries, judges -- even the prosecutor's
families -- are liable to feel the tug of local anti-Castro
feeling. "I welcome the opportunity of having anyone assassinate
Castro," Republican Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen of Miami recently
told a British documentary crew. Ros-Lehtinen, who has also
publicly expressed support for famed militant Orlando Bosch, is
married to Dexter Lehtinen, former U.S. attorney for the
Southern District of Florida.
Even outside South Florida, juries can balk at convicting
anti-Castro exiles. In 1997, the U.S. Attorney in Puerto Rico
charged seven Cuban exiles with attempted murder of a foreign
official after authorities searched a boat in Puerto Rico and
found sniper rifles and night vision goggles, and interviewed a
defendant who revealed a plan to whack Castro in Venezuela. The
defendants tried to get a change of venue to South Florida and
failed, but still succeeded in finding a sympathetic panel. A
Puerto Rican jury acquitted the men of the attempted murder
charges.
In perhaps the highest-profile criminal case involving Cuban
exiles, federal prosecutors in Washington, D.C., were unable to
keep suspects in the assassination of former Chilean diplomat
Orlando Letelier behind bars. Five Cuban-Americans were alleged
to have played roles in the murder of Letelier and his American
aide by car-bomb in D.C. in 1976. Three years later, Alvin Ross
Diaz and Guillermo Novo Sampoll were convicted of murder and
conspiracy to murder a foreign official and sentenced to life.
Novo Sampoll's brother Ignacio was convicted on lesser charges.
Ross Diaz and Guillermo Novo Sampoll ended up serving less
than five years, however, after winning a new trial and then
acquittals. Ignacio Novo Sampoll, whose initial sentence was
only three years, also had his conviction overturned on appeal.
The last two defendants, Virgilio Paz Romero and Jose Dionisio
Suarez Esquivel, eluded capture for 15 years, and then cut deals
allowing them to serve less than a dozen years apiece. After his
release, Guillermo Novo Sampoll would be arrested in Panama for
plotting to murder Fidel Castro.
Today, federal law enforcement's de facto approach toward
militant exiles seems to be to infiltrate and monitor them and
attempt to disrupt their "missions" as they're launched. The
Cuban government would maintain that the U.S. does not show
sufficient interest in this limited task.
In 1997, Cuban intelligence agents discovered an exile plot
to blow up airplanes carrying tourists to and from Cuba,
according to a report released by the Cuban Interests Section in
Washington, Havana's diplomatic post in the U.S. Castro himself
wrote a letter to then-President Clinton asking for help
investigating the plot, given the potential impact on both
countries.
On June 15, 1998, a delegation of FBI agents went to Havana.
The Cubans say they gave the agents documents, surveillance
videos and samples from a defused bomb found in one of the
hotels. The Cubans alleged the evidence led back to individuals
in Miami. But when the FBI left, the Cubans claim they never
heard anything more about the matter. Instead, three months
after returning stateside, FBI agents arrested a network of 10
Cuban intelligence agents -- the source of much of the shared
bombing information. Five of them pleaded guilty and received
minimal sentences. Five others are serving terms ranging from 15
years to life. Havana has waged a prolonged propaganda campaign
to free them.
One former law enforcement official dismisses the Cuban
government's version of events. "They gave the FBI manila
folders with a bunch of newspaper articles in them," the
official scoffs, pointing out that the spy network had been
under investigation for more than a year before the arrests.
When the feds do disrupt a mission and federal prosecutors do
follow up criminally, they often charge the exiles with illegal
weapons possession, a crime that carries a five-year prison
sentence, rather than more serious offenses. Prosecutors have
proven willing to accept lenient plea bargains and ask for
lenient sentences. They have done so despite the fact that in
1994 and 1996, Congress passed laws that would give them far
greater latitude to crack down on violent anti-Castro militants.
The 1994 Violent Crime and Control and Law Enforcement Act,
an anti-terrorism measure passed after the first attack on New
York's World Trade Center, made it illegal to knowingly provide
material assistance for terrorist activity. The Antiterrorism
and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 was also intended to
deter terrorism. The section titled "Conspiracy to Harm People
and Property Overseas" states that anyone within the
jurisdiction of the U.S. who conspires to commit "an act that
would constitute the offense of murder, kidnapping, or maiming"
abroad faces punishment up to life in prison.
During the Clinton administration, no anti-Castro militants
were prosecuted under those laws. And then came the Bush
administration, and 9/11.
In 2001, George Bush was inaugurated as president on the
strength of Florida's 25 electoral votes. One reason he got
close enough in the state's popular vote for the U.S. Supreme
Court to hand him the victory was because Florida's Cuban voters
supported him by a lopsided ratio of 4 to 1. His brother,
Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, had already established ties to the
state's Cuban community, which had supported him by a similar
margin in the gubernatorial election two years earlier. Jeb had
also served as a campaign manager for Cuban-American Rep. Ileana
Ros-Lehtinen in 1988, and during that campaign had called his
father, George, then the vice president and a candidate for
president, to enlist his help in blocking the deportation of
militant Orlando Bosch.
All three Bushes have relied on Cuban-American money and
support to carry Florida. In 2004, President George W. Bush
placed new restrictions on U.S. citizens and Cuban residents in
the U.S. who want to visit relatives on the island, and
increased enforcement of the embargo against Cuba. To date, his
administration has not invoked the 1994 and 1996 anti-terror
laws against any anti-Castro militants.
The support of unsavory characters simply because they were
fighting our fight was more understandable when we were engaged
in a global war on communism. But given the Bush
administration's "war on terror," some experts think our
government's approach to Cuban militants within our own borders
harms our credibility. "There's always some discretion allowed
prosecutors, but generally the goal is to apply the laws
equitably," explains Peter Margulies, a law professor at Roger
Williams University School of Law, who has written about
anti-terrorist laws and formerly taught at St. Thomas University
in Miami. "If you don't, you undermine the legitimacy not only
of U.S. law, but our standing in the world. Governments in Latin
America now profoundly distrust us because we don't apply the
same rules when dealing with Cuba that we do to the Middle
East."
Under Bush, the FBI continues to monitor Cuban groups, but
Miami spokeswoman Judy Orihuela says the agency considers the
militants to be of "diminished capacity." The administration has
its own ideas about who is and isn't a terrorist.
In August 2007, less than 30 miles from the Alpha 66 training
camp, a federal jury in downtown Miami convicted a Brooklyn-born
Muslim convert named Jose Padilla of conspiracy to kidnap, maim
or kill people abroad. His sentencing hearing began last
Wednesday; he faces up to life in prison. Although the military
originally alleged he planned to detonate a dirty bomb in the
U.S., the criminal case finally brought against him charged he
plotted overseas attacks and plotted to provide support to
terrorists as part of a U.S.-based terrorist cell. Prosecutors
used the 1996 terrorism law in this case.
In December 2007, a federal jury failed to convict any of
seven adherents of the Seas of David group of terror-related
charges. The members of the tiny religious sect, who were also
charged under the 1996 law, had allegedly conspired to purchase
weapons from an informant they believed to be a representative
of al-Qaida, and were supposedly plotting to bomb the Sears
Tower in Chicago and a federal building in Florida. When the FBI
raided the group's headquarters, the most serious weapons agents
found were three machetes and some handgun bullets. They never
found any plans for a terrorist plot. The jury acquitted one man
on all charges and could not agree on verdicts for the other six
defendants. The judge declared a mistrial; the U.S. Attorney's
office plans to retry the men in 2008.
The 1994 and 1996 anti-terror laws have been invoked more
than 40 times since 9/11, but never against anti-Castro
militants. If authorities in South Florida wanted to apply the
same scrutiny to Cuban-Americans that they applied to Padilla,
who is Puerto Rican, and the Seas of David group, which was
largely Haitian-American, they could surely find some suspects
who have both a training camp and more weaponry than machetes.
Among the South Florida residents who might bear some scrutiny:
Santiago Alvarez and Osvaldo Mitat -- Cuban
authorities allege that Alvarez, a founder of Alpha 66 who is
now a Miami developer, was on board a motorboat that strafed the
shoreline of a Cuban fishing village in 1971 killing two men and
wounding four others, including two young girls.
Alvarez is known to have provided financial and other
material support to Luis Posada Carriles and other militants. In
April of 2001 Cuban authorities reported capturing three Miami
area residents after they clambered ashore with AK-47 assault
rifles, an M-3 carbine fitted with a silencer and three
semi-automatic Makarov pistols. While in custody, one of the men
phoned Alvarez, while Cuban agents recorded the call. "The other
day, when you told me about the Tropicana, do you want me to do
something there?" Ihosvani Suris de la Torre asked, referring to
a popular nightclub. Alvarez responded: "If you want to do that
there, so much the better. Makes no difference to me." Cuba
asked the FBI to do a voice analysis to prove it was Alvarez.
The FBI has never acknowledged opening an investigation. The
Cuban government released a transcript of the call to foreign
journalists and broadcast audio of it on national television.
Through his lawyer, former U.S. attorney for the Southern
District of Florida Kendall Coffey, Alvarez told Salon he was
not involved in the operation and was only trying to help Suris;
he knew the call was being recorded, and that Suris faced the
firing squad, so he wanted to say something that would make
Suris appear to be providing valuable assistance to his captors.
But Alvarez sounded supportive in a 2001 interview with the
Miami New Times. "My first connection with them is that we all
believe that in order to fight Castro we have to fight in Cuba,"
he said in a previously unpublished portion of the interview,
adding, "We're not terrorists."
In 2005 federal agents searched an apartment Alvarez kept
north of Miami in Broward County and found a store of military
hardware including an M-11 A1 machine gun, two Colt AR-15
assault rifles, a silencer, and a Heckler & Koch grenade
launcher. Agents arrested Alvarez and his assistant, Osvaldo
Mitat.
According to Peter Margulies, prosecutors could have
considered charging Alvarez with providing material support for
terrorist activity, which carries a sentence of 15 years to
life. Instead, they charged Alvarez and Mitat with seven counts
of illegal weapons possession.
Both pleaded guilty to one of the counts. The judge sentenced
Mitat to about three years and Alvarez to just under four years.
"While I have always been passionately interested in a free and
democratic Cuba, I recognize that any conduct of mine must occur
within the bounds of the law," Alvarez stated at his sentencing.
After the plea, Alvarez supporters, who were able to remain
anonymous, brokered a deal with prosecutors through a lawyer. In
exchange for even more weapons, including 200 pounds of
dynamite, 14 pounds of C-4 explosives and 30 assault weapons,
the judge further reduced Alvarez's sentence to 30 months.
"Alvarez and Mitat are the paradigm of Miami justice," Miguel
Alvarez, chief advisor to Ricardo Alarcón, president of Cuba's
National Assembly of the People's Power, says wryly. "They
confiscate a cache of arms from them, they try them, and when
they turn over another cache of arms, they reduce their
sentences. It's amazing."
Wonders Peter Kornbluh of the National Security Archive:
"What was all that hardware for? Why did they let him plea
bargain without getting the story on what he planned to do with
all those weapons?"
"You can bet your bottom dollar," says Jose Pertierra, the
Washington, D.C., attorney hired by the Venezuelan government to
press for the extradition of militant Luis Posada, "if their
names were Mohammed they wouldn't be as lenient and they'd
certainly be looking for the rest of the arms."
Gaspar Jimenez -- Jimenez was indicted in the 1976 car
bombing of Cuban-American radio commentator and critic of exile
violence Emilio Milian in Miami. The U.S. attorney dropped the
charges. In 1977 Mexican authorities arrested Jimenez and two
others for attempting to kidnap the Cuban consul and killing the
consul's bodyguard. Jimenez escaped and was rearrested in Miami
in 1978. He was deported to Mexico and served less than three
years. In 2000, he was jailed in Panama for attempting to
assassinate Castro, as were Guillermo Novo, Pedro Remon
and Luis Posada Carriles. All four were pardoned by the
Panamanian president in 2004.
Pedro Remon -- One of the four exiles arrested in
Panama for the Castro assassination plot, Remon was also
arrested in 1985 in the United States for a bombing at the Cuban
mission to the United Nations in New York. He was indicted for
the murder of Cuban diplomat Felix Garcia-Rodriguez in New York
and the attempted murder of the Cuban ambassador. He was
sentenced to 10 years on reduced charges.
And then there's Luis Posada Carriles. With Orlando
Bosch, he is a suspect in the 1976 bombing of a Cubana Airlines
flight that killed 73 people. Posada is perhaps the most wanted
of all of Miami's militants. "Certainly what Posada is accused
of fits [the] standard [of the terrorism acts]," says Margulies.
"The Santiago and Posada cases create some real questions
about whether we are applying the law in this matter in an
objective manner. The premise of the anti-terrorism laws,
including providing material support, is that people who are in
this country shouldn't plan violence in another country, because
1) it is inherently wrong, particularly if it involves
civilians, and 2) it can entangle the U.S. in complications,
including war."
But the idea of indicting Posada as a terrorist would prompt
laughter in many Cuban exile circles, if not a few bomb threats.
It's a warm night in Westchester, a largely Cuban suburb
southwest of Miami. Shade trees sway outside the folksy Miami
Havana restaurant; inside waiters pour sangria in the rear
dining room, which is packed with heavily perfumed women draped
in gold jewelry and men in starched guayaberas. Alpha 66 is
hosting this fundraiser to repair storm damage at its training
camp, but it is also a pep rally for "the struggle," la lucha.
Shortly after the American and Cuban national anthems play
over a scratchy sound system but before the chicken and rice is
served, an old man with neatly combed white hair enters through
the French doors. He is barely visible behind a scrum of men who
quickly surround him. Diners crane to see. They begin to
whisper. Then clap. Soon there is a standing ovation. Luis
Posada Carriles, the hero of the counter-revolution, is making
his way to the head table.
"Bambi" Posada, 79, is wearing a light gray suit, white shirt
and dark tie. As he sits down, the crowd asks him to speak.
Talking publicly is not his strong suit after an assassination
attempt in 1990 took out a chunk of his tongue. Nonetheless he
mumbles a thanks to the crowd for their support, then sits down.
During dinner a 9 mm Beretta pistol is raffled. The winner is a
young mother.
The Cuban government has implicated Posada in a series of
1997 Havana hotel bombings, which killed an Italian tourist and
injured 11 people. In 1998 Posada, a former CIA and Venezuelan
intelligence operative, told the New York Times that he was
responsible for the bombings. The Venezuelan government wants
Posada for the 1976 bombing of a Cuban jetliner, which killed 73
people. Although Havana-bound Cubana Flight 455 originated in
Trinidad and Tobago, the plot was allegedly hatched by Posada in
Caracas. Two men who worked for Posada admitted to the crime,
but Posada has repeatedly denied any involvement in that attack.
Venezuelan authorities arrested Posada and Orlando Bosch in
1976 for planning the bombing. Posada escaped from a Venezuelan
prison in 1985, in an operation allegedly funded by Jorge Mas
Canosa, and fled to El Salvador. He then began working for a
CIA-led gun-running operation. Posada was paid $3,000 per month
by Oliver North deputy Maj. Gen. Richard Secord to funnel guns
to the Nicaraguan Contras. After the Iran-Contra debacle, he
remained in Central America as an advisor to the Guatemalan
government.
In 2000 Panamanian authorities arrested Posada and three
Miami Cubans for a plot to bomb a Panamanian auditorium where
Castro was scheduled to give a speech. Posada was in possession
of a gym bag full of C4 explosives. The four men were convicted
on related charges in 2004; one was a CANF employee, another was
Pedro Remon. Panamanian President Mireya Moscoso, a close U.S.
ally, pardoned all four men that same year just before she left
office. All of them returned to Miami except Posada.
In 2005 Posada entered the U.S illegally; he was later
arrested with a false passport and jailed. He requested
political asylum in April and the Venezuelan government
requested his extradition in May. A U.S. immigration judge in
Texas rejected Venezuela's request when prosecutors did not
challenge Posada's assertion he'd be tortured if sent back.
Assistant Secretary of State Roger Noriega said publicly in 2005
that the Cuban and Venezuelan charges against Posada "may be a
completely manufactured issue." Posada was held by U.S.
immigration authorities from May 2005 to April 2007, when he was
released on bail. In May 2007, a U.S. district judge tossed out
all charges of immigration fraud against him.
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, a Castro ally, has vowed to
do all he can to prosecute Posada. "They have wanted to
stonewall the extradition by giving the appearance of criminal
prosecution on lesser matters," says Jose Pertierra, Venezuela's
Washington attorney. "They use that at diplomatic meetings. They
tell government officials from Venezuela, 'We're taking care of
the Posada matter. We have a criminal investigation going on.'"
Whatever authorities might be investigating, whether it is
Posada's role in the Havana bombings or his fake passport,
"doesn't even compare with an extradition involving 73 counts of
first-degree murder," Pertierra says. "Can you imagine Osama bin
Laden [entering] Pakistan on a camel," he adds, "and Pakistani
immigration authorities telling the White House that they don't
want to extradite Osama bin Laden for murder because they've got
him on an immigration charge?"
Eduardo Soto, Posada's lawyer in the immigration case,
asserts that the international convention against torture
prohibits his client's extradition to Venezuela. "You could be a
convicted mass murderer, you could be Adolf Hitler, it matters
not, if there is a possibility that he would be tortured in
countries that would [otherwise] be entitled to take him," Soto
says. It helped Posada's case that federal prosecutors didn't
contest this claim.
There is another option. "Either extradite him to the country
that is demanding him, Venezuela, or try him as if the act, the
bombing of the Cubana plane, had been committed in U.S.
territory," says Cuba's Miguel Alvarez, citing agreements
hammered out at the Montreal Convention of 1991 on explosives,
one of a series of international conventions meant to spell out
the obligations of national governments when terrorism occurs.
Back at the Miami Havana restaurant, Posada has been joined
at the front table by an old comrade in arms. Sitting next to
Posada is Pedro Remon, who shared a cell with Posada in Panama.
Remon stands up to speak. "It's an honor to have gathered here
tonight for a just cause," he tells the crowd. "To cooperate
with an organization that has been the vanguard over so many
years of struggle against communism in Cuba."
Remon's years behind bars give him, like Posada, a kind of
elder statesman status among the exiles, and prison has hardly
diminished his resolve. Athletic with a thick mustache, he still
believes in groups like Alpha 66. "The organization has been
strengthened," he tells Salon in an interview at the restaurant.
"They have very good new people who are dedicated to the cause
of Cuba." And he laments the absence at the fundraising dinner
of comrade-in-arms Santiago Alvarez. "I'm very hopeful he'll be
with us soon," he says.
Posada is less talkative with strangers. "I'm sorry, I still
have a legal matter." After dessert he politely waves goodbye to
his supporters and heads for the door escorted by Alpha 66's
jefe militar Reinol Rodriguez.
Rodriguez, a towering man with white hair and mustache,
returns to the dining room and stands with a group of men in a
half-circle, including Al Bacallao, who back at the training
camp talked about his 1993 arrest on a weapons-laden boat headed
for Cuba. They've loosened their collars, rolled up their
sleeves, and are talking hopefully about the hot summer in
Havana and how the heat might fuel discontent. "We're waiting
for the spark," Rodriguez says. "We're ready to go when the
moment comes."
"We have what it takes," Bacallao adds, extending his hands
as if he were holding a couple of melons. "Cojones."
-- By Tristram Korten and Kirk Nielsen
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