http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/castro-questions-timing-of-cuban-spy-arrests-1698892.html

Castro questions timing of Cuban spy arrests 

AP


Sunday, 7 June 2009



Fidel Castro called the case of two Americans accused of spying for Cuba 
"strange" yesterday and questioned whether the timing of their arrests was 
politically motivated. 



In an essay read by a newscaster on state television, the former Cuban leader 
noted that the retired Washington couple were taken into custody just 24 hours 
after the Organization of American States voted to lift a decades-old 
suspension of Cuba's membership in that group. 

Though the US ultimately supported the OAS vote Wednesday, the administration 
of President Barack Obama initially wanted to see more democratic reforms on 
the communist island before Cuba was readmitted. 

Castro called the OAS vote "a defeat for United States diplomacy." 

Walter Kendall Myers and his wife, Gwendolyn, were arrested Thursday in 
Washington after a three-year investigation that began before Myers' retirement 
from the State Department in 2007. 

The US government says they had been spying for Havana for 30 years, recruited 
by Cuba after a 1978 trip there. Myers received his orders by Morse code, and 
he and his wife usually hand-delivered intelligence, sometimes by exchanging 
carts in a grocery store, according to court documents. 

"Doesn't the story of Cuban spying seem really ridiculous to everyone?" Castro 
asked, without commenting on its validity. 

Myers had been under suspicion since 1995 and FBI investigation since 2006. 

If the couple had been watched that long, "why were they not arrested before?" 
Castro asked. 

Court documents say the two were such valued spies, they once had a four-hour 
meeting with Castro, whom Myers described as one of the great modern political 
leaders. 

Castro said he doesn't recall meeting them when he was still president. 

"I met during this time with thousands of Americans for various reasons, 
individually or in groups, on occasion with gatherings of several hundred of 
them," said the 82-year-old, who ceded power to his brother Raul when he fell 
ill nearly three years ago and has not been seen in public since. 

"Perhaps influencing the case was not only the tremendous reverse suffered (by 
the U.S.), but also the news that contacts are being made between the 
governments of the United States and Cuba on issues of common interest," he 
added. 

Cuba agreed to resume talks with the Obama administration on legal immigration 
of Cubans to the United States and direct mail services after an overture from 
the U.S. last month. 


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