Documents: CIA warned of plane bomb plot

By ANDREW O. SELSKY, Associated Press Writer/ 13 minutes ago/

An anti-Castro militant now in a Texas jail warned the CIA months before
the 1976 bombing of a Cuban airliner that fellow exiles were planning
such an attack, according to a newly released U.S. government document.

The document shows that Luis Posada Carriles — who had worked for the
CIA but was cut off by the agency earlier that year — was secretly
telling the CIA that his fellow far-right Cuban exiles opposed to Fidel
Castro's communist government were plotting to bring down a commercial jet.

The document does not say what the CIA did with Posada's tip. A CIA
spokesman said he had no comment on Monday, a federal holiday.

The CIA had extensive contacts with anti-Castro militants and trained
some of them, but has denied involvement in the bombing.

The documents were posted online Thursday by the National Security
Archive, an independent research institute at George Washington
University that seeks to declassify government files through the Freedom
of Information Act.

The Cubana Airlines plane, on a flight from Venezuela to Cuba, blew up
shortly after taking off from a stopover in Barbados on Oct. 6, 1976,
killing all 73 aboard, including Cuba's Olympic fencing team.

The bombing remains an open wound in Cuba. Weeping relatives of the
victims met in a Havana cemetery on Friday, the 30th anniversary of the
bombing. They demanded that Posada — who is now 78 and in a Texas
detention center on an immigration violation — be put on trial.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez is seeking the extradition of Posada, a
naturalized Venezuelan who served as the country's counterintelligence
chief. He accuses the U.S. government of protecting a terrorist.

The National Security Archive's Peter Kornbluh urged the U.S. government
to tell everything it knows about Posada.

"Now is the time for the government to come clean on Posada's covert
past and his involvement in international terrorism," Kornbluh said.
"His victims, the public, and the courts have a right to know."

Separating deception from truth in the intelligence world is notoriously
difficult, and the newly released documents contain mixed messages about
Posada. Much remains murky.

In a report dated a month after the bombing, then FBI Director Clarence
Kelly told Secretary of State Henry Kissinger that a confidential FBI
source ascertained the bombing had been planned in Caracas by Posada,
Venezuelan intelligence agency official Ricardo Morales Navarrete and
Cuban exile Frank Castro, who is not related to the Cuban leader.

Two Venezuelan employees of Posada's private security agency were
arrested in Trinidad the day after the bombing, and one of them — who
said he had worked for the CIA — admitted the two had planted the bomb,
documents posted by the National Security Archive show.

Posada trained with the CIA for the 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion and served
in the U.S. Army in the early 1960s. In 1965, he allegedly plotted to
overthrow the Guatemalan government and blow up a Soviet or Cuban
freighter in Mexico, according to the FBI. In 1967, he moved to
Venezuela, eventually leading its counterintelligence agency, and was
running his own security firm in the mid-1970s.

In 1973, Posada was investigated by the CIA for allegedly smuggling
cocaine, but was cleared after he convinced interrogators he was "guilty
of only having the wrong kind of friends," a declassified document says.
The same document says the CIA "formally terminated" its relationship
with him on Feb. 13, 1976.

Yet Posada still contacted the agency.

"After 2/76 contacts with (deleted by censors) were at Posada's own
initiative to volunteer information in exchange for assistance U.S. visa
for self and family," said the document, an annotated list of
still-secret records on Posada's CIA career that was marked "sanitized."

It tells how Posada contacted the CIA in February 1976 to describe an
assassination plot by Orlando Bosch and Frank Castro, two fellow
right-wing Cuban exiles, against leftist Andres Pascal Allende, the
nephew of slain Chilean President Salvador Allende. Posada worried that
his allies would discover he was giving up their secrets.

"Posada concerned that Bosch will blame Posada for leak of plans," the
report says. Andres Allende was not assassinated, and it is unclear
whether the Cuban exiles ever made an attempt on his life.

Then, four months later, Posada came back to tell of a sinister plot to
blow up an airliner.

On June 22, 1976, "Posada again contacts (deleted by censor) reptd info
concerning possible exile plans to blow up Cubana Airliner leaving
Panama and requested visa assistacne," read the document, filled with
typographical errors.

Shortly after, a bomb aboard a Cubana Airlines plane leaving Panama
failed to detonate, and the following month, a bomb in a suitcase
exploded before being loaded onto a Cubana plane leaving Jamaica,
according to a confidential State Department memo previously posted by
the National Security Archive.

The day after the Cubana Airlines flight was bombed near Barbados, the
CIA tried unsuccessfully to contact Posada, according to the annotated
list. Five days later, Posada was arrested in Venezuela. He denied
involvement in the bombing and escaped from prison in 1985 before a
civilian trial was completed.

Allegations that he masterminded mass murder did not keep U.S. covert
operatives from hiring Posada again. Within months, he was delivering
weapons to Nicaraguan Contra rebels in an illegal Reagan administration
operation. Posada also acknowledged, and then denied, a role in Havana
hotel bombings in 1997 that killed a tourist.

And in 2000, Posada was arrested for allegedly plotting to assassinate
Castro during a summit in Panama. He was pardoned in 2004 by then
Panamanian President Mireya Moscoso.

Posada was detained in Florida in May 2005 for entering the United
States illegally. A U.S. immigration judge has ruled that he cannot be
sent to Cuba or Venezuela, citing fears that he would be tortured.

__

On the Net:

National Security Archive: http://www.gwu.edu/nsarchiv/


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