===Cuba based espionage and destabilization operations===
Cuba
has for long been a place where spies are active, this was
celebrated in Cuba and after 1960 in the US by Antonio Prohias’
comic strip Spy vs Spy
http://www.angelfire.com/hi/SpyVsSpy/.
By their very nature such secret activities often only come to
light when the agents are caught, defect or die; thus any historic
vision of their actions is usually a kaleidoscope of apparently
discontinuous events, reported differently by the different
antagonists involved.
During the US Civil war the Confederacy
employed a Cuban woman, Loreta Janeta Velazquez (aka Lieutenant
Harry T. Buford) to spy on Union forces [ISBN 0299194248].
Thomas
Jordan, a former
U.S. Army officer who became a
Confederate
colonel, started an embryonic spy network in
Washington, D.C. as
early as
1860,
American Civil War spies. Thomas
Jordan later became general in the Cuban forces in the Ten Year
War. In subsequent Cuban independence struggles, the Spanish
Colonial government employed spies and informers inside and out
side of Cuba, notable the Pinkertons
http://www.irishabroad.com/irishworld/irishamericamag/decjan03/hibernia/dynamitejohnnydecjan03.asp,
to try to control pro-independence activity. During the Cuban
Republic, in 1925, at the beginning of Machado’s legal term,
Abraham Semjovitch, code name Fabio Grobart
http://www.granma.cubaweb.cu/2005/08/31/nacional/articulo01.html,
http://www.cartadecuba.org/castro_el_infiel.htm
a Kremlin Agent helped make formal links between the Cuban
Communist Party and the Communist International
[1048] PCC. Walker Evans has an amazing
photograph of a 1930s Machado informer of ‘’la Porra,’’ standing in
his most elegant white suit watching for the resistance [ISBN
0892366176].
In the 1940’s Rogelio Recio Ramírez, leader of
the ephemeral 1933 Mabay Workers Soviet develops the first secret
cells of what will become the Sierra Maestra covert communist
party. These cells engage in agi-prop in these mountains among the
Guajiros and Montunos. When Castro takes to the mountains in
1956-1958 these super-secret cells, do very little fighting, but
provide logistic support and information to the pro-Communist
factions especially to
Ernesto Che Guevara. These cells also
work to oppose the non-Communist rebel factions of Frank País
http://www.hup.harvard.edu/pdf/SWEINS_excerpt.pd
and Huber Matos
http://www.cubanet.org/CNews/y04/mar04/30o5.htm.
All this in some obscure way relates to weapon supply in the
Sierra, via Frank Sturgis (putative agent of the CIA and "burgler"
in Watergate), José Figueres (past President of Costa Rica) and the
Caribbean Legion and thus to the Cayo Confites matter (see below)
and to Alfonso Manuel Rojo (“the Che supposedly who spied on the
“Che” Guevara), pilot Pedro Díaz Lanz and a number of others
http://www.clarin.com/suplementos/zona/2000/02/13/i-00601e.htm
who appear and disappear as Cuba’s spy dramas fold and
unfold.
Cuba was also scene of German spying intended to
locate ships as target for that country's submarine warfare in WW
II. The book
Voyage of the Damned describes Otto Ott
a dwarf spy who, it seems, was surprisingly effective. Others
describe Heinz Lüning
http://www.il.proquest.com/proquest/newsletters/04/historyjan04.shtml
as a tall handsome, but not very effective, German spy who was
captured, tried and shot by the Batista government on November 10th
1942.
Then there is the 1940
Leon Trotsky assassination in Mexico which
is reported very differently by the numerous sides involved
http://www.marxist.com/mexico-trotsky-museum240603.htm,
http://www.rotten.com/library/bio/crime/assassins/ramon-mercader/. Trotsky’s assassin, Jaime
Ramón Mercader,),
was the son of Eustacia María Caridad del Río Hernández said to be
Cuban
http://firmaspress.com/454.htm,
not as commonly thought, Spanish. Jaime Ramón Mercader after
release from prison lived and died in Cuba and was buried in Russia
as Ramón Ivanovich López.
This circumstance is reflected in
the literature, for instance “Our Man in Havana” by Graham Greene
http://members.tripod.com/~greeneland/havana.htm,
Greene apparently anticipated the
Cuba Missile
Crisis and used Batista’s elegant goon Esteban Ventura Nova as
his model for Capitan Segura. However, it is wise to recall that
Graham Greene, who had worked under the direction of double agent
Kim Philby
History of Soviet espionage, was
both experienced in real spy games and sympathized with Fidel
Castro.
Castro himself was a player in these activities long
before reaching power. He was active in the 1948 Bogotazo in
Colombia and some how involved in the killing of Liberal Party
Cacique and presidential candidate Jorge Eliécer Gaitán
http://www.icdc.com/~paulwolf/gaitan/gaitancastro.htm.
There Castro’s ally was Rafael del Pino Siero, a naturalized US
citizen who would be jailed and apparently strangled by agents of
his former ally. Rafael del Pino Siero should not be confused with
the Rafael del Pino Díaz, a pilot at the “
Bay of Pigs;” to complicate
matters further each Rafael del Pino had a son with the same name.
Castro was involved, apparently as a minor player, in part of the
aborted “Cayo Confites” 1947 and 1949 affairs
http://www.angelfire.com/ga/garnata/Trujillo.html,
which involved a massive Caribbean Legion plot to overthrow General
Rafael Leonidas Trujillo, Dictator of the Dominican Republic, and
which involved much equipment, including about 20, light, transport
and attack aircraft
http://www.nocastro.com/documents/aviacion/aviacion5.htm.
In the Castro era this matter has elicited an enormous amount
of often conflicting published and web material. What is certain is
that Castro cast a big shadow in the Cold War. Castro’s enemies or
rivals honorable
[1049] and dishonorable often died
mysterious violent deaths. The “
Honey trap” is considered a standard technique on
the island; and many visitors from clergymen (including a certain
young rabbi) to film actors are reputed to have been subject to
this technique. Cuban operatives and Cuban regulars did battle
against US allies and US interests especially in Latin America.
Aside from the well known interventions in Nicaragua
[1050] and
El Salvador
[1051] there were a
myriad of other operations. For instance Castro's bodyguard Antonio
Briones Montoto was killed during a landing at Machurucuto
Venezuela on May 8th 1967
[1052].
Cuban Brigadier General Teté Puebla (see below) briefly describes a
good number of these actions (see citation below) including the
Angola, Cuban intervention in Algeria-Morocco War and the early
Congo conflicts.
Elsewhere similar actions were undertaken.
In Africa, in Angola
[1053] and
Ethiopia
[1054]
there were tank battles. In Grenada, in the Caribbean, Cuban and US
forces actually entered into combat
[1055]. In Vietnam Cuban engineers help
build the Ho Chi Min trail
[1056], and Cuban
intelligence harshly interrogated US prisoners
[1057].
When the Soviet Union stopped supplying funding much of this ceased
for a while, and the recently concluded Filiberto Ojeda Rios affair
in Puerto Rico
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/09/28/AR2005092802077.html?nav=rss_nation/special
relates to this time frame. However, more recently Cuban
intelligence is once more active in the US as agents such as Ana
Belen Montes
[1058] penetrated US intelligence
services and the Red Avispa Network are found spying on Cuban
exiles, US Armed Forces personnel and bases
[1059]. A Cuban spy ring in Mexico is
revealed and officially denied
http://www.nocastro.com/archives/spymex1.htm.
At present Castro and his ally Hugo Chavez have been busy through
out Latin America
[1060].
It is noted that the
companion
Foreign relations of Cuba article
does not mention: the training in Cuba of the Polisario front, the
intervention in Eritrea, in the Congo, and in Bolivia. The Chile
intervention when Castro had a Cuban bodyguard, Patricio de la
Guardia, kill Allende to make him a martyr
[1061] is not
mentioned and neither is the old and new Venezuelan adventures, the
support for the Macheteros in Puerto Rico, for the Montoneros in
Argentina
[1062], or the Tupamaros in Uruguay
Secretas/Tupamaros y
Montoneros.htm, the disastrous landing in the Dominican
Republic, apparently successful weapon supply to the rebels in Sri
Lanka
[1063], the material and engineering and
interrogation manpower support to North Vietnam (also see
references above).
Given Castro’s involvement the recent
anti-democratic events in Bolivia, Venezuela and Colombia
[1064] and the above 47 or more year
history promoting overseas violence it seems delusional to believe
as some do
Cuban intervention under
Castro that there is hope that Castro has reformed and seeks
peace.
As useful beginner reference for those who do not read
Spanish is the index in: Christopher Andrew and Oleg Gordievsky
1990 KGB: The Inside Story of Its Foreign Operations from Lenin to
Gorbachev. HarperCollins, New York, ISBN 0-06-016605-3 . Some
interesting details from a very partisan point of view appear in
Tete Puebla 2003 Marianas in Combat: and the Mariana Grajales
Women's Platoon in Cuba's Revolutionary War 1956-58 Pathfinder
(Paperback) ISBN: 0873489578
Hugh Thomas’s Cuba or the Pursuit of Freedom
(Paperback) Da Capo Press; Updated edition (April, 1998) ISBN:
0306808277 is essential reading although it has a few serious
errors. For instance, readers are led to believe that the land
measure Caballería is 330 acres (about 4,300 hectares) instead of
the real 33 acres (about 430 hectares), thus grossly overstating
the size of land holdings, with consequential political distortion.
Numbers of violent deaths are extremely conservative.