CIA Link to Cuban Pig Virus Reported - SFC1/10/77
----- Original Message ----- 
Sent: Sunday, April 26, 2009 4:43 AM
Subject: CIA Link to Cuban Pig Virus Reported 1971 ( Swine Flu 1971 - Swine Flu 
2009 Hmmm....)



  San Francisco Chronicle
  January 10, 1977    Front page

      1971 Mystery


  CIA Link to Cuban
  Pig Virus Reported

  New York

 
    With at least the tacit backing of U.S. Central Intelligence Agency
officials, operatives linked to anti-Castro terrorists introduced
African swine fever virus into Cuba in 1971.

      Six weeks later an outbreak of the disease forced the slaughter of 
500,000 pigs to prevent a nationwide animal epidemic.

 
    A U.S. intelligence source told Newsday last week he was given the
virus in a sealed, unmarked container at a U.S. Army base and CIA
training ground in the Panama Canal Zone, with instructions to turn it
over to the anti-Castro group.

      The 1971 outbreak, the first
and only time the disease has hit the Western Hemisphere, was labeled
the "most alarming event" of 1971 by the United Nations Food and
Agricultural Organization. African swine fever is a highly contagious
and usually lethal viral disease that infects only pigs and, unlike
swine flu, cannot be transmitted to humans.

      All production of pork, a Cuban staple, halted, apparently for several 
months.
 
    A CIA spokesman, Dennis Berend, in response to a Newsday request
for comment, said, "We don't comment on information from unnamed and,
at best, obscure sources."

      Why the virus turned up in Cuba has
been a mystery to animal investigators ever since the outbreak.
Informed speculation assumed that the virus entered Cuba either in
garbage from a commercial airliner or in sausages brought in by
merchant seamen.

      However, on the basis of numerous interviews
over four months with U.S. intelligence sources, Cuban exiles and
scientists concerning the outbreak — which occurred two years after
then-President Nixon had banned the use of offensive chemical and
biological warfare — Newsday was able to piece together this account of
events leading up to the outbreak.

      The U.S. intelligence
source said that early in 1971 he was given the virus in a sealed,
unmarked container at Ft. Gulick, an Army base in the Panama Canal
Zone. The CIA also operates a paramilitary training center for career
personnel and mercenaries at Ft. Gulick.

      The source said he was given instructions to turn the container with the 
virus over to members of an anti-Castro group.

 
    The container then was given to a person in the Canal Zone, who
took it by boat and turned it over to persons aboard a fishing trawler
off the Panamanian coast. The source said the substance was not
identified to him until months after the outbreak in Cuba. He would not
elaborate further.

      Another man involved in the operation, a
Cuban exile who asked not to be identified, said he was on the trawler
when the virus was put aboard at a rendezvous point off Bocas del Toro,
Panama. He said the trawler carried the virus to Navassa Island, a
tiny, deserted, U.S.-owned island between Jamaica and Haiti. From
there, after the trawler made a brief stopover, the container was taken
to Cuba and given to other operatives on the southern coast near the
U.S. Navy base at Guantanamo Bay in late March, according to the source
on the trawler. The base is 100 miles due north of Navassa.

     
The source on the trawler, who had been trained by the CIA and had
carried out previous missions for the agency, said he saw no CIA
officials aboard the boat that delivered the virus to the trawler off
Panama, but added: "We were well paid for this and Cuban exile groups
don't have that kind of money . . ."

      He said he was revealing
the information because he is a member of an exile group being
investigated by the United States in connection with terrorist activity
in Florida. His account was confirmed by another intelligence source in
Miami. The source said he had no proof that the operation was approved
by CIA officials in Washington, but added: "In a case like this,
though, they would always give them (CIA officials in Washington)
plausible deniability."

      The investigation referred to by the
operative on the trawler involves a federal inquiry into terrorist acts
allegedly carried out by Cuban exiles. Those include bombings and
assassination attempts in the United States and Venezuela. Trained
originally by the CIA for operations against Cuba, the exiles have
become more restive as they view what they believe to be an increasing
move toward rapprochement between Fidel Castro and the United States.

  Newsday



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  Source:
  http://www.maebrussell.com/Health/CIA%20Pig%20Virus.html

  News & Views
  http://www.truthquestonline.info/NEWS_VIEWS.html





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  S1000+ 
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--- On Sun, 4/26/09, Sardar <[email protected]> wrote:




      
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