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Luis Posada Carriles

Luis Clemente Posada Carriles (February 15, 1928 – May 23, 2018) was a Cuban exile militant and Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) agent. He was considered a terrorist by the United States' Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the Government of Cuba, among others.[1][2]

Luis Posada Carriles
Luis Posada at Fort Benning, Georgia, US, 1962
Born(1928-02-15)February 15, 1928
DiedMay 23, 2018(2018-05-23) (aged 90)

Born in Cienfuegos, Cuba, Posada fled to the United States after a spell of anti-Castro activism. He helped organize the Bay of Pigs Invasion, and after it failed, became an agent for the CIA.[3][4] He received training at Fort Benning, and from 1964 to 1967 was involved with a series of bombings and other covert activities against the Cuban government, before joining the Venezuelan intelligence service.[4][5] Along with Orlando Bosch, he was involved in founding the Coordination of United Revolutionary Organizations,[5][6][7] described by the FBI as "an anti-Castro terrorist umbrella organization".[6] Posada and CORU are widely considered responsible for the 1976 bombing of a Cuban airliner that killed 73 people.[4][5][8][9] Posada later admitted involvement in a string of bombings in 1997 targeting fashionable Cuban hotels and nightspots.[10][11][12] In addition, he was jailed under accusations related to an assassination attempt on Fidel Castro in Panama in 2000, although he was later pardoned by Panamanian President Mireya Moscoso in the final days of her term.[13] He denied involvement in the airline bombing and the alleged plot against Castro in Panama, but admitted to fighting to overthrow the Castro regime in Cuba.[14]

In 2005, Posada was held by US authorities in Texas on the charge of being in the country illegally: the charges were later dismissed. A judge ruled he could not be deported because he faced the threat of torture in Venezuela.[15] The US government refused to repatriate Posada to Cuba, citing the same reason.[14] His release on bail in 2007 elicited angry reactions from the Cuban and Venezuelan governments. The US Justice Department had urged the court to keep him in jail because he was "an admitted mastermind of terrorist plots and attacks", a flight risk and a danger to the community.[12] The decision was also criticized within the US; an editorial in the Los Angeles Times stated that by releasing Carriles while detaining a number of suspected terrorists in Guantánamo Bay, the US government was guilty of hypocrisy.[16]

Posada died in May 2018 in Florida, where hardline elements of the anti-Castro exile community in Miami still regarded him as "a heroic figure".[17] Reporter Ann Louise Bardach called him "Fidel Castro's most persistent would-be assassin,[18] while Peter Kornbluh of the National Security Archive referred to him as "one of the most dangerous terrorists in recent history" and the "godfather of Cuban exile violence."[17]

Early years (1928–1968)

Posada was born in Cienfuegos, Cuba, on February 15, 1928. His family was relatively affluent. He had four siblings. The family moved to Havana when Posada was 17 years old, where he studied medicine and chemistry at the University of Havana. In 1956, he and Antonio Garcia established a pest control enterprise in Cienfuegos called Servicios Exterminadores Fumigadores de Insectos. The station wagon used for their business was destroyed by a bomb while parked on the street on the night of January 3, 1957.[19] Posada worked in 1958 as a supervisor for the Firestone Tire and Rubber Company.[4] He worked initially in Havana, and was transferred to Akron, Ohio, after the Cuban Revolution of 1959.[20]

As a student, he had come in contact with Fidel Castro, who had become a figure of some significance in the student politics of the time. Posada later said that Castro was three years ahead of him at the university.[20] Misgivings about the Cuban revolution led Posada to become an activist in open opposition to the new government. After a spell in a military prison, Posada sought political asylum in Mexico. By 1961, Posada had relocated to the United States where he helped to organize the failed Bay of Pigs Invasion of Cuba.[4][3] The rest of Posada's family remained in Cuba, and continued to support the Cuban revolution; Posada's sister eventually rose to the rank of Colonel in the Cuban army.[4] When asked in a 1998 interview why he had opposed the Revolution, he stated "All communists are the same. All are bad, a form of evil."[21] Posada was stationed in Guatemala, where he was supposed to participate in a second wave of landings in Cuba. The initial attack on Cuban soil failed, and the operation was called off before Posada's force was to take part.[21]

After the failure at the Bay of Pigs, Posada attended officer candidate school at the United States Army's facility in Fort Benning.[22] There, he was trained by the CIA in sabotage and explosives between March 1963 and March 1964.[5][3][23][4] While at Fort Benning, he served in the same platoon as Jorge Mas Canosa, later the founder of the Cuban American National Foundation: the two men became fast friends.[21] He graduated from the training program with the rank of second lieutenant, but he and Mas Canosa left the army when they recognized that the US was unlikely to invade Cuba again.[21][5] In a 1998 interview, he stated that "the CIA taught us everything ... explosives, how to kill, bomb, trained us in acts of sabotage."[1] Posada received further training in guerrilla tactics in Polk City, Florida.[5] He worked closely with the CIA in Miami and was active in the CIA's Operation 40. He later described his role as that of the agency's "principal agent", informing the organisation about political movements within the exile community and operating anti-Castro activities.[24]

In Florida, Posada trained members of the JURE, Junta Revolucionaria Cubana, an anti-Castro militant organization.[21][23] He was also associated with other militant groups, including RECE (Cuban Representation in Exile).[21] CIA files indicate that Posada was involved in a 1965 attempt to overthrow the Guatemalan government. The same year, the CIA reported that Posada was involved in various bombing plans in association with Mas Canosa.[5][23] Posada also supplied information about the Cuban exile community to the CIA, and unsuccessfully attempted to recruit his brother to spy for them.[25] In 1968, relations frayed with the CIA when Posada was questioned about his "unreported association with gangster elements". Posada's other associates at the time included Frank Rosenthal, described as a "well-known gangster". Posada relocated to Venezuela, taking with him various CIA-supplied weapons including grenades and fuses.[5][23][26]

Venezuela (1968–1985)

In Venezuela, Posada quickly rose through the ranks of Venezuelan intelligence. He became head of the service, known as DIGEPOL and later as DISIP, in 1969.[27] The role involved countering various guerrilla movements supported by Cuba, and Posada threw himself into his work with enthusiasm. He invited Orlando Bosch, another Cuban exile who was then on parole from US federal prison, to join his operations in Venezuela: Bosch accepted his offer in 1974, thereby violating the terms of his parole.[28] Posada was dismissed from the service in 1974 due to ideological differences with the government of Carlos Andrés Pérez, who had assumed office in that year.[28] Posada went on to found a private detective agency in Caracas.[29][5]

At approximately the same time, Posada's relations with the CIA also deteriorated. The agency began to suspect that he was involved in cocaine trafficking and dealing in counterfeit money.[28] Posada was not confronted with these allegations to avoid compromising existing operations, but internal CIA communications referred to him as a serious liability.[28] The Church Committee hearings of 1975, which had been triggered by fears that the CIA were running too many rogue operations, had a significant impact on the agency, and Posada's association was seen to be "not in good odor".[30] In February 1976, the CIA officially broke off relations with Posada. Subsequently, Posada made several efforts to get back into the agency's good graces, including informing on an alleged plot by Bosch to kill Henry Kissinger, then US Secretary of State.[28]

Coordination of United Revolutionary Organizations

Along with Orlando Bosch and Gaspar Jiménez, Posada founded the Coordination of United Revolutionary Organizations (CORU).[5][31] The group first met in the Dominican Republic in June 1976, and laid plans for more than 50 bombings over the next year.[32] The US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) described CORU as "an anti-Castro terrorist umbrella organization."[6] CORU was responsible for a number of attacks in 1976. These included a machine gun attack on the Cuban embassy in Bogotá, the assassination of a Cuban official in Mérida, Yucatán, the kidnapping of two Cuban embassy employees in Buenos Aires, the bombing of a Cubana airlines office in Panama City, the bombing of the Guyanese embassy in Port of Spain, and the assassination of former Chilean ambassador Orlando Letelier in Washington, D.C.[9]

 
Declassified FBI report that reads: "Our confidential source ascertained ... that the bombing of the Cubana Airlines DC-8 was planned, in part, in Caracas, Venezuela, at two meetings attended by Morales Navarrete, Luis Posada Carriles and Frank Castro"[33]

The information Posada provided the CIA while attempting to reestablish good relations with it included a tip that Cuban exiles were planning to blow up a Cuban airliner.[32] Cubana Flight 455 was a Cubana de Aviación flight departing from Barbados, via Trinidad, to Cuba. On October 6, 1976, two time bombs variously described as dynamite or C-4 planted on the Douglas DC-8 aircraft exploded, killing all 73 people on board, including all 25 members of the 1975 Cuban national fencing team.[1][5][9][34][35] Investigators from Cuba, Venezuela and the United States traced the planting of the bombs to two Venezuelan passengers, Freddy Lugo and Hernán Ricardo Lozano.[5][36] Both men were employed by Posada at his private detective agency based in Venezuela.[5] A week later, Posada and Bosch were arrested on charges of masterminding the attack, and were jailed in Venezuela.[36]

Declassified FBI and CIA reports also show that the agencies suspected his involvement in the airline bombing within days of its occurrence.[6][37][38] According to a declassified CIA document dated October 13, 1976, with information from what the CIA deemed a usually reliable source, Posada – in Caracas at the time – was overheard to say a few days before Cubana flight 455 exploded: "We are going to hit a Cuban airliner ... Orlando has the details".[9] The details were contained in a memorandum sent to Kissinger. The memorandum suggested that Posada was likely to have planned the bombing.[38] Another CIA document, based on a Miami-based informant, also implicated Posada in the conspiracy.[39]

Posada, who denied involvement in the Cubana-455 bombing, insisted his "only objective was to fight for Cuba's freedom".[40] In prison, Posada and Bosch learned to paint, and sold their artwork in the US via intermediaries.[41] Posada was found not guilty by a military court; however, this ruling was overturned and he was held for trial in a civilian court. Posada escaped from prison with Freddie Lugo in 1977, and the pair turned themselves in to the Chilean authorities, expecting to be welcomed for their role in the killing of Letelier, who was a target of the government of Augusto Pinochet: however, they were immediately handed back to Venezuela.[42] Posada was held awaiting trial in Venezuela for eight years before escaping in 1985 while awaiting a prosecutor's appeal of his second acquittal in the bombing. His escape is said to have involved a hefty bribe and his dressing as a priest.[43][44][45] According to Posada, the escape was planned and financed by Jorge Mas Canosa, who by then had become head of the Cuban American National Foundation.[36]

Contras and Central America (1985–2005)

Posada was met in El Salvador by CIA operative Félix Rodríguez, who told Posada that he was supporting him "at the request of a wealthy Miami benefactor".[43] Rodríguez had overseen the capture of Ernesto "Che" Guevara in 1967. He offered Posada a job as his deputy, ferrying supplies to the Contra rebels in Nicaragua, in an operation directed by Oliver North: the pair were to coordinate drops of military supplies to the rebels, who opposed the Sandinista government.[43] Posada's fortunes rose after the Reagan administration took a more confrontational approach to Cuba and expanded covert operations in Latin America. Posada was given a house and a car, and paid $3,000 per month, $750 for each flight he made, and sundry expenses, primarily by US Major General Richard Secord, who was directing operations for North.[46] Posada was responsible for managing supply flights from the Salvadoran base of Ilopango to the Contra rebels at the border. He was also responsible for coordinating between the Contras, their advisers in the US, and their allies in the military forces of El Salvador. Operating with the Salvadoran alias "Ramón Medina", Posada built relationships inside the government of El Salvador, its military, and its infamous death squads.[47]

The supply flights to the Contra rebels ceased in 1986, after the Nicaraguan government shot down one of the planes. Two of the crew were killed, including a close friend of Posada's. American pilot Eugene Hasenfus survived, thanks to his oft-mocked habit of wearing a parachute, and was captured by the Nicaraguan government. He confessed to the role of the US government in supporting the Contras, and his story made headlines around the world.[48] Posada was supposed to have been on the flight himself, but missed the flight narrowly.[49] After Hasenfus's capture became known, Posada gathered a group of soldiers and flew to San Salvador, where he emptied the safe houses used by the operation. By getting rid of this evidence, he would later claim, he saved George H. W. Bush and Ronald Reagan from impeachment.[50]

Posada was forced to remain in hiding in El Salvador during the Iran-Contra hearings before signing up as a security advisor to the Guatemalan government. He also remained in contact with Cuban exile groups during this period.[50][5][50] In February 1990, Posada was shot while sitting in his car in Guatemala City by unknown assailants that Posada believed were Cuban assassins. In his memoir, Posada said that his recovery and medical bills were paid by the Cuban American National Foundation, with additional payments from Secord.[36] Posada recuperated in Honduras, where the FBI believed him to have had a role in 41 bombings in the country. Posada himself admitted to planning numerous attacks against Cuba. His ploys included attempting to use information obtained from a Honduran captain about the movement of Cuban ships to place a mine on a freighter, and using a base in Honduras to launch an attack on Cuba with a force of Cuban exiles. Despite paying large bribes to the Honduran military for their support with the latter scheme, Posada eventually abandoned this plan, believing he could not trust the Honduran military.[51]

Terrorist bombings of 1997

In 1997, Posada was implicated in a series of terrorist bombings in Cuba intended to deter the growing tourism trade on the island. An Italian-born Canadian national, Fabio di Celmo, was killed and 11 others were wounded as a result. In reaction to di Celmo's death, Posada told reporter Ann Louise Bardach of The New York Times in a 1998 taped interview that "the Italian was in the wrong place at the wrong time, but I sleep like a baby."[17][1] In a taped interview, Posada said: "It is sad that someone is dead, but we can't stop."[44] He added that Raúl Ernesto Cruz León, the man arrested and charged with the bombings, was a mercenary in his employ.[52] Cruz León was sentenced to death by the Cuban authorities after admitting to the attacks; the sentence was later commuted to 30 years imprisonment.[53] Posada repudiated his statements after being arrested in Panama in 2000.[54] Posada was reportedly disappointed with the reluctance of news organisations in the US to report the bombing attacks, saying "If there is no publicity, the job is useless".[55]

In 1998, The New York Times indicated that, even after the US government no longer sponsored Posada's violent activities, Posada may have benefited from a tolerant attitude on the part of US law enforcement. As bombs were being placed in tourist hotels and restaurants in Havana, The New York Times reported, a Cuban-American business-partner of Posada's tried to inform first Guatemalan, then US, law enforcement of Posada's involvement and possible links to Cuban exiles in Union City, New Jersey.[56] Posada himself suggested his friendship with an FBI agent made it unlikely he would be officially implicated; the FBI denied claims of any friendship.[57]

According to Posada, much of his funding in this period came through Mas Canosa and the Cuban American National Foundation, and that Mas Canosa was aware of his role in the bombings.[52] The Cuban Ministry of the Interior claimed that on the September 4, 1997, three bomb attacks against hotels in Havana, in which one person was killed, were planned and controlled by CANF.[58][59] CANF denied the allegations.[60] Jose Antonio Llama, a former board member of CANF, stated in an interview published in 2006 that several of its leaders planned attacks in Cuba during the 1990s.[61] In 1997, CANF published a statement refusing to condemn terrorist attacks against Cuba; the CANF chairman at the time stated that "We do not think of these as terrorist actions".[62][52] The CANF repeatedly denied links with Posada and his activities after the publication of the 1998 interview, and threatened The New York Times with legal action. Multiple members of the foundation, however, confirmed links with Posada.[63]

Arrest, conviction and release in Panama

 
Fidel Castro, the target of an alleged failed assassination attempt in 2000

In October 1997 Posada was implicated in an assassination attempt on Fidel Castro, after four men were arrested by the US Coast Guard in a boat off the coast of Puerto Rico. He denied any involvement, and called the plot amateurish, but was believed to have been involved by the FBI.[52] On November 17, 2000, Posada was discovered with 200 pounds of explosives in Panama City and arrested for plotting the assassination of Castro, who was visiting the country for the first time since 1959. Three other Cuban exiles were also arrested: Gaspar Jiménez who worked at the Cuban American National Foundation in Miami, Pedro Remón Rodríguez and Guillermo Novo.[63][45] While in prison, Posada released a statement renouncing terrorism, and stating that he had been framed for the assassination attempt in Panama by the Cuban intelligence services.[64] By mid-2001, $200,000 had been raised via efforts on Miami radio for a defense fund for Posada and his colleagues.[64]

Castro announced the alleged discovery of the plot on international television, describing Posada as "a cowardly man totally without scruples". He also blamed CANF for allegedly orchestrating the plot. Shortly after, Justino di Celmo, the father of Fabio di Celmo, the victim of one of the Havana bombings, appeared on Cuban television to urge the Panamanian authorities to extradite Posada to Cuba. Posada was subsequently convicted and jailed in Panama for the assassination attempt.[63] Bardach described him as "Fidel Castro's most persistent would-be assassin.[18] Posada was convicted of plotting to assassinate Castro; the plot allegedly involved using dynamite to blow up an auditorium full of college students.[1]

No foreign government has pressured me to take the decision, I knew that if these men stayed here, they would be extradited to Cuba and Venezuela, and there they were surely going to kill them there.

 — Panamanian President Mireya Moscoso[13]

In August 2004, Posada and the three other convicted plotters were pardoned by outgoing Panamanian president Mireya Moscoso. Moscoso, who had been close to the Bush administration in the US, denied that she had been pressured by US officials to engineer a release of the men, and US officials said they were not involved. "This was a decision made by the government of Panama", said State Department spokesman J. Adam Ereli. "We never lobbied the Panamanian government to pardon anyone involved in this case, and I'd leave it to the government of Panama to discuss the action." President Mireya Moscoso also commented, saying that "No foreign government has pressured me to take the decision", she told reporters. "I knew that if these men stayed here, they would be extradited to Cuba and Venezuela, and there they were surely going to kill them there."[13]

Moscoso's decision was condemned by incoming Panamanian president Martín Torrijos,[65] and speculation was rife that the pardon was politically motivated.[13] Cuba expert Julia E. Sweig said the decision "reeks of political and diplomatic cronyism". Immediately after news of the pardon broke, Venezuela and Cuba withdrew diplomatic ties with Panama.[65]

United States (2005–2018)

 
Roger Noriega, then US Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs. At the time of Posada's arrest in the US, Noriega stated that the charges against Posada "may be a completely manufactured issue".[66]

In 2005, Posada requested political asylum in the United States through his attorney. On May 3, 2005, the Supreme Tribunal of Venezuela approved an extradition request for him.[54] Although he was arrested following international pressure on the administration of George W. Bush to treat him on par with other suspects in the War on Terror, the US refused to extradite him to either Venezuela or Cuba.[67] On September 28, 2005, a US immigration judge ruled that Posada could not be deported because he faced the threat of torture in Venezuela. The Venezuelan government reacted angrily to the ruling, accusing the US of having a "double standard in its so-called war on terrorism".[15] The United States government sought to deport Posada elsewhere, but at least seven friendly nations refused to accept him.[68]

Posada was referenced in Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez's address to the United Nations General Assembly on September 20, 2006. Railing against the US for "imperialism" and "hypocrisy", Chávez called Posada "the biggest terrorist of this continent", and said: "Thanks to the CIA and government officials, he was allowed to escape, and he lives here in this country, protected by the government."[69]

During a United Nations Security Council meeting to review the work of its three subsidiary counter-terrorism committees, the US was invited by the representatives of Venezuela and Cuba to comment on the evidence (above) in the Posada case. The US representative, Willson, stated that "an individual cannot be brought for trial or extradited unless sufficient evidence has been established that he has committed the offence charged."[70] Willson said removal to Venezuela or Cuba could not be carried out because, she claimed, "it was more likely than not that he would be tortured if he were so transferred."[70] The Venezuelan representative denied the allegation, and pointed to the United States' own record in Abu Ghraib and in Guantánamo as examples of what Venezuela would not do.[71]

He is not being charged as a terrorist but rather as a liar. My family and I are outraged and disappointed that a known terrorist, Luis Posada, is going to trial for perjury and immigration fraud, not for the horrific crime of masterminding the bombing of a civilian airliner.

 — Livio di Celmo, whose brother Fabio di Celmo was killed in the 1997 bombings in Havana[17]

On May 8, 2007, US district judge Kathleen Cardone dismissed seven counts of immigration fraud and ordered the removal of Posada's electronic bracelet. In a 38-page ruling, Cardone criticized the US government's "fraud, deceit and trickery" during the interview with immigration authorities that was the basis of the charges against Posada.[72] Cardone's ruling was overturned in mid-2008 by the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, which ruled that Posada should be tried for the alleged immigration violation.[68]

In 2009, a federal grand jury issued a superseding indictment, which marked the first time Posada was officially linked by the US government to the 1997 bombings in Cuba. On April 9, 2009, the Miami Herald reported:

The superseding indictment from the grand jury in El Paso does not charge Posada, 81, with planting the bombs or plotting the bombings but with lying in an immigration court about his role in the attacks at hotels, bars and restaurants in the Havana area. The perjury counts were added to the previous indictment that accused Posada of lying in his citizenship application about how he got into the United States. Another new charge is obstruction of a US investigation into "international terrorism."[73]

2010 Texas trial

The bottom line is that the Justice Department is trying to hold him accountable for horrible acts of terrorism ... This trial can confirm what everybody already knows, (that) Luis Posada is a leading purveyor of terrorism.

 — Peter Kornbluh, National Security Archive, February 25, 2010[74]

Posada was accused of lying to US authorities about his entry into the country and about his alleged involvement in bomb attacks in Havana in 1997, and went on trial in Texas.[14][74] Many of his backers in the Cuban exile community gathered thousands of dollars for his defense during what they termed a "radio marathon" on Radio Mambí.[74] His charges did not relate to his alleged involvement in the bombing of the Cubana airliner, or in the bombings in Havana. Instead, they revolved around lying to immigration agents about his trip to the US and illegally entering the United States.[74] The fact that he was not tried for murder or terrorism was strongly criticized by Cuba and Venezuela, while the Center for Democracy in the Americas described it as "charging Al Capone with tax evasion".[1]

Prosecutors alleged that Posada deceived them about his passport and arrived on a boat named the Santrina, not on a bus as he had told the government during interviews.[74] Posada was acquitted on all charges against him in 2011. A spokesman of the US Justice Department expressed disappointment in the outcome, while the Cuban and Venezuelan governments denounced the trial: Venezuela stated that the US was protecting a known terrorist.[14][45][75]

Personal life

Posada married in 1955.[76] He separated from his first wife a few years after first moving to the US.[67] He married his second wife, Elina Nieves, in 1963 while at Fort Benning. Nieves and he had a son while still in the US: a daughter was born after the family had moved to Venezuela in 1968.[77] Posada and Nieves lived apart for most of their marriage.[67] He had a lengthy relationship with Titi Bosch, who died of cancer in 2001.[78] Towards the end of his life, Posada lived in Miami, where he often attended fund raisers among the right-wing exile groups, and participated in protests against the government of Fidel Castro.[17] Among Cuban exiles, he was nicknamed "Bambi".[29]

A November 2016, El Nuevo Herald newspaper article described Posada in a Miami restaurant celebrating Castro's death. The article reported that the then-88-year-old Posada was a cancer survivor and had suffered a stroke.[79] He died on May 23, 2018, in Miami, aged 90: an obituary in The Washington Post stated that he had been diagnosed with throat cancer five years previously.[67][80] His lawyer stated that Posada Carriles died at "a government home for veterans".[81]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f Ruiz, Albor. . NY Daily News. Archived from the original on November 26, 2011. Retrieved December 6, 2014.
  2. ^ Gamez Torres, Nora (November 15, 2017). "Drugs, spying and terrorism: CIA files offer insight on life of Luis Posada Carriles". Miami Herald. from the original on May 28, 2018. Retrieved May 30, 2018.
  3. ^ a b c Candiotti, Susan (May 18, 2005). . CNN. Archived from the original on June 2, 2008. Retrieved May 22, 2008.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Bardach, Ann Louis; Rohter, Larry (July 13, 1998). "A Bomber's Tale: Decades of Intrigue". The New York Times. from the original on March 3, 2019. Retrieved January 20, 2007.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Lettieri, Mike (June 1, 2007). "Posada Carriles, Bush's Child of Scorn". Washington Report on the Hemisphere. 27 (7/8).
  6. ^ a b c d Kornbluh, Peter (June 9, 2005). "The Posada File: Part II". National Security Archive. from the original on June 17, 2014. Retrieved May 23, 2018.
  7. ^ Bardach, Ann Louise (November 2006). "Twilight of the Assassins". The Atlantic.
  8. ^ Selsky, Andrew O. (May 4, 2007). "Link found to bombing". Associated Press.
  9. ^ a b c d LeoGrande, William M.; Kornbluh, Peter (2014). Back Channel to Cuba: The Hidden History of Negotiations Between Washington and Havana. UNC Press Books. pp. 153–54. ISBN 9781469617633. from the original on May 10, 2022. Retrieved May 23, 2018.
  10. ^ . Local10. April 21, 2005. Archived from the original on September 27, 2007.
  11. ^ "US tiptoes between terror, Castro's policies". The Christian Science Monitor. May 20, 2005. Archived from the original on July 28, 2012. Retrieved May 1, 2007.
  12. ^ a b Williams, Carol J. (April 20, 2007). "U.S. criticized as Cuban exile is freed". Los Angeles Times. from the original on April 27, 2018. Retrieved June 13, 2018.
  13. ^ a b c d Kessler, Glenn (August 27, 2004). "U.S. Denies Role in Cuban Exiles' Pardon: Panama Frees 4 Convicted in Plot To Kill Castro". The Washington Post. from the original on September 7, 2012. Retrieved June 13, 2018.
  14. ^ a b c d "Cuba anger at US Posada Carriles verdict". BBC. April 9, 2011. from the original on November 2, 2018. Retrieved June 13, 2018.
  15. ^ a b No deportation for Cuban militant Archived July 11, 2012(Timestamp length), at archive.today, BBC, September 28, 2005.
  16. ^ "A terrorist walks". Los Angeles Times. April 20, 2007. from the original on June 10, 2016. Retrieved December 6, 2014.
  17. ^ a b c d e Peter Kornbluh, "Former CIA Asset Luis Posada Goes to Trial" August 26, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, The Nation, January 5, 2011.
  18. ^ a b Bardach 2002, p. 136.
  19. ^ (PDF) . Archived from the original (PDF) on September 2, 2018. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  20. ^ a b Bardach 2002, p. 179.
  21. ^ a b c d e f Bardach 2002, pp. 180–183.
  22. ^ Bardach 2002, pp. 180–182.
  23. ^ a b c d CIA declassified report on Luis Posada (PDF) December 15, 2006, at the Wayback Machine; retrieved April 25, 2011.
  24. ^ Bardach 2002, pp. 180–185.
  25. ^ Bardach 2002, p. 182.
  26. ^ Bardach 2002, p. 181.
  27. ^ Bardach 2002, p. 184.
  28. ^ a b c d e Bardach 2002, pp. 184–186.
  29. ^ a b . The New York Times. November 15, 1976. Archived from the original on September 29, 2007. Retrieved February 17, 2009.
  30. ^ Bardach 2002, p. 185.
  31. ^ Peter Dale Scott; Jonathan Marshall (April 10, 1998). Cocaine Politics: Drugs, Armies, and the CIA in Central America, Updated Edition. University of California Press. p. 204. ISBN 978-0-520-21449-1. from the original on August 19, 2020. Retrieved July 1, 2020.
  32. ^ a b Bardach 2002, pp. 188–191.
  33. ^ "Declassified FBI report on bombing of Cubana Flight 455" (PDF). National Security Archive. November 5, 1976. (PDF) from the original on October 19, 2012. Retrieved April 25, 2011.
  34. ^ Phillips, Dion E. (1991). "Terrorism and security in the Caribbean: The 1976 Cubana disaster off Barbados". Studies in Conflict & Terrorism. 14 (4).
  35. ^ Bardach 2002, p. 187.
  36. ^ a b c d Bardach, Ann Louise (July 12, 1998). "A Bomber's Tale: Taking Aim At Castro". The New York Times. from the original on March 13, 2018. Retrieved May 23, 2018.
  37. ^ "Luis Posada Carriles The Declassified Record". National Security Archive. from the original on March 3, 2015. Retrieved May 23, 2018.
  38. ^ a b Torres, Nora Gamez; Chardy, Alphonso (June 4, 2015). "Declassified document says Posada Carriles likely planned 1976 bombing of Cuban plane". Miami Herald. from the original on May 24, 2018. Retrieved May 23, 2018.
  39. ^ Bardach 2002, pp. 189.
  40. ^ "Profile: Cuban 'plane bomber". BBC. May 9, 2007. from the original on December 12, 2006. Retrieved June 25, 2018.
  41. ^ Bardach 2002, p. 190.
  42. ^ Bardach 2002, p. 190-192.
  43. ^ a b c Bardach 2002, pp. 191–195.
  44. ^ a b "Arrest of Cuban ex-CIA figure puts Bush in tough political spot". San Francisco Chronicle. May 18, 2005. Archived from the original on September 20, 2012. Retrieved May 10, 2022.
  45. ^ a b c "Cuba denounces acquittal of former CIA agent Luis Posada as a farce". The Guardian. April 10, 2011. from the original on April 1, 2017. Retrieved December 12, 2016.
  46. ^ Bardach 2002, pp. 193–196.
  47. ^ Bardach 2002, pp. 193–198.
  48. ^ Bardach 2002, pp. 193–197.
  49. ^ Bardach 2002, pp. 195–197.
  50. ^ a b c Bardach 2002, pp. 197–201.
  51. ^ Bardach 2002, pp. 202–206.
  52. ^ a b c d Bardach 2002, pp. 208–211.
  53. ^ Editorial, Reuters (December 3, 2010). "Cuba commutes bomber's death sentence to 30 years". Reuters. from the original on May 24, 2018. Retrieved May 23, 2018. {{cite news}}: |first= has generic name (help)
  54. ^ a b Williams, Carol J.; Dahlburg, John-Thor (May 6, 2005). "Venezuela Seeks Exile's Extradition". Los Angeles Times. from the original on December 8, 2015. Retrieved May 24, 2018.
  55. ^ Bardach 2002, pp. 208–210.
  56. ^ "The U.S. and Cuban Exile Violence". Human Rights Watch. 1999. from the original on May 1, 2013. Retrieved June 27, 2018.
  57. ^ Bardach 2002, pp. 206=210.
  58. ^ CNN & Reuters (September 4, 1997). "Explosions hit 3 hotels in Havana, killing 1". CNN. {{cite news}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  59. ^ Cuba Interior Minister (September 11, 1997). "Official statement about terrorist arrest". Prensa Latina.
  60. ^ Pascal Fletcher (September 16, 1997). "Accused bomber makes calm TV confession in Cuba". Reuters.
  61. ^ Wilfredo Cancio Isla (June 25, 2006). "Former CANF Board member admits to planning terrorist attack against Cuba". El Nuevo Herald. from the original on May 26, 2012. Retrieved May 24, 2018.
  62. ^ CANF President Francisco Hernandez (August 13, 1997). "CANF Statement". El Nuevo Herald.
  63. ^ a b c Bardach 2002, pp. 210–223.
  64. ^ a b Bardach 2002, pp. 220–223.
  65. ^ a b Venezuela envoy to leave Panama Archived September 20, 2012(Timestamp length), at archive.today, BBC News, August 28, 2004.
  66. ^ Mojitos in Miami May 10, 2022, at the Wayback Machine, The Guardian, May 18, 2005.
  67. ^ a b c d Saloman, Gisela (May 23, 2018). . The Washington Post. Archived from the original on May 23, 2018. Retrieved May 23, 2018.
  68. ^ a b Cuban militant Luis Posada Carriles to stand trial in U.S. Archived September 20, 2012(Timestamp length), at archive.today, Los Angeles Times, August 15, 2008.
  69. ^ President Hugo Chavez Delivers Remarks at the U.N. General Assembly August 27, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, The Washington Post, September 20, 2006.
  70. ^ a b United Nations Security Council Verbatim Report 6015. S/PV/6015 page 30. Ms. Willson United States November 12, 2008.
  71. ^ "Through diplomatic notes and official conversations between and among Venezuelan diplomats, representatives of the Venezuelan embassy in the United States, and representatives of the State Department, Venezuela has given full assurances that if the United States complied with the extradition process, Posada Carriles will be subject to the rule of law, with full respect for due process, for his human rights. ... If any terrorist practices or tortures have been proven, it is those that have been committed by the United States of America, for example in Abu Ghraib and in Guantánamo, where the Government of the United States has refused access, on many occasions, to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights and both the American and the global press ... Carilles ... was on the CIA payroll. That is possibly one additional reason that has led the United States Government to protect Posada Carilles: the possible confessions that that criminal could make about his CIA past ..." United Nations Security Council Verbatim Report 6015. S/PV/6015 page 33. Mr Valero Briceňo Venezuela November 12, 2008.
  72. ^ "Judge throws out charges against anti-Castro militant" May 9, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, CNN, May 8, 2007.
  73. ^ Chardy, Alfonso (April 9, 2009). . Miami Herald. Archived from the original on April 17, 2009.
  74. ^ a b c d e Chuck Strouse, Cuban killer Luis Posada Carriles goes on Trial October 9, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, Miami New Times, February 25, 2010.
  75. ^ Rory Carroll (April 10, 2011). "Cuba denounces acquittal of former CIA agent Luis Posada as a farce". the Guardian. from the original on December 10, 2014. Retrieved December 6, 2014.
  76. ^ Bardach 2002, p. 180.
  77. ^ Bardach 2002, p. 183.
  78. ^ Bardach 2002, p. 221.
  79. ^ Penton, Mario J (November 26, 2016). "Posada Carriles lamenta que la muerte de Fidel llegara tan tarde". El Nuevo Herald (in Spanish). from the original on April 25, 2017. Retrieved April 24, 2017.
  80. ^ Gamez Torres, Nora (May 23, 2018). "Anti-Castro militant Posada Carriles is dead at 90". from the original on May 24, 2018. Retrieved May 23, 2018.
  81. ^ "Luis Posada Carriles: Cuba anti-communist activist dies". BBC. May 23, 2018. from the original on June 24, 2018. Retrieved June 24, 2018.

Sources

  • Bardach, Ann Louise (2002). Cuba Confidential: Love and Vengeance in Miami and Havana. Random House. ISBN 978-0-375-50489-1.

Further reading

  • Dateline Havana: The Real Story of US Policy and the Future of Cuba by Reese Erlich, 2008, Polipoint Press, ISBN 0-9815769-7-4

External links

  • Luis Posada Carriles: The Declassified Record. Declassified CIA and FBI Documents on The National Security Archive
  • . Declassified CIA and FBI Documents on The National Security Archive
  • Bombing of Cuban Jetliner 30 Years Later. Declassified CIA and FBI Documents on The National Security Archive
  • Cuba Seeks U.S. Arrest of Castro Foe by Michele Kelemen, NPR, May 7, 2005
  • by Jose Pertierra, Political Affairs, April 15, 2006
  • Luis Posada Carriles photo and article archive by the Latin American Studies Organization
  • Our Man's in Miami: Patriot or Terrorist? by Ann Louise Bardach, The Washington Post, April 17, 2005
  • Cuban Exile Could Test U.S. Definition of Terrorist by Tim Weiner, The New York Times, May 9, 2005
  • Why Luis Posada Carriles, an Admitted Cuban Exile Terrorist, Should Face Justice in Venezuela by the Council on Hemispheric Affairs
  • Why the U.S. Refuses to Prosecute Luis Posada Carriles for Cubana Airlines Flight 455 – video report by Democracy Now!

luis, posada, carriles, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, posada, second, maternal, family, name, carriles, luis, clemente, posada, carriles, february, 1928, 2018, cuban, exile, militant, central, intelligence, agency, agent, considered, terrorist. In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Posada and the second or maternal family name is Carriles Luis Clemente Posada Carriles February 15 1928 May 23 2018 was a Cuban exile militant and Central Intelligence Agency CIA agent He was considered a terrorist by the United States Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI and the Government of Cuba among others 1 2 Luis Posada CarrilesLuis Posada at Fort Benning Georgia US 1962Born 1928 02 15 February 15 1928Cienfuegos CubaDiedMay 23 2018 2018 05 23 aged 90 Miami Florida USBorn in Cienfuegos Cuba Posada fled to the United States after a spell of anti Castro activism He helped organize the Bay of Pigs Invasion and after it failed became an agent for the CIA 3 4 He received training at Fort Benning and from 1964 to 1967 was involved with a series of bombings and other covert activities against the Cuban government before joining the Venezuelan intelligence service 4 5 Along with Orlando Bosch he was involved in founding the Coordination of United Revolutionary Organizations 5 6 7 described by the FBI as an anti Castro terrorist umbrella organization 6 Posada and CORU are widely considered responsible for the 1976 bombing of a Cuban airliner that killed 73 people 4 5 8 9 Posada later admitted involvement in a string of bombings in 1997 targeting fashionable Cuban hotels and nightspots 10 11 12 In addition he was jailed under accusations related to an assassination attempt on Fidel Castro in Panama in 2000 although he was later pardoned by Panamanian President Mireya Moscoso in the final days of her term 13 He denied involvement in the airline bombing and the alleged plot against Castro in Panama but admitted to fighting to overthrow the Castro regime in Cuba 14 In 2005 Posada was held by US authorities in Texas on the charge of being in the country illegally the charges were later dismissed A judge ruled he could not be deported because he faced the threat of torture in Venezuela 15 The US government refused to repatriate Posada to Cuba citing the same reason 14 His release on bail in 2007 elicited angry reactions from the Cuban and Venezuelan governments The US Justice Department had urged the court to keep him in jail because he was an admitted mastermind of terrorist plots and attacks a flight risk and a danger to the community 12 The decision was also criticized within the US an editorial in the Los Angeles Times stated that by releasing Carriles while detaining a number of suspected terrorists in Guantanamo Bay the US government was guilty of hypocrisy 16 Posada died in May 2018 in Florida where hardline elements of the anti Castro exile community in Miami still regarded him as a heroic figure 17 Reporter Ann Louise Bardach called him Fidel Castro s most persistent would be assassin 18 while Peter Kornbluh of the National Security Archive referred to him as one of the most dangerous terrorists in recent history and the godfather of Cuban exile violence 17 Contents 1 Early years 1928 1968 2 Venezuela 1968 1985 2 1 Coordination of United Revolutionary Organizations 3 Contras and Central America 1985 2005 3 1 Terrorist bombings of 1997 3 2 Arrest conviction and release in Panama 4 United States 2005 2018 4 1 2010 Texas trial 5 Personal life 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Notes 7 2 Sources 8 Further reading 9 External linksEarly years 1928 1968 EditPosada was born in Cienfuegos Cuba on February 15 1928 His family was relatively affluent He had four siblings The family moved to Havana when Posada was 17 years old where he studied medicine and chemistry at the University of Havana In 1956 he and Antonio Garcia established a pest control enterprise in Cienfuegos called Servicios Exterminadores Fumigadores de Insectos The station wagon used for their business was destroyed by a bomb while parked on the street on the night of January 3 1957 19 Posada worked in 1958 as a supervisor for the Firestone Tire and Rubber Company 4 He worked initially in Havana and was transferred to Akron Ohio after the Cuban Revolution of 1959 20 As a student he had come in contact with Fidel Castro who had become a figure of some significance in the student politics of the time Posada later said that Castro was three years ahead of him at the university 20 Misgivings about the Cuban revolution led Posada to become an activist in open opposition to the new government After a spell in a military prison Posada sought political asylum in Mexico By 1961 Posada had relocated to the United States where he helped to organize the failed Bay of Pigs Invasion of Cuba 4 3 The rest of Posada s family remained in Cuba and continued to support the Cuban revolution Posada s sister eventually rose to the rank of Colonel in the Cuban army 4 When asked in a 1998 interview why he had opposed the Revolution he stated All communists are the same All are bad a form of evil 21 Posada was stationed in Guatemala where he was supposed to participate in a second wave of landings in Cuba The initial attack on Cuban soil failed and the operation was called off before Posada s force was to take part 21 After the failure at the Bay of Pigs Posada attended officer candidate school at the United States Army s facility in Fort Benning 22 There he was trained by the CIA in sabotage and explosives between March 1963 and March 1964 5 3 23 4 While at Fort Benning he served in the same platoon as Jorge Mas Canosa later the founder of the Cuban American National Foundation the two men became fast friends 21 He graduated from the training program with the rank of second lieutenant but he and Mas Canosa left the army when they recognized that the US was unlikely to invade Cuba again 21 5 In a 1998 interview he stated that the CIA taught us everything explosives how to kill bomb trained us in acts of sabotage 1 Posada received further training in guerrilla tactics in Polk City Florida 5 He worked closely with the CIA in Miami and was active in the CIA s Operation 40 He later described his role as that of the agency s principal agent informing the organisation about political movements within the exile community and operating anti Castro activities 24 In Florida Posada trained members of the JURE Junta Revolucionaria Cubana an anti Castro militant organization 21 23 He was also associated with other militant groups including RECE Cuban Representation in Exile 21 CIA files indicate that Posada was involved in a 1965 attempt to overthrow the Guatemalan government The same year the CIA reported that Posada was involved in various bombing plans in association with Mas Canosa 5 23 Posada also supplied information about the Cuban exile community to the CIA and unsuccessfully attempted to recruit his brother to spy for them 25 In 1968 relations frayed with the CIA when Posada was questioned about his unreported association with gangster elements Posada s other associates at the time included Frank Rosenthal described as a well known gangster Posada relocated to Venezuela taking with him various CIA supplied weapons including grenades and fuses 5 23 26 Venezuela 1968 1985 EditIn Venezuela Posada quickly rose through the ranks of Venezuelan intelligence He became head of the service known as DIGEPOL and later as DISIP in 1969 27 The role involved countering various guerrilla movements supported by Cuba and Posada threw himself into his work with enthusiasm He invited Orlando Bosch another Cuban exile who was then on parole from US federal prison to join his operations in Venezuela Bosch accepted his offer in 1974 thereby violating the terms of his parole 28 Posada was dismissed from the service in 1974 due to ideological differences with the government of Carlos Andres Perez who had assumed office in that year 28 Posada went on to found a private detective agency in Caracas 29 5 At approximately the same time Posada s relations with the CIA also deteriorated The agency began to suspect that he was involved in cocaine trafficking and dealing in counterfeit money 28 Posada was not confronted with these allegations to avoid compromising existing operations but internal CIA communications referred to him as a serious liability 28 The Church Committee hearings of 1975 which had been triggered by fears that the CIA were running too many rogue operations had a significant impact on the agency and Posada s association was seen to be not in good odor 30 In February 1976 the CIA officially broke off relations with Posada Subsequently Posada made several efforts to get back into the agency s good graces including informing on an alleged plot by Bosch to kill Henry Kissinger then US Secretary of State 28 Coordination of United Revolutionary Organizations Edit Further information Coordination of United Revolutionary Organizations and Cubana de Aviacion Flight 455 Along with Orlando Bosch and Gaspar Jimenez Posada founded the Coordination of United Revolutionary Organizations CORU 5 31 The group first met in the Dominican Republic in June 1976 and laid plans for more than 50 bombings over the next year 32 The US Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI described CORU as an anti Castro terrorist umbrella organization 6 CORU was responsible for a number of attacks in 1976 These included a machine gun attack on the Cuban embassy in Bogota the assassination of a Cuban official in Merida Yucatan the kidnapping of two Cuban embassy employees in Buenos Aires the bombing of a Cubana airlines office in Panama City the bombing of the Guyanese embassy in Port of Spain and the assassination of former Chilean ambassador Orlando Letelier in Washington D C 9 Declassified FBI report that reads Our confidential source ascertained that the bombing of the Cubana Airlines DC 8 was planned in part in Caracas Venezuela at two meetings attended by Morales Navarrete Luis Posada Carriles and Frank Castro 33 The information Posada provided the CIA while attempting to reestablish good relations with it included a tip that Cuban exiles were planning to blow up a Cuban airliner 32 Cubana Flight 455 was a Cubana de Aviacion flight departing from Barbados via Trinidad to Cuba On October 6 1976 two time bombs variously described as dynamite or C 4 planted on the Douglas DC 8 aircraft exploded killing all 73 people on board including all 25 members of the 1975 Cuban national fencing team 1 5 9 34 35 Investigators from Cuba Venezuela and the United States traced the planting of the bombs to two Venezuelan passengers Freddy Lugo and Hernan Ricardo Lozano 5 36 Both men were employed by Posada at his private detective agency based in Venezuela 5 A week later Posada and Bosch were arrested on charges of masterminding the attack and were jailed in Venezuela 36 Declassified FBI and CIA reports also show that the agencies suspected his involvement in the airline bombing within days of its occurrence 6 37 38 According to a declassified CIA document dated October 13 1976 with information from what the CIA deemed a usually reliable source Posada in Caracas at the time was overheard to say a few days before Cubana flight 455 exploded We are going to hit a Cuban airliner Orlando has the details 9 The details were contained in a memorandum sent to Kissinger The memorandum suggested that Posada was likely to have planned the bombing 38 Another CIA document based on a Miami based informant also implicated Posada in the conspiracy 39 Posada who denied involvement in the Cubana 455 bombing insisted his only objective was to fight for Cuba s freedom 40 In prison Posada and Bosch learned to paint and sold their artwork in the US via intermediaries 41 Posada was found not guilty by a military court however this ruling was overturned and he was held for trial in a civilian court Posada escaped from prison with Freddie Lugo in 1977 and the pair turned themselves in to the Chilean authorities expecting to be welcomed for their role in the killing of Letelier who was a target of the government of Augusto Pinochet however they were immediately handed back to Venezuela 42 Posada was held awaiting trial in Venezuela for eight years before escaping in 1985 while awaiting a prosecutor s appeal of his second acquittal in the bombing His escape is said to have involved a hefty bribe and his dressing as a priest 43 44 45 According to Posada the escape was planned and financed by Jorge Mas Canosa who by then had become head of the Cuban American National Foundation 36 Contras and Central America 1985 2005 EditPosada was met in El Salvador by CIA operative Felix Rodriguez who told Posada that he was supporting him at the request of a wealthy Miami benefactor 43 Rodriguez had overseen the capture of Ernesto Che Guevara in 1967 He offered Posada a job as his deputy ferrying supplies to the Contra rebels in Nicaragua in an operation directed by Oliver North the pair were to coordinate drops of military supplies to the rebels who opposed the Sandinista government 43 Posada s fortunes rose after the Reagan administration took a more confrontational approach to Cuba and expanded covert operations in Latin America Posada was given a house and a car and paid 3 000 per month 750 for each flight he made and sundry expenses primarily by US Major General Richard Secord who was directing operations for North 46 Posada was responsible for managing supply flights from the Salvadoran base of Ilopango to the Contra rebels at the border He was also responsible for coordinating between the Contras their advisers in the US and their allies in the military forces of El Salvador Operating with the Salvadoran alias Ramon Medina Posada built relationships inside the government of El Salvador its military and its infamous death squads 47 The supply flights to the Contra rebels ceased in 1986 after the Nicaraguan government shot down one of the planes Two of the crew were killed including a close friend of Posada s American pilot Eugene Hasenfus survived thanks to his oft mocked habit of wearing a parachute and was captured by the Nicaraguan government He confessed to the role of the US government in supporting the Contras and his story made headlines around the world 48 Posada was supposed to have been on the flight himself but missed the flight narrowly 49 After Hasenfus s capture became known Posada gathered a group of soldiers and flew to San Salvador where he emptied the safe houses used by the operation By getting rid of this evidence he would later claim he saved George H W Bush and Ronald Reagan from impeachment 50 Posada was forced to remain in hiding in El Salvador during the Iran Contra hearings before signing up as a security advisor to the Guatemalan government He also remained in contact with Cuban exile groups during this period 50 5 50 In February 1990 Posada was shot while sitting in his car in Guatemala City by unknown assailants that Posada believed were Cuban assassins In his memoir Posada said that his recovery and medical bills were paid by the Cuban American National Foundation with additional payments from Secord 36 Posada recuperated in Honduras where the FBI believed him to have had a role in 41 bombings in the country Posada himself admitted to planning numerous attacks against Cuba His ploys included attempting to use information obtained from a Honduran captain about the movement of Cuban ships to place a mine on a freighter and using a base in Honduras to launch an attack on Cuba with a force of Cuban exiles Despite paying large bribes to the Honduran military for their support with the latter scheme Posada eventually abandoned this plan believing he could not trust the Honduran military 51 Terrorist bombings of 1997 Edit In 1997 Posada was implicated in a series of terrorist bombings in Cuba intended to deter the growing tourism trade on the island An Italian born Canadian national Fabio di Celmo was killed and 11 others were wounded as a result In reaction to di Celmo s death Posada told reporter Ann Louise Bardach of The New York Times in a 1998 taped interview that the Italian was in the wrong place at the wrong time but I sleep like a baby 17 1 In a taped interview Posada said It is sad that someone is dead but we can t stop 44 He added that Raul Ernesto Cruz Leon the man arrested and charged with the bombings was a mercenary in his employ 52 Cruz Leon was sentenced to death by the Cuban authorities after admitting to the attacks the sentence was later commuted to 30 years imprisonment 53 Posada repudiated his statements after being arrested in Panama in 2000 54 Posada was reportedly disappointed with the reluctance of news organisations in the US to report the bombing attacks saying If there is no publicity the job is useless 55 In 1998 The New York Times indicated that even after the US government no longer sponsored Posada s violent activities Posada may have benefited from a tolerant attitude on the part of US law enforcement As bombs were being placed in tourist hotels and restaurants in Havana The New York Times reported a Cuban American business partner of Posada s tried to inform first Guatemalan then US law enforcement of Posada s involvement and possible links to Cuban exiles in Union City New Jersey 56 Posada himself suggested his friendship with an FBI agent made it unlikely he would be officially implicated the FBI denied claims of any friendship 57 According to Posada much of his funding in this period came through Mas Canosa and the Cuban American National Foundation and that Mas Canosa was aware of his role in the bombings 52 The Cuban Ministry of the Interior claimed that on the September 4 1997 three bomb attacks against hotels in Havana in which one person was killed were planned and controlled by CANF 58 59 CANF denied the allegations 60 Jose Antonio Llama a former board member of CANF stated in an interview published in 2006 that several of its leaders planned attacks in Cuba during the 1990s 61 In 1997 CANF published a statement refusing to condemn terrorist attacks against Cuba the CANF chairman at the time stated that We do not think of these as terrorist actions 62 52 The CANF repeatedly denied links with Posada and his activities after the publication of the 1998 interview and threatened The New York Times with legal action Multiple members of the foundation however confirmed links with Posada 63 Arrest conviction and release in Panama Edit Fidel Castro the target of an alleged failed assassination attempt in 2000 In October 1997 Posada was implicated in an assassination attempt on Fidel Castro after four men were arrested by the US Coast Guard in a boat off the coast of Puerto Rico He denied any involvement and called the plot amateurish but was believed to have been involved by the FBI 52 On November 17 2000 Posada was discovered with 200 pounds of explosives in Panama City and arrested for plotting the assassination of Castro who was visiting the country for the first time since 1959 Three other Cuban exiles were also arrested Gaspar Jimenez who worked at the Cuban American National Foundation in Miami Pedro Remon Rodriguez and Guillermo Novo 63 45 While in prison Posada released a statement renouncing terrorism and stating that he had been framed for the assassination attempt in Panama by the Cuban intelligence services 64 By mid 2001 200 000 had been raised via efforts on Miami radio for a defense fund for Posada and his colleagues 64 Castro announced the alleged discovery of the plot on international television describing Posada as a cowardly man totally without scruples He also blamed CANF for allegedly orchestrating the plot Shortly after Justino di Celmo the father of Fabio di Celmo the victim of one of the Havana bombings appeared on Cuban television to urge the Panamanian authorities to extradite Posada to Cuba Posada was subsequently convicted and jailed in Panama for the assassination attempt 63 Bardach described him as Fidel Castro s most persistent would be assassin 18 Posada was convicted of plotting to assassinate Castro the plot allegedly involved using dynamite to blow up an auditorium full of college students 1 No foreign government has pressured me to take the decision I knew that if these men stayed here they would be extradited to Cuba and Venezuela and there they were surely going to kill them there Panamanian President Mireya Moscoso 13 In August 2004 Posada and the three other convicted plotters were pardoned by outgoing Panamanian president Mireya Moscoso Moscoso who had been close to the Bush administration in the US denied that she had been pressured by US officials to engineer a release of the men and US officials said they were not involved This was a decision made by the government of Panama said State Department spokesman J Adam Ereli We never lobbied the Panamanian government to pardon anyone involved in this case and I d leave it to the government of Panama to discuss the action President Mireya Moscoso also commented saying that No foreign government has pressured me to take the decision she told reporters I knew that if these men stayed here they would be extradited to Cuba and Venezuela and there they were surely going to kill them there 13 Moscoso s decision was condemned by incoming Panamanian president Martin Torrijos 65 and speculation was rife that the pardon was politically motivated 13 Cuba expert Julia E Sweig said the decision reeks of political and diplomatic cronyism Immediately after news of the pardon broke Venezuela and Cuba withdrew diplomatic ties with Panama 65 United States 2005 2018 Edit Roger Noriega then US Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs At the time of Posada s arrest in the US Noriega stated that the charges against Posada may be a completely manufactured issue 66 In 2005 Posada requested political asylum in the United States through his attorney On May 3 2005 the Supreme Tribunal of Venezuela approved an extradition request for him 54 Although he was arrested following international pressure on the administration of George W Bush to treat him on par with other suspects in the War on Terror the US refused to extradite him to either Venezuela or Cuba 67 On September 28 2005 a US immigration judge ruled that Posada could not be deported because he faced the threat of torture in Venezuela The Venezuelan government reacted angrily to the ruling accusing the US of having a double standard in its so called war on terrorism 15 The United States government sought to deport Posada elsewhere but at least seven friendly nations refused to accept him 68 Posada was referenced in Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez s address to the United Nations General Assembly on September 20 2006 Railing against the US for imperialism and hypocrisy Chavez called Posada the biggest terrorist of this continent and said Thanks to the CIA and government officials he was allowed to escape and he lives here in this country protected by the government 69 During a United Nations Security Council meeting to review the work of its three subsidiary counter terrorism committees the US was invited by the representatives of Venezuela and Cuba to comment on the evidence above in the Posada case The US representative Willson stated that an individual cannot be brought for trial or extradited unless sufficient evidence has been established that he has committed the offence charged 70 Willson said removal to Venezuela or Cuba could not be carried out because she claimed it was more likely than not that he would be tortured if he were so transferred 70 The Venezuelan representative denied the allegation and pointed to the United States own record in Abu Ghraib and in Guantanamo as examples of what Venezuela would not do 71 He is not being charged as a terrorist but rather as a liar My family and I are outraged and disappointed that a known terrorist Luis Posada is going to trial for perjury and immigration fraud not for the horrific crime of masterminding the bombing of a civilian airliner Livio di Celmo whose brother Fabio di Celmo was killed in the 1997 bombings in Havana 17 On May 8 2007 US district judge Kathleen Cardone dismissed seven counts of immigration fraud and ordered the removal of Posada s electronic bracelet In a 38 page ruling Cardone criticized the US government s fraud deceit and trickery during the interview with immigration authorities that was the basis of the charges against Posada 72 Cardone s ruling was overturned in mid 2008 by the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit which ruled that Posada should be tried for the alleged immigration violation 68 In 2009 a federal grand jury issued a superseding indictment which marked the first time Posada was officially linked by the US government to the 1997 bombings in Cuba On April 9 2009 the Miami Herald reported The superseding indictment from the grand jury in El Paso does not charge Posada 81 with planting the bombs or plotting the bombings but with lying in an immigration court about his role in the attacks at hotels bars and restaurants in the Havana area The perjury counts were added to the previous indictment that accused Posada of lying in his citizenship application about how he got into the United States Another new charge is obstruction of a US investigation into international terrorism 73 2010 Texas trial Edit The bottom line is that the Justice Department is trying to hold him accountable for horrible acts of terrorism This trial can confirm what everybody already knows that Luis Posada is a leading purveyor of terrorism Peter Kornbluh National Security Archive February 25 2010 74 Posada was accused of lying to US authorities about his entry into the country and about his alleged involvement in bomb attacks in Havana in 1997 and went on trial in Texas 14 74 Many of his backers in the Cuban exile community gathered thousands of dollars for his defense during what they termed a radio marathon on Radio Mambi 74 His charges did not relate to his alleged involvement in the bombing of the Cubana airliner or in the bombings in Havana Instead they revolved around lying to immigration agents about his trip to the US and illegally entering the United States 74 The fact that he was not tried for murder or terrorism was strongly criticized by Cuba and Venezuela while the Center for Democracy in the Americas described it as charging Al Capone with tax evasion 1 Prosecutors alleged that Posada deceived them about his passport and arrived on a boat named the Santrina not on a bus as he had told the government during interviews 74 Posada was acquitted on all charges against him in 2011 A spokesman of the US Justice Department expressed disappointment in the outcome while the Cuban and Venezuelan governments denounced the trial Venezuela stated that the US was protecting a known terrorist 14 45 75 Personal life EditPosada married in 1955 76 He separated from his first wife a few years after first moving to the US 67 He married his second wife Elina Nieves in 1963 while at Fort Benning Nieves and he had a son while still in the US a daughter was born after the family had moved to Venezuela in 1968 77 Posada and Nieves lived apart for most of their marriage 67 He had a lengthy relationship with Titi Bosch who died of cancer in 2001 78 Towards the end of his life Posada lived in Miami where he often attended fund raisers among the right wing exile groups and participated in protests against the government of Fidel Castro 17 Among Cuban exiles he was nicknamed Bambi 29 A November 2016 El Nuevo Herald newspaper article described Posada in a Miami restaurant celebrating Castro s death The article reported that the then 88 year old Posada was a cancer survivor and had suffered a stroke 79 He died on May 23 2018 in Miami aged 90 an obituary in The Washington Post stated that he had been diagnosed with throat cancer five years previously 67 80 His lawyer stated that Posada Carriles died at a government home for veterans 81 See also EditCriticism of the War on Terrorism Cuban FiveReferences EditNotes Edit a b c d e f Ruiz Albor Ruiz Terrorist s day in court may be here NY Daily News Archived from the original on November 26 2011 Retrieved December 6 2014 Gamez Torres Nora November 15 2017 Drugs spying and terrorism CIA files offer insight on life of Luis Posada Carriles Miami Herald Archived from the original on May 28 2018 Retrieved May 30 2018 a b c Candiotti Susan May 18 2005 Alleged anti Castro terrorist Posada arrested CNN Archived from the original on June 2 2008 Retrieved May 22 2008 a b c d e f g Bardach Ann Louis Rohter Larry July 13 1998 A Bomber s Tale Decades of Intrigue The New York Times Archived from the original on March 3 2019 Retrieved January 20 2007 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Lettieri Mike June 1 2007 Posada Carriles Bush s Child of Scorn Washington Report on the Hemisphere 27 7 8 a b c d Kornbluh Peter June 9 2005 The Posada File Part II National Security Archive Archived from the original on June 17 2014 Retrieved May 23 2018 Bardach Ann Louise November 2006 Twilight of the Assassins The Atlantic Selsky Andrew O May 4 2007 Link found to bombing Associated Press a b c d LeoGrande William M Kornbluh Peter 2014 Back Channel to Cuba The Hidden History of Negotiations Between Washington and Havana UNC Press Books pp 153 54 ISBN 9781469617633 Archived from the original on May 10 2022 Retrieved May 23 2018 Organizations Demand Cuban Militant s Arrest Local10 April 21 2005 Archived from the original on September 27 2007 US tiptoes between terror Castro s policies The Christian Science Monitor May 20 2005 Archived from the original on July 28 2012 Retrieved May 1 2007 a b Williams Carol J April 20 2007 U S criticized as Cuban exile is freed Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on April 27 2018 Retrieved June 13 2018 a b c d Kessler Glenn August 27 2004 U S Denies Role in Cuban Exiles Pardon Panama Frees 4 Convicted in Plot To Kill Castro The Washington Post Archived from the original on September 7 2012 Retrieved June 13 2018 a b c d Cuba anger at US Posada Carriles verdict BBC April 9 2011 Archived from the original on November 2 2018 Retrieved June 13 2018 a b No deportation for Cuban militant Archived July 11 2012 Timestamp length at archive today BBC September 28 2005 A terrorist walks Los Angeles Times April 20 2007 Archived from the original on June 10 2016 Retrieved December 6 2014 a b c d e Peter Kornbluh Former CIA Asset Luis Posada Goes to Trial Archived August 26 2014 at the Wayback Machine The Nation January 5 2011 a b Bardach 2002 p 136 PDF https web archive org web 20180902084136 http www latinamericanstudies org 1957 DLM 1 4 1957 18 pdf Archived from the original PDF on September 2 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help a b Bardach 2002 p 179 a b c d e f Bardach 2002 pp 180 183 Bardach 2002 pp 180 182 a b c d CIA declassified report on Luis Posada PDF Archived December 15 2006 at the Wayback Machine retrieved April 25 2011 Bardach 2002 pp 180 185 Bardach 2002 p 182 Bardach 2002 p 181 Bardach 2002 p 184 a b c d e Bardach 2002 pp 184 186 a b Anti Castro Extremists Tolerated if Not Encouraged by Some Latin American Nations The New York Times November 15 1976 Archived from the original on September 29 2007 Retrieved February 17 2009 Bardach 2002 p 185 Peter Dale Scott Jonathan Marshall April 10 1998 Cocaine Politics Drugs Armies and the CIA in Central America Updated Edition University of California Press p 204 ISBN 978 0 520 21449 1 Archived from the original on August 19 2020 Retrieved July 1 2020 a b Bardach 2002 pp 188 191 Declassified FBI report on bombing of Cubana Flight 455 PDF National Security Archive November 5 1976 Archived PDF from the original on October 19 2012 Retrieved April 25 2011 Phillips Dion E 1991 Terrorism and security in the Caribbean The 1976 Cubana disaster off Barbados Studies in Conflict amp Terrorism 14 4 Bardach 2002 p 187 a b c d Bardach Ann Louise July 12 1998 A Bomber s Tale Taking Aim At Castro The New York Times Archived from the original on March 13 2018 Retrieved May 23 2018 Luis Posada Carriles The Declassified Record National Security Archive Archived from the original on March 3 2015 Retrieved May 23 2018 a b Torres Nora Gamez Chardy Alphonso June 4 2015 Declassified document says Posada Carriles likely planned 1976 bombing of Cuban plane Miami Herald Archived from the original on May 24 2018 Retrieved May 23 2018 Bardach 2002 pp 189 Profile Cuban plane bomber BBC May 9 2007 Archived from the original on December 12 2006 Retrieved June 25 2018 Bardach 2002 p 190 Bardach 2002 p 190 192 a b c Bardach 2002 pp 191 195 a b Arrest of Cuban ex CIA figure puts Bush in tough political spot San Francisco Chronicle May 18 2005 Archived from the original on September 20 2012 Retrieved May 10 2022 a b c Cuba denounces acquittal of former CIA agent Luis Posada as a farce The Guardian April 10 2011 Archived from the original on April 1 2017 Retrieved December 12 2016 Bardach 2002 pp 193 196 Bardach 2002 pp 193 198 Bardach 2002 pp 193 197 Bardach 2002 pp 195 197 a b c Bardach 2002 pp 197 201 Bardach 2002 pp 202 206 a b c d Bardach 2002 pp 208 211 Editorial Reuters December 3 2010 Cuba commutes bomber s death sentence to 30 years Reuters Archived from the original on May 24 2018 Retrieved May 23 2018 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a first has generic name help a b Williams Carol J Dahlburg John Thor May 6 2005 Venezuela Seeks Exile s Extradition Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on December 8 2015 Retrieved May 24 2018 Bardach 2002 pp 208 210 The U S and Cuban Exile Violence Human Rights Watch 1999 Archived from the original on May 1 2013 Retrieved June 27 2018 Bardach 2002 pp 206 210 CNN amp Reuters September 4 1997 Explosions hit 3 hotels in Havana killing 1 CNN a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a author has generic name help Cuba Interior Minister September 11 1997 Official statement about terrorist arrest Prensa Latina Pascal Fletcher September 16 1997 Accused bomber makes calm TV confession in Cuba Reuters Wilfredo Cancio Isla June 25 2006 Former CANF Board member admits to planning terrorist attack against Cuba El Nuevo Herald Archived from the original on May 26 2012 Retrieved May 24 2018 CANF President Francisco Hernandez August 13 1997 CANF Statement El Nuevo Herald a b c Bardach 2002 pp 210 223 a b Bardach 2002 pp 220 223 a b Venezuela envoy to leave Panama Archived September 20 2012 Timestamp length at archive today BBC News August 28 2004 Mojitos in Miami Archived May 10 2022 at the Wayback Machine The Guardian May 18 2005 a b c d Saloman Gisela May 23 2018 Militant Cuban exile Luis Posada Carriles has died The Washington Post Archived from the original on May 23 2018 Retrieved May 23 2018 a b Cuban militant Luis Posada Carriles to stand trial in U S Archived September 20 2012 Timestamp length at archive today Los Angeles Times August 15 2008 President Hugo Chavez Delivers Remarks at the U N General Assembly Archived August 27 2017 at the Wayback Machine The Washington Post September 20 2006 a b United Nations Security Council Verbatim Report 6015 S PV 6015 page 30 Ms Willson United States November 12 2008 Through diplomatic notes and official conversations between and among Venezuelan diplomats representatives of the Venezuelan embassy in the United States and representatives of the State Department Venezuela has given full assurances that if the United States complied with the extradition process Posada Carriles will be subject to the rule of law with full respect for due process for his human rights If any terrorist practices or tortures have been proven it is those that have been committed by the United States of America for example in Abu Ghraib and in Guantanamo where the Government of the United States has refused access on many occasions to the Inter American Commission on Human Rights and both the American and the global press Carilles was on the CIA payroll That is possibly one additional reason that has led the United States Government to protect Posada Carilles the possible confessions that that criminal could make about his CIA past United Nations Security Council Verbatim Report 6015 S PV 6015 page 33 Mr Valero Briceno Venezuela November 12 2008 Judge throws out charges against anti Castro militant Archived May 9 2007 at the Wayback Machine CNN May 8 2007 Chardy Alfonso April 9 2009 U S indicts Cuban exile Luis Posada links him to bombings Miami Herald Archived from the original on April 17 2009 a b c d e Chuck Strouse Cuban killer Luis Posada Carriles goes on Trial Archived October 9 2010 at the Wayback Machine Miami New Times February 25 2010 Rory Carroll April 10 2011 Cuba denounces acquittal of former CIA agent Luis Posada as a farce the Guardian Archived from the original on December 10 2014 Retrieved December 6 2014 Bardach 2002 p 180 Bardach 2002 p 183 Bardach 2002 p 221 Penton Mario J November 26 2016 Posada Carriles lamenta que la muerte de Fidel llegara tan tarde El Nuevo Herald in Spanish Archived from the original on April 25 2017 Retrieved April 24 2017 Gamez Torres Nora May 23 2018 Anti Castro militant Posada Carriles is dead at 90 Archived from the original on May 24 2018 Retrieved May 23 2018 Luis Posada Carriles Cuba anti communist activist dies BBC May 23 2018 Archived from the original on June 24 2018 Retrieved June 24 2018 Sources Edit Bardach Ann Louise 2002 Cuba Confidential Love and Vengeance in Miami and Havana Random House ISBN 978 0 375 50489 1 Further reading EditDateline Havana The Real Story of US Policy and the Future of Cuba by Reese Erlich 2008 Polipoint Press ISBN 0 9815769 7 4External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Luis Posada Carriles Luis Posada Carriles The Declassified Record Declassified CIA and FBI Documents on The National Security Archive Documents linked to Cuban exile Luis Posada highlighted targets for terrorism Declassified CIA and FBI Documents on The National Security Archive Bombing of Cuban Jetliner 30 Years Later Declassified CIA and FBI Documents on The National Security Archive Cuba Seeks U S Arrest of Castro Foe by Michele Kelemen NPR May 7 2005 Who is Luis Posada Carriles by Jose Pertierra Political Affairs April 15 2006 Luis Posada Carriles photo and article archive by the Latin American Studies Organization Our Man s in Miami Patriot or Terrorist by Ann Louise Bardach The Washington Post April 17 2005 Cuban Exile Could Test U S Definition of Terrorist by Tim Weiner The New York Times May 9 2005 Why Luis Posada Carriles an Admitted Cuban Exile Terrorist Should Face Justice in Venezuela by the Council on Hemispheric Affairs Why the U S Refuses to Prosecute Luis Posada Carriles for Cubana Airlines Flight 455 video report by Democracy Now Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Luis Posada Carriles amp oldid 1106058632, wikipedia, wiki, book, 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