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Fidel
Castro's Deadly
By Martin
Arostegui
From Insight Magazine (Washington Times)
Vol 14, No 26 July 20, 1998
www.insightmag.com
The Cuban
dictator is devoting a lot of his destitute
island nation's budget to secretive
biological- and chemical-weapons research.
Will he share his germ arsenal with
terrorists?
Not far from Havana's picturesque
harbor, where ogling tourists and curvaceous
prostitutes ply Cuba's only thriving form of
free trade, stands the Luis Diaz Soto Naval
Hospital, flanked by a newly built concrete
laboratory complex about 400 feet long by
300 feet wide. Inside the compound, along a
165-foot acid-resistant work table with
built-in circuit breakers, military
biotechnicians reportedly experiment on
cadavers, hospital patients and live animals
with anthrax,
brucellosis, equine encephalitis, dengue
fever, hepatitis, tetanus and a variety of
other bacterial agents.
Five chemical- and biological-weapons
plants operate throughout the island,
according to documents smuggled out of Cuba
and made available to Insight by Alvaro
Prendes, a former Cuban air force colonel
who now is the Miami-based spokesman for the
Union of Liberated Soldiers and Officers, a
clandestine pro-democracy movement within
Cuba's security services.
The credibility of the smuggled
documents is enhanced by a recent classified
Pentagon analysis. Also, these facilities
have not been on the itinerary of such
visiting dignitaries as retired Marine Gen.
John Sheehan, the recently passed-over
candidate for chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff who enthusiastically embraced
normalizing relations with Havana following
a recent round of junketing with Castro.
Pentagon, State Department and
congressional sources also point to
continuing Cuban support for international
terrorism and drug trafficking. They tell
Insight that, according to the CIA, Russian
specialists still operate the electronic
listening station at Lourdes on the
northeast tip of the island which taps into
U.S. communications. During the Persian Gulf
War, this station forwarded strategic
information to Iraq.
Reports smuggled out this year by
dissident Cuban military officers and
scientists are believed to be among the
factors prompting Defense Secretary William
Cohen to revise a Pentagon report sent to
Congress last April which decertified Cuba
as a threat to U.S. national security. The
revised report, still classified but made
available to an Insight reporter, states
"Cuba's air force is in disrepair and
much of the regular army is demobilized, but
the Castro government retains the potential
to pose unconventional threats. It has the
infrastructure which can be adapted to the
production of chem-bio weapons."
A classified annex to the Pentagon's
final report to Congress further warns
"According to sources within Cuba, at
least one research site is run and funded by
the Cuban military to work on the
development of offensive and defensive
biological weapons."
Why does the president ignore this?
"Clinton just wants to avoid another
front," says Ernesto Betancourt, former
director of Radio Marti, a U.S. government
broadcasting service. Betancourt believes
that the administration is terrified of
provoking a confrontation which could lead
to another Cuban wave of refugees.
"While maintaining the economic embargo
to placate Cuban-American voters, Clinton
desperately avoids making waves with
Castro," Betancourt adds.
"The administration has been
asleep at the switch on China, India and
very possibly now on Cuba," Chairman
Dan Burton of the House Government Reform
and Oversight Committee tells Insight.
"They are simply not on the ball."
Moreover, former U.S. ambassador to Colombia
Lewis Tambs has the same concern "If we
cannot prevent the proliferation of weapons
of mass destruction in our backyard, how can
we hope to do so halfway around the
world?"
Although Clinton has been sufficiently
concerned about the general threat of
chemical and biological terrorism triggering
an internal domestic crisis by setting up a
series of new response measures -- including
expanded storage of antidotes, stepped-up
inoculations of military personnel and a
call for $250 million to train
first-responder teams at state and local
levels -- he appears to be taking no action
against Castro.
According to the documents obtained by
Insight, Castro initiated his
chemical-weapons program in 1981 when Soviet
technicians built a plant to produce
tricothecen, the main component of
"yellow rain," in an underground
tunnel complex at Quimonor in Matanzas
province. The program was expanded some
years later with the construction of another
chemical-weapons facility in Pinar del Rio,
where Cuban and Soviet technicians began
experimenting with mixtures of germs and
toxins to produce anthrax,
the documents assert.
Drastic cutbacks in Russian subsidies
and military aid to Cuba did not dissuade
Castro from further expanding his
development of germ warfare. According to
Betancourt, classified CIA reports dating
back to 1989 describe Cuban efforts to
acquire technology and equipment to
manufacture biological weapons.
The exile reports back this up While
Cuba's economy collapsed, Dr. Maria del
Pilar y Gloria de la Campa, a biochemist and
Politburo member on Castro's presidential
staff -- whose real name is Gladys Llanusa
-- made repeated trips to Europe, the Middle
East and the former Soviet Union to arrange
related purchases, these reports say. A
centrifugal reactor capable of 10,000
revolutions per minute, used to separate
biological microorganisms from solid and
liquid substances, was acquired through
Comicondor, an Italian company in Milan
which also supplies technology to Libya for
Col. Muammar Qaddafi's biological-weapons
experiments.
Cuba's chemical- and
biological-weapons production is
administered through a network of
state-controlled biogenetic industries
operated by interlocking front companies
linked to the Defense and Interior
ministries. Manuel Cereijo, a professor of
electronic engineering at Florida
International University in Miami who has
debriefed more than 300 Cuban scientists,
estimates that from an original investment
of $1.6 million in 1980, Cuba's biogenetic
industry has grown into a $2 billion-a-year
venture. "This unprecedented level of
investment is comparable with the
biotechnologies of the most advanced
industrial countries in Europe and the
United States. It's out of all proportion to
Cuba's small and bankrupt economy which is
desperately undeveloped in all other
areas," Cereijo says.
Eleven biochemical plants currently
are operating in Cuba, half of which are
believed to serve military purposes,
according to the Florida professor. With the
exception of some cattle inoculants, very
little vaccine is being produced for medical
or commercial purposes, his sources say. The
Prendes documents explain
The two newest laboratories, built
near military installations on the east side
of Havana Bay have started operating during
the last five years. The largest facility,
located 100 meters from the naval hospital,
was completed in late 1993 and inaugurated
in April 1994, while another began
functioning in early 1995 close to the J.
Finlay military hospital.
These plants are supervised closely by
a military-scientific coordinating body
composed of top army and intelligence
officers. They include former armed-forces
chief of staff Gen. Ulises Rosales del Toro
and counterintelligence chief Col. Librado
Reina Benitan. Another officer with an
extensive track record in special
operations, Gen. Julio Casas Regueiro, also
is supervising the project, as are two
personal deputies to Defense Minister Raul
Castro (a Col. Alonso and a Brig. Gen.
Milian) and the chief of investments for the
armed forces, Lt. Col. Sergio Sanchez.
According to Cuban sources with
personal access to the project's records, a
team of specialists in strategic military
construction, carefully vetted by Cuban
counterintelligence, carried out much of the
construction and installation.
The Italian-manufactured centrifugal
plant and other laboratory equipment were
transported to Cuba in 1993 onboard a
Panama-registered vessel crewed by carefully
selected Cuban naval personnel. Records
indicate the ship, the Cristina Amary,
previously used for sensitive cargo, is
leased to front companies operated by the
Cuban military intelligence, Cubanacan S.A.
and Cimex, which intelligence experts say
channel financial proceeds from tourism and
other state-run enterprises into military
operations. The intelligence sources also
maintain that accounting records for the
lab's construction are meticulously covered
up through authorized funding for extensions
to existing medical facilities and the
remodeling of Havana's historical El Morro
Fortress.
"The extensive covert
arrangements indicate plans to use the
material produced in the plants in an
offensive capacity or for genocidal purposes
to eliminate centers of antigovernment
unrest," says Col. Prendes, who was a
Cuban top gun and chief air-defense
strategist before being forced into exile in
1994 when he called upon Castro to resign.
SS-22 medium-range missiles acquired from
the Soviet Union in 1990 are installed at
coastal batteries near the most recently
built laboratories, according to the
colonel. Within easy striking range of
Florida, these missiles could be armed with
chemical or biological warheads.
Rather than using conventional
military delivery systems, however, more
insidious methods are being tested to infect
civilian communities. Experiments are
reported to be underway in the use of
insects, rats and even house pets as
contaminants. Cuba's biowarfare technicians
also have developed tetanus-carrying
antipersonnel mines in the form of easily
built, low-explosive devices armed with
infected needles. These small and
inexpensive booby traps reportedly are being
used for perimeter security around
forced-labor camps, underground sources
report from Cuba.
Deliveries of biological weapons also
could be facilitated through the numerous
terrorist and Mafia organizations keeping
close ties to Havana. According to Tambs,
"There is no doubt about continuing
Cuban support for the the National
Liberation Army and Revolutionary Armed
Forces of Colombia in their alliance with
major drug-trafficking cartels to topple the
Colombian government."
Cuba's support for terrorism is
widespread. Spain's Interior Minister, Jaime
Mayor Oreja, despite his country's important
investments in Cuba, accuses Havana of
providing asylum and intelligence support to
Basque separatist ETA terrorists. And the
State Department is worked up about recent
reports indicating Cuban involvement with
guerrillas of the Zapatista National
Liberation Army in Mexico. All these are
potential markets for Cuba's chemical and
biological weapons.
"We are producing medicines, not
weapons," insists a spokesman for the
Cuban interests section in Washington, who
claims to be head of the unit but does not
give his name. "We deny the Pentagon's
charges of offensive potential in our
biogenetic industry," he says. A State
Department official who says he is
uncomfortable about the subject of Cuban
biochemical weapons -- and asks not to be
named -- nonetheless says for the record,
"Any evidence that Castro could
manufacture biological weapons is strictly
circumstantial. We don't see much indication
that he is doing it." The U.S. official
points to the embargo of Cuba as an
effective means to curtail the communist
island nation's biochemical research, citing
a recent example in which a British company
seeking to enter into joint biogenetic
ventures with the Cuban government was
blocked by U.S. sanctions, due to partial
ownership of the company by U.S. citizens.
"We are keeping an eye on it," he
says reassuringly.
"These labs operated by the Cuban
military and interior ministries are highly
secure and off-limits to foreigners and
visiting scientists," Florida
Republican Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen warned
in a recent House speech. While she and
other members of Congress have called for
on-site inspections of the Cuban facilities,
State Department officials believe "it
would be very tricky. The Cubans could claim
the right to inspect our industries. Getting
the U.N. involved would be very
difficult."
"A factor which must be
considered is the deeply sadistic and
psychotic nature of Castro's
personality," says Prendes, who has
known him personally since serving as one of
his ace pilots in repelling the 1961
CIA-backed Bay of Pigs invasion. "He is
determined to hold on to power until the
very end, to take everyone down with
him." And Castro's eight-hour speeches
still are punctuated by apocalyptic rhetoric
"Communism or death. ... After me comes
the deluge. ... The last wish of a
revolutionary is to pull the trigger against
his enemy, explode a land mine."
How ruthless is Castro? Would he
actually use these weapons of mass
extermination? Consider
Among the long line of distinguished
foreign visitors who have enjoyed the
opportunity of being hosted and entertained
by Cuba's Maximum Leader, some have been
surprised to discover that he is an avid
herpetophile, or reptile lover. A
multimillionaire Spanish entrepreneur and
mayor of a luxurious resort city who
regularly visits Cuba and is on first-name
terms with Fidel recently told an Insight
reporter that he never will forget being
shown around the last true socialist's
private game preserve at Guahnacabiles,
occupying an entire peninsula in the western
part of Pinar del Rio. While touring the
lush paradise, he was amazed to come upon a
massive snake farm attended by military
personnel.
Castro explained that this is where he
breeds a deadly viper discovered by his
troops in Angola -- a snake which can kill a
human instantly.
Dissident sources often have reported
that these poisonous snakes are used as
guards by Castro's security men. They anchor
the snakes to stakes using long tethers as
if they were prison guard dogs. Few
prisoners dare even try to escape. So
impressed was the mayor by Castro's Jurassic
Park ruthlessness that Fidel sent him a baby
snake as a birthday gift. It was returned to
sender.
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