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----- Original Message -----
Sent: Friday, January 04, 2002 7:14 PM
Subject: [CubaNews] Cuba rallies for convicted spies

It is rare indeed for a US journalist to present the Cuban
perspective on a significant event in an objective as well
as detailed and informative manner. We should all be
grateful to David Adams of the St. Petersburg Times for
this most unusual report on the case of the Miami Five.

Please share this article widely with as many people as
you can so they can get a better sense of what this has
been really about. Thanks very much, in advance.
===================================

Cuba rallies for convicted spies
 
Some in the United States say the five members of the
"Wasp network'' should have been deported, not put on trial.
By DAVID ADAMS, Times Latin America Correspondent

� St. Petersburg Times, published January 2, 2002
------------------------------------------------------------

HAVANA -- For more than seven years Candido Gonzalez, 71,
refused to speak to his son, a talented Cuban pilot.

In what at the time appeared to be a stunning act of
betrayal, Rene Gonzalez stole a Cuban plane in 1991 and
defected to Miami. His father, a retired bus driver and
staunch revolutionary, was mortified.

But these days, there's a wry smile on Candido Gonzalez's
face as he tells of a refound pride in his son's deeds.

No matter that his son was sentenced in December to 15 years
in prison by a Miami judge on charges of spying for Cuba
against the United States. The former traitor is now a
national hero.

"We were happy to discover the truth about who he really
was," said the elder Gonzalez, rocking gently in a chair at
a house where the government had arranged for him to be
interviewed.

Even so, that truth remains hard to grasp, wrapped in
competing claims and decades of distrust in U.S.-Cuban
relations that are hard to unravel.

Rene Gonzalez's conviction along with four other Cuban spies
known as the "Wasp network" passed largely unnoticed in the
United States. Even in Miami, where scandals involving Cuba
are a dime a dozen, the seven-month trial barely made the
front pages.

Not so in Havana, where the five spies are now the subject
of a massive public campaign to link their fate to the
post-Sept. 11 fight against terrorism.

The unprecedented case -- Cuban foreign agents had never
been tried in the United States -- concluded Thursday with
the sentencing of the last of the five men. Gonzalez's
sentence was the least severe. Three others were jailed for
life.

The severity of the sentences has prompted cries of outrage
in Cuba. The government has mobilized millions of Cubans in
rallies calling for their release.

The "free the five" campaign dominates Cuba's state-run
media. A nightly round-table TV show, titled In the Entrails
of the Monster, provides regular updates on the five,
including family interviews and letters and poems sent from
jail.

The presentencing court statements of the five -- all spoke
of their unwavering revolutionary patriotism -- have been
reprinted in the Communist Party daily, Granma.

While Cuba admits that the five were part of an official
undercover operation, complete with multiple false
identities and sophisticated espionage training, Havana
claims the Wasps were not spies in the traditional sense.
Instead of hunting for top secret U.S. defense intelligence,
Cuba claims, they were on a legitimate mission to infiltrate
militant Cuban-American groups in Miami, which it accuses of
engaging in terrorism.

"The five never posed a risk to the national security of the
United States," said Lazaro Barredo, a leading member of
Cuba's one-party National Assembly and a regular on the
round-table program. "In fact, the U.S. should thank us for
what those young men did."

In making their claims, Cuban officials recite a long list
of alleged terrorist acts committed by the United States
against their island, commencing with the 1961 Bay of Pigs
invasion.

Cuba claims more than 5,000 victims, including about 3,400
dead, of U.S.-based terrorism committed by both the U.S.
government and Cuban-American exile groups. Instead of
punishing those responsible, Cuba says, the United States
has looked the other way.

"It took some assassins to blow up the twin towers for the
U.S. to take terrorism seriously," said Barredo. "We
wouldn't have to send our people over there if the U.S.
ended the impunity for those terrorist groups operating in
Miami."

Most recently, Cuba cites the case of a spate of Havana
hotel bombings in 1997 that killed one tourist and injured
several others. Although the bombings were allegedly
financed by Cuban exiles in Miami, no arrests have been
made.

In April, three Cuban-Americans were arrested in Cuba after
entering the island illegally armed with AK-47 assault
rifles. Cuba accuses the three of planning to blow up the
Tropicana, Havana's world-famous nightclub.

More generally Cuba accuses the United States of permitting
a climate in Miami of open encouragement of terrorist
attacks against the island, largely fomented on Miami radio
stations.

New Times, a Miami weekly, recently asked representatives of
several leading Cuban exile groups if they supported
terrorist attacks against Cuba. While none said they
condoned terrorism, they were also unwilling to condemn its
use in Cuba.

"We do not condemn a person who attempts to end conditions
that oppress his people," responded Ramon Raul Sanchez, head
of the Democracy Movement, a militant exile group. "I cannot
condemn somebody who is willing to risk his or her life for
the well-being of other people."

The magazine went on to quote President Bush's Nov. 10
speech at the United Nations in which he said any
ambivalence toward terrorism is unacceptable.

"Some governments still turn a blind eye to the terrorists,
hoping that the threat will pass them by," he said. "They
are mistaken. The allies of terror are equally guilty and
equally accountable."

While there may be some truth to Cuba's complaints about
Miami terrorism, prosecutors in the trial of the Wasps
argued successfully that the five did not limit their
efforts to spying on exile groups.

Trial evidence also highlighted their efforts to infiltrate
U.S. military installations in South Florida. Facilities
targeted included the U.S. Southern Command headquarters in
Miami, MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa and the Boca Chica
Naval Air Station in the Florida Keys.

All efforts at infiltration were a dismal failure, although
one of the five did manage to get hired as a manual laborer
at Boca Chica. While none of the Wasps ever obtained
classified information, prosecutors argued that the
knowledge the five gleaned over years of observations in and
around the bases, including detailed charts of takeoffs and
landings of military planes, was potentially harmful to U.S.
security.

The most serious allegation in the case linked two of the
men to the 1996 shootdown of two small aircraft belonging to
the Cuban exile group Brothers to the Rescue, resulting in
the deaths of four of its volunteer pilots.

In sentencing the last of the five Thursday, U.S. District
Judge Joan Lenard dismissed the alleged terrorist activities
of Cuban exiles in Miami as an excuse for sending spies to
Miami.

"Wherever terrorism is committed against innocents it is
evil and it is wrong," she said. But, she added, "the
terrorist acts of others cannot excuse the actions of these
defendants."

Despite seven months of court proceedings, aspects of the
case are still a mystery.

As evidence of its good intentions, Cuba claims it has
offered to share information with U.S. law enforcement
authorities about exile activities in Miami. It cites a
visit by Federal Bureau of Investigation agents to Havana in
the summer of 1998.

During the trial, retired FBI Agent Stuart Hoyt confirmed in
court that Cuba had shared information on violent exile
groups, albeit "on a limited basis."

The FBI has so far declined to comment in detail on the
substance of the Cuban information. "There was some
information brought to our attention through diplomatic
channels. We, in discharging our duties, looked into it," is
all that FBI Miami director Hector Pesquera is willing to
say.

Questions also remain about the decision to prosecute the
case, which defense attorneys argue was politically
motivated.

Attorneys for the five point out that it is almost unheard
of for foreign agents to be put on trial in the United
States. Instead, they argued, it is common
counterintelligence practice not to arrest suspected foreign
agents but to keep them under close surveillance. If
arrested they are normally shipped quietly back overseas.

A retired Army major general, Edward Atkeson, testified at
the trial that during the Cold War spies were frequently
caught and exchanged at Checkpoint Charlie, a border post
that once separated East and West Berlin. He also testified
that Cuba represented no serious military threat to the
United States.

Navy Adm. Eugene Carroll, an expert on U.S.-Cuban military
capabilities, testified that far more detailed information
than that gathered by the spies is widely available in
publications such as Jane's Defense Weekly magazine.

"There was no legal precedent for this case," said Paul
McKenna, attorney for Gerardo Hernandez, the Wasps'
ringleader. "They (the government) needed a big scapegoat
for the Brothers to the Rescue shootdown," he added,
referring to the 1996 incident regarded by many exiles as
one of Fidel Castro's worst atrocities.

Attorneys also claim the five were first detected by U.S.
intelligence services in the mid 1990s, yet no decision was
taken to arrest them until September 1998. At the time the
Clinton administration was under attack from Cuban exile
groups for being too soft on Cuba.

"There's absolutely no question the case was politically
motivated and locally driven," McKenna said. "Cooler heads
should have prevailed here. They should have been sent home.
It's ridiculous they got life sentences."

After sentencing was over Thursday, the federal prosecutor
who led the case, Caroline Heck Miller, declared a sweeping
victory. "The U.S. rule of law has been enforced and the
national security has been protected."

But her words were unlikely to resonate outside Miami.

"These guys are bigger heroes because they lost," said
defense attorney Jack Blumenthal. "These same acts in
Afghanistan on behalf of the United States would be
considered heroic."

That's certainly the view in Havana.

Not only is Candido Gonzalez now back on speaking terms with
his son, Rene, he is also thinking of visiting him in
prison.

"We have a lot to talk about," he said. "But mostly I want
to tell him how proud I am of what he has done for his
country."


--

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