POLICE STATE / MILITARY - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
The CIA and the Bombing of Cubana Flight 455 |
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by TOM CRUMPACKER Counter Punch Entered into the database on Thursday, June 16th, 2005 @ 13:21:28 MST |
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Recently declassified (partially blacked out) CIA, FBI and State Department reports
(see National Security Archive Briefing Book #153, Peter Kornbluh) indicate that
former CIA agent Luis Posada Carriles had been trained by CIA in demolition and
explosives in the early 1960s. He was ostensibly in the US military, February
1963 to March 1964, which was the cover CIA gave its training agents then. During
the 1960s, as a salaried agent he ran a school in Florida training others in his
trade, financed by CIA. He also did forays to other countries to do covert bombings
and assassinations. CIA was using him as an "operative" in Caracas 1976.
In 1972 he had listed his permanent residence as Miami. When he left Florida for
Caracas to work with the Venezuelan intelligence agency DISIP, he had with him
a supply of CIA bomb-making materials and explosive devices. On the date of the
bombing of Havana bound Cubana flight 455, October 6, 1976, he had supposedly
left DISIP and was operating a private detective agency in Caracas. The reports suggest that the Cubana bombing was a joint DISIP-CIA project and
CIA was involved in the planning. They refer to meetings in Santo Domingo in
the summer and in Caracas in early September involving agent Posada and his
partner Orlando Bosch and top DISIP officials, at which discussions were held
about bombing Cubana flights, also the Letelier car bombing which occurred in
Washington, DC in mid-September. At the time, Bosch was head of CORU, a new
umbrella organization of violent anti-Castro groups in US which CIA had urged
them to form. He was also involved with "Condor" operations, a CIA
supported super-secret web in South America which exterminated and disappeared
many leftists. CIA had been kept informed of previous attempts by its agent Posada to bomb
Cubana airliners in the summer. In late September Posada (referred to "informant")
reported: "We're going to hit the Cubana airliner." On October 1,
our State Department -- at Posada's request and under a special procedure --
issued a US visa for the week of the bombing to one of Posada's two employees
who placed the bomb in the plane restroom at the Barbados stop, then left the
plane. The other Posada employee-bomb-planter had a secret Caracas CIA telephone
number in his belongings when arrested in Trinidad after sending this message
to Bosch: "A bus went off the cliff and 73 dogs died." These reports
were not made available to the Venezuelan officials who prosecuting Bosch and
Posada in the 1980s. No one warned Cuba or potential passengers of the impending attack. George
Bush, Sr. was the CIA Director at the time of the bombing. He was Vice President
when Posada was allowed to escape from jail during his trial in Venezuela (CIA
bribed his guards when the evidence started to implicate them) and report to
Col. Oliver North in El Salvador to work on the Nicaraguan Contra supply operation
being run out of the White House. Bush, Sr. was President when he pardoned Bosch
against the recommendation of his own Justice Department, thereby harboring
him in Miami. In 1976 CIA was aware the Bush family had important connections in the oil
business and was dealing with key politicians in Venezuela. Jeb Bush (now governor
of Florida) was establishing himself in Caracas with the Commerce Bank of Texas,
owned by Bush family friend (later Secretary of State) James Baker. When Bosch
arrived in Caracas on September 14, 1976, after a visit with Pinochet officials
in Chile, then Venezuelan President Perez allowed Bosch and Posada to conduct
fundraising and operate freely in Venezuela, even contributing funds to their
projects. In custody after the bombing, Posada threatened that if he were forced to talk,
the Venezuelan government would go down the tube and the US would have another
Watergate. Indeed, another Watergate type cover-up seems now in progress, spawned
by Posada's resurfacing in US and the declassification of some of CIA's reports
after 28 years. Homeland Security has charged Posada with not reporting immediately
to them, an immigration matter which could be settled by a small fine. However,
it's been set for trial on August 29 and Posada's Miami lawyers have filed motions
to move the case to Miami (to be ruled on in writing in the next week), bond
reduction, and asylum petitions. From State Department's comments, one would
think that the Homeland immigration cases will go on for many months and State
has no extradition obligation until they're finished. There's no legally valid reason why our State Department should not submit
the Venezuelan request to the extradition judge now. Posada is a Venezuelan
citizen who committed the Cubana crime there and is a fugitive who escaped from
their justice system during trial there for that crime. The present Bush Administration
well knows who is responsible for bombing the Cubana flight. It didn't need
to wait for Venezuela to produce or translate the evidence, much of which is
in still classified or blacked out CIA files. Nor is there any valid reason
to wait while lawyers fool around with Homeland's illegal entry claim or Posada's
venue and asylum claims. Venezuela and US have had an extradition treaty for 83 years which has always
been honored by both countries. Immigration cases concern lawfulness of entry
and where an illegal migrant should be sent or deported to. Extradition concerns
where an alleged criminal should be tried regardless of his immigration status.
It's not a question of policy or discretion, it's a question of law. The ultimate
issue here is whether the rule of law still exists in US. In January, Bush,
Jr. took an oath as president to faithfully execute the US Constitution, laws
and treaties. On May 27 Assistant Secretary of State Roger Noriega said that Venezuela's
extradition request for Posada had been rejected as inadequate because unsupported
by evidence. But the US Embassy in Caracas had told Venezuela to translate the
700 pages of evidence (without any time limit), and on May 27 said it was still
ready to receive it. Venezuela has now filed the translated evidence and complied
with all other US procedural requirements. Washington had previously denied Venezuela's request to keep Posada in custody
pending extradition. A hearing is set for June 24 to reduce Posada's bond, which
will probably be granted because the charge is such a minor one. If he is released
on bond, he will probably disappear again. Washington seems to be trying to
justify harboring Posada in a country like El Salvador where he presumably could
be kept from talking. It has already induced or pressured Salvadoran officials
to start preparing their own extradition request. Deft maneuvering by Washington may keep CIA involvement in the bombing under
wraps for a while, but eventually the truth will out. So far the damage to our
government is primarily in the international arena, where the corporate mass
media's are somewhat less under the control of the commercial oligarchies. This
Administration obviously cares very little about the rule of law or its image
abroad. But more and more American reporters and people are starting to demand
that Posada be sent to Venezuela and that CIA open its files on the matter. |