Luis Posada
Carriles, a
terror suspect
abroad, enjoys a
'coming-out' in
Miami
A dinner with
500 fellow Cuban
exiles honors
the militant and
former CIA
operative, now
80 and still
wanted in
Venezuela on
terrorism
charges.
By Carol J.
Williams
Los Angeles
Times Staff
Writer
07/05/08 "Los
Angeles Times"
-- -- MIAMI
-- The dapper
octogenarian in
a crisp blue
suit, his face
smoothed by
plastic surgery,
swanned from
table to table
in the candlelit
banquet hall,
bestowing kisses
and collecting
accolades.
An aging movie
star being feted
by fans? A
veteran politico
taking his bows?
No, the man
being honored by
500 fellow Cuban
Americans at a
sold-out gala
was Luis Posada
Carriles, the
former CIA
operative wanted
in Venezuela on
terrorism
charges and
under a
deportation
order for
illegally
entering the
United States
three years ago.
Posada, 80, has
mostly kept a
low profile
since his
release from a
Texas prison a
year ago and a
federal judge's
dismissal of the
only U.S.
charges against
him -- making
false statements
to immigration
officials.
But recent
events like the
Friday dinner
and an
exhibition and
sale of his
paintings last
fall show that
the man who
spent his life
trying to topple
the communist
government of
Fidel Castro has
returned to the
social forefront
of this city's
exile community.
"We are coming
to the end of a
terrible stage.
The end of our
struggle is
near," Posada
told the crowd
of supporters in
evening dress,
referring to
Castro's failing
health.
Venezuela's
ambassador in
Washington,
Bernardo Alvarez
Herrera,
condemned the
celebration of
Posada as a
mockery of
justice and
evidence of a
Bush
administration
double standard
in fighting
terrorism.
"This is
outrageous,
particularly
because he kept
talking about
violence,"
Alvarez said of
Posada. "He said
that the whole
thing now is 'to
sharpen our
machetes' " for
a confrontation
with leftist
regimes in Latin
America.
The U.S.
government has
never given
Venezuela a
formal answer to
its 3-year-old
request for
extradition of
Posada, despite
a treaty
providing for
such cooperation
that has been in
effect since
1922, the
ambassador said.
Posada, a
naturalized
Venezuelan
citizen, is
alleged to have
masterminded the
bombing of a
Cuban airliner
in 1976 on which
all 73 on board
were killed,
including a
youth fencing
team returning
from a
tournament in
the Venezuelan
capital,
Caracas. He is
also suspected
of plotting a
series of hotel
bombings in
Havana in the
late 1990s, one
of which killed
an Italian
tourist.
He has boasted
of his many
attempts to kill
Castro and has
allegedly been
involved in,
according to
court documents,
"some of the
most infamous
events of 20th
century Central
American
politics."
Posada was
serving time in
a Panama prison
for a 2000
assassination
attempt on
Castro when
outgoing
Panamanian
President Mireya
Moscoso pardoned
him and three
accomplices in
August 2004 in
what some
observers saw as
a favor to
President Bush
to rally the
Cuban-dominated
Florida vote for
his reelection.
The three other
Cuban Americans
returned to
Miami as heroes;
Posada arrived
six months
later,
reportedly
fetched from
Mexico by a
shrimp boat
owned by an
anti-Castro
benefactor.
As Venezuela,
Cuba and human
rights groups
clamored for
Posada's
extradition for
trial on the
plane-bombing
charges, federal
authorities here
arrested him in
May 2005 for
illegal entry. A
federal judge in
Texas ordered
him deported,
but another
judge prohibited
his being sent
to Venezuela,
heeding claims
by Posada's
lawyers that he
could face
torture or
execution there.
None of a
half-dozen
friendly
countries
contacted by the
State Department
would agree to
take Posada.
An immigration
fraud case was
brought by
federal
prosecutors
later that year
but dismissed in
May 2007. U.S.
District Judge
Kathleen Cardone
accused federal
authorities of
using trickery,
fraud and deceit
in pursuing a
criminal case
against him.
Federal
prosecutors
appealed and are
waiting for a
ruling from the
U.S. 5th Circuit
Court of
Appeals, said
Dean Boyd,
spokesman for
the Justice
Department.
Analysts
speculate that
the U.S.
government has
dodged calls for
prosecution of
Posada for fear
he would
disclose details
of CIA
involvement in
coups,
assassination
plots and
scandals,
including the
Iran-Contra
Affair.
Peter Kornbluh,
head of the Cuba
Documentation
Project at
George
Washington
University's
National
Security
Archive, has
compiled
declassified CIA
and FBI
documents on
Posada that show
he remained in
close touch with
Washington
handlers
throughout his
covert service.
"The spectacle
of a wanted
international
terrorist being
publicly feted
as a hero in
Miami makes a
mockery of the
Bush
administration's
commitment to
wage a war on
terrorism," he
said of Posada's
coming-out
party.
Rep. William
Delahunt
(D-Mass.)
convened a
congressional
hearing in
November on the
administration's
handling of the
Posada case,
arguing that
there was
"compelling
evidence"
implicating
Posada in the
plane bombing.
Delahunt said
Tuesday that
"there doesn't
seem to be much
enthusiasm"
under the
current
administration
for prosecuting
Posada, but that
he would push
again for legal
action against
Posada after the
fall election.
"To have Posada
honored in such
a way sends a
terrible
statement to the
rest of the
world," the
congressman said
of the tribute.
Posada, still
under a
supervision
order with U.S.
Immigration and
Customs
Enforcement,
entered the
banquet to a
standing
ovation, his
face beaming and
minus the scar
from a 1990
attack by gunmen
in Guatemala.
"He's a real
hero for Cuba.
He's been
fighting for the
freedom of Cuba
since the day he
arrived in the
United States,"
said Hector
Morales-George,
a retired
surgeon who
attended the
dinner.
carol.williams@latimes.com
