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The Wall Street
Journal, February 26, 2001
Indict Castro for Murder
Christopher Smith
On Feb. 24, 1996, Cuban Air Force MIGs attacked three unarmed civilian
aircraft. The attack took place in international airspace over the
Florida Straits. One plane escaped, but the MIGs shot down the other
two, killing all four men on board.
The victims included U.S. citizens Armando Alejandre, Mario de la
Pena and Carlos Costa, as well as Pablo Morales, a lawful U.S. resident
who was a Vietnam veteran. They had been on a mission for Brothers
to the Rescue, a group of pilots who search for asylum seekers lost
at sea.
Five years later, none of the perpetrators of these murders has been
brought to justice. Shortly after the killings, however, the U.S.
presented compelling evidence to the United Nations, showing that
the attack resulted not from a mistake, or even the whim, of the MIG
pilots, but by order of the Cuban military command. Fidel Castro himself
took credit for giving the order to shoot down any civilian planes
that engaged in "acts of provocation." In a March 1996 interview
with Time magazine, he said that he gave the Cuban Air Force authority
to shoot down Brothers flights because he was exasperated with U.S.
"interference in our internal affairs."
Recently, evidence has surfaced that the killings were wholly premeditated.
In the espionage trial of four Cuban intelligence officers now taking
place in Miami, federal prosecutors have produced messages from Havana
intercepted days before the planes were shot down. Some of these messages
appear to have been warnings to one of the Cuban agents, who had infiltrated
the Brothers, of the impending attack. He was instructed not to fly
with the Brothers between Feb. 24 and Feb. 27, "in order to avoid
any incident of provocation they may carry out and our response to
it." In the event the agent could not avoid flying on one of
the designated days, he was given a code phrase to say over the radio,
evidently to alert the Cuban military not to shoot down their own
man.
This demonstrates that the actions of the Castro government constituted
premeditated murder. The Cuban officer who had infiltrated the Brothers
is now being charged not only with espionage, but with conspiracy
to commit murder. Justice will not be done, however, unless the criminal
conspiracy is traced up the chain of command to its ultimate source.
This chain almost certainly leads to Fidel Castro.
After the 1996 murders, President Clinton pledged that those responsible
for the deaths of Armando, Mario, Carlos and Pablo would be brought
to justice. Yet despite abundant evidence documenting the crime, including
the identities of those who carried it out and some of those who authorized
it, the Clinton administration never initiated criminal proceedings
against them. This inaction contrasts with the exhaustive efforts
to unravel the conspiracy behind the bombings of our embassies in
Kenya and Tanzania, and of the USS Cole. The mainspring of such efforts
has been the determination of our law-enforcement agencies to identify
and prosecute the chief conspirator, Osama bin Laden. In the Cuban
case, however, such determination has been absent.
The responsibility to ensure that justice is done now passes to the
new administration. The recent decision by Paul O'Neill, the Treasury
secretary, to authorize payment of $96.7 million in frozen Cuban government
assets to satisfy judgments obtained by the families of the four victims
should obviate the need for further civil proceedings. As to criminal
charges, John Ashcroft's Justice Department should review the evidence
that has been languishing for five years as well as the new evidence
that has come to light.
Mr. Ashcroft should consider whether the discretionary doctrine of
"head of state immunity"-which has not stopped U.S. courts
from holding Manuel Noriega accountable for crimes-should apply to
the killing of four civilians in international airspace. If not, a
federal grand jury should be convened to determine whether the evidence
warrants an indictment of Mr. Castro for murder.
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