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Cuba
spy suspect was rising into senior
intelligence ranks
BY
TIM JOHNSON
tjohnson@krwashington.com
WASHINGTON
-- Before her arrest as a spy for Cuba last
week, Ana Belen Montes was rising rapidly
into the senior ranks of the U.S.
intelligence community and appeared to have
made a direct impact on U.S. policy toward
the island, according to a variety of
sources who knew or worked with the
44-year-old defense analyst.Her job allowed
Montes to work with dozens of policymakers
and intelligence analysts. She conducted
briefings on Capitol Hill, regularly met
with CIA counterparts, and had access to the
Intelink computer network of secret
intelligence reports on a gamut of
issues.Her most recent effort, according to
these sources, involved an intelligence
appraisal that attempted to soften a 1999
ground-breaking Pentagon assessment that
declared Cuba no longer a threat to the
United States militarily.The portrait that
emerges from talks with colleagues and
acquaintances is of a woman who was often
quiet, sometimes prickly and stand-offish in
bearing, but apparently in a position to do
considerable harm.``There has not been what
is a called an assessment of damage of what
she might have known and been able to
compromise by making it available to the
Cubans,'' said Bob Graham, the Florida
Democrat who chairs the Senate Intelligence
Committee.``The offense that she committed
is a capital offense,'' Graham told The
Herald's editorial board Friday. Graham said
several months may elapse before prosecutors
determine if Montes will provide details
about the extent of her alleged espionage to
avoid the death penalty.Other sources
believe her role was very harmful. As the
highest-level accused spy for Cuba, Montes
did ``substantial damage'' to the United
States, and probably knew the identities of
U.S. spies in Cuba, one former intelligence
officer said.Another said her arrest shows
that Cuba's foreign intelligence apparatus
is ``very sophisticated and very
aggressive.''In 2000, Montes took part in
inter-agency briefings during the
seven-month international saga over the
custody of Elián González, the young
castaway from Cuba.As a senior intelligence
analyst on Cuba for the Defense Intelligence
Agency, Montes traveled to Havana, first in
1993 on a CIA-paid leave to study the Cuban
military, again in January 1998 during Pope
John Paul II's visit, and perhaps other
times, colleagues say.One of the mysteries
surrounding the case is what drove Montes to
commit her alleged betrayal of the United
States. She lived in an apartment -- not
beyond her means -- in a leafy, residential
neighborhood of northwest Washington popular
with professionals.Colleagues offer sharply
differing assessments of her ability.``She
was superb,'' said one senior retired
intelligence officer. Another dismissed her
as ``very weak'' and prone to depression.
Laughter was foreign to her.``She's
certainly not a warm person,'' said Edward
Gonzalez, a retired UCLA professor who knew
her. ``She is not a happy person. She was
always scowling.''The daughter of a military
psychologist from Puerto Rico, Montes was
born in Germany and educated at top schools
in the United States. She spoke English and
Spanish beautifully. She obtained a master's
degree from the prestigious School of
Advanced International Studies at Johns
Hopkins University.
NEVER
GOT TOO CLOSE Though
she knew many people, she left little
wake.``We're trying to reconstruct who her
friends were, and we can't,'' said Riordan
Roett, director of Western Hemisphere
Studies at the university. ``I took a look
at her transcript and she took two of my
classes.'' Even so, Roett said he only
``vaguely'' can recall Montes.In 1985,
Montes got a job as a junior analyst at the
Defense Intelligence Agency, which provides
the Pentagon with military and political
analysis. A supervisor there at the time,
who spoke on condition of anonymity,
described Montes as introverted.``She was
very private. She never attended parties.
When we had office parties, she might show
up for only a little while.'' he said.During
her first years, Montes worked on issues
related to Central America.``When I was
posted to Nicaragua in 1990,'' said a former
State Department diplomat who knows Montes,
``she was part of a team of two or three who
came down to brief [President Violeta]
Chamorro on the military
apparatus.''Chamorro, a widow, was
struggling to deal with the Sandinista
People's Army, which was commanded by the
brother of Daniel Ortega, the Sandinista
president she upset in 1990 elections.By
then, Montes seemed to lead a charmed
professional life.In 1992, Montes was
plucked by the CIA along with a handful of
intelligence analysts who were deemed
exceptional talents worthy of a year-long
sabbatical at the Center for the Study of
Intelligence. After a trip to Cuba, Montes
published a DIA paper in 1993 on the Cuban
military's efforts to adopt Western
managerial tactics to cope with the island
nation's economic crisis.``I found her study
useful,'' said Gonzalez, who has co-authored
reports for the Pentagon on U.S.-Cuba
policy. ``It shed light on an aspect of the
Cuban military that I didn't know
about.''Some of her former colleagues are
shocked to learn she may have been a
turncoat.``It's a huge puzzle,'' says a
former senior CIA officer who had frequent
contact with her. ``She was considered a
very well-respected analyst. She had a
superb record. There was no agenda that she
was pushing.'' He paused a moment and
repeated: ``She was superb. I hope you can
find her motivation [for her alleged
betrayal] because I'd like to know what it
is.''Unlike the CIA, the Defense
Intelligence Agency does not require its
analysts to undergo regular polygraph tests
to ensure they remain loyal, several sources
said.In its criminal complaint, the FBI said
it believes Montes betrayed a U.S.
intelligence officer working in Cuba.
Intelligence sources said no harm befell the
U.S. officer. The complaint also said Montes
may have begun spying for Havana in 1996.If
so, said Richard Nuccio, a White House
advisor on Cuba at the time, Montes would
have been positioned to pass detailed
analysis to Havana of U.S. military
capabilities following the Cuban shootdown
in February 1996 of two small aircraft
belonging to the Brothers to the Rescue
exile group.At the time, the White House
asked the Pentagon to review scenarios that
included the bombing of Cuban runways, and
other possible U.S. military action.``Going
through that review would have been very
useful to a Cuban spy,'' Nuccio said.
BROAD
ACCESS Montes
had a security clearance that allowed her
broad access to documents from several
intelligence agencies, not only DIA, and not
only on Cuba, although that remained her
focus. She attended sessions of Georgetown
University's Cuba Study Group, a regular
gathering of 70 or so scholars, intelligence
analysts and others involved professionally
on issues related to Cuba.``I don't recall
her ever expressing an opinion in that study
group, and asking questions only once or
twice,'' said Wayne S. Smith, a former U.S.
diplomat in Cuba and senior fellow at the
Center for International Policy. While Cuba
has made no public pronouncement about
Montes' arrest, Smith said Cuban diplomats
in Washington privately justified running
spies like her in the United States.``One of
the Cubans at the Interest Section was
saying the other day, `You have people you
run [as spies] in Cuba. We have to know what
your plans are. We have to know what kind of
operations you are running against us,' ''
Smith said in an interview.After her trip to
Cuba in early 1998, Montes helped the
Pentagon settle on a reassessment concluding
that Cuba was too weak after the fall of the
Soviet Union to present a military threat to
the United States.Montes' conclusion in the
reassessment was toughened up at the
Pentagon.``The original version was much
softer,'' said a source on a Capitol Hill
intelligence committee.Montes regularly
briefed officers at the U.S. Southern
Command in Miami, which oversees military
operations in Latin America and the
Caribbean, two sources said.
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