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Fidel
May Be Part of Terror Campaign
Posted
Nov. 9, 2001
By Martin
Arostegui
Media
Credit: Ali
Khalig/UPI
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Unholy
alliance: In
Tehran, Castro was
welcomed with open
arms by Iranian
President Khatami
on May 8.
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At 6:30 p.m.
on Sept. 14, Ana Belen Montes, a senior
analyst at the Defense Intelligence Agency
(DIA), walked into a public telephone
booth outside Washington's National Zoo
and made two calls to pager numbers later
traced by federal agents to Cuba's
Directorate of General Intelligence (DGI).
She already had compromised the identities
of CIA agents, revealed U.S. military
secrets and exposed the contents of
classified files. But, as Montes sent
repeated signals to her DGI handlers
during the days immediately following the
Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on the Pentagon
and the twin towers of the World Trade
Center, the FBI was given orders to act.
The Sept. 21 arrest of a Fidel Castro mole
deeply burrowed into the U.S. defense
establishment at such a moment — even as
weapons-grade anthrax
was being mailed to media and
congressional targets — raises serious
questions about a possible Cuban
connection with the international
terrorist conspiracy targeting the United
States. Concerns about Cuba's continuing
threat to U.S. national security were
voiced recently by the DIA director, Vice
Adm. Tom Wilson. Before entering a closed
session of the Senate Select Committee on
Intelligence he told reporters that
"Cuba could initiate information
warfare or computer-network attacks that
could seriously disrupt our
military."
While there has been a tendency to play
down Castro's capabilities to engage the
United States in asymmetrical warfare,
"they are getting renewed attention
in the light of recent events,"
according to a Pentagon source. The source
tells Insight that only a highly
sophisticated espionage network, such as
the one operating from Cuba, could have
cracked the code of Air Force One in an
apparent breach of security that caused
U.S. Secret Service officials to whisk the
president out of sight on the morning of
Sept. 11.
A sudden decision by Russian President
Vladimir Putin to shut down Russia's
electronic listening station at Lourdes
near Havana by next year, announced just
hours before his meeting with President
George W. Bush at the Oct. 19 economic
summit in Shanghai, "reflects the
degree of alarm over Cuba's intelligence
operations," according to a U.S.
defense analyst in Washington. Congress
already was threatening to freeze
financial aid to Moscow unless it
dismantled the intelligence facility that
gives Castro a degree of international
leverage out of proportion to the bankrupt
state of his communist regime.
Despite some residual support for Castro
in the Kremlin, a Cuban delegation
visiting Moscow to procure additional
funding for the Lourdes facility abruptly
was dismissed with the announcement that
instead the listening post would be
closed. Influential elements in Moscow
fear that the rogue use of Cuban spy
facilities could drag Russia into an
unwanted confrontation with Washington.
According to Cuban exile Ernesto
Betancourt, some Russian officials were
highly disturbed by a 1999 incident
recorded by the Federal Communications
Commission in which Cuban
electronic-warfare specialists penetrated
New York's air-traffic-control system by
simulating U.S. Air Force flight codes.
The signals, which seriously threatened to
disrupt air traffic, were traced to a
1,500 kilowatt transmitter operating west
of Havana.
As Russia and the United States try to
close ranks against the common threat
posed by Muslim terrorist networks in
Central Asia, say intelligence insiders,
Castro's growing ties with radical Islamic
movements have become a source of worry
for both governments. During his recent
tour of Syria, Libya, Iran, Qatar, the
United Arab Emirates and Malaysia, the
Cuban dictator told a cheering crowd of
Muslim students at the University of
Tehran, "Together we will bring
America to its knees."
Agence France-Presse reported that Castro,
in an apocalyptic speech on May 10, told
his Muslim audience in Iran: "America
is weak. I have studied its weaknesses
from very close by. I tell you, the
imperialist king will finally fall."
Following the Sept. 11 attacks, Castro
followed the lead of hard-line Muslim
leaders by blaming "this
tragedy" on "the terrorist
policies of the United States."
There are signs that Castro's new
alignment with fundamentalist Islam could
go beyond crowd-pleasing declarations.
U.S. law-enforcement agencies have
indications that Cuba may have assisted
the logistics and planning for the latest
wave of terrorist attacks. Insight has
learned that al-Qaeda ringleader Mohammed
Atta, who organized the Sept. 11 attacks
and crashed a hijacked airliner into one
of the twin towers of the World Trade
Center, may have met secretly with Cuban
undercover agents shortly after his
arrival in the United States last year.
The Czech government has confirmed that
Atta similarly had met with Iraqi
intelligence officers in Prague.
Federal investigators believe that Castro
had been exploiting the international
controversy unleashed by the Elian
Gonzalez case to flood the United States
with intelligence agents — including
high-level officials of Cuba's
biological-warfare program who allegedly
spoke with Atta at a Miami motel. Federal
investigators suspect that Atta's Cuban
contact was a top defense-ministry officer
with personal ties to Castro who entered
the United States under cover of
assignment to a Cuban-government
delegation escorting Elian's two
grandmothers, who supposedly were coming
to mediate the custody battle.
"Information which Atta's al-Qaeda
cells readily possessed on flight schools,
airport security and airline flight
patterns only could have been obtained
through an intelligence infrastructure
already in place," says a federal
law-enforcement official. FBI affidavits
filed in connection with the roundup of a
Cuban spy ring involved in the 1996
shootdown of two small aircraft over the
straits of Florida charge the Cuban DGI
with conducting espionage against U.S.
military and civil aviation through a
network of some 300 agents operating
across the continent.
Exchanges between bin Laden's al-Qaeda
network and Cuban intelligence also could
involve the provision of weaponized
biological strains produced by Cuba's
extensive chemical/biological warfare
facilities exposed by Insight three years
ago (see "Fidel Castro's Deadly
Secret," July 20, 1998). Kenneth
Alibek, who developed anthrax
as deputy director of the Soviet
biological warfare Biopreperat program,
says in his book Biohazard, published last
year, that Castro has since been running
an advanced biological-weapons program
administered by scientists trained in
Moscow in the 1990s.
Reports smuggled out by Cuban dissident
scientists confirm that Castro's research
has concentrated on developing
undetectable methods of spreading deadly
bacteria, including the use of
contaminated bird flocks. Cuba, meanwhile,
has been engaging in scientific exchanges
with Iraq, say these scientists. A year
ago, Cuban Vice President Carlos Lage
opened a biotechnological
research-and-development plant in Iran,
paving the way for Castro's visit to that
country last May.
Atta's dealings with the DGI are not the
only contacts reported between Cuba's
military intelligence and al-Qaeda. The
Associated Press reported on March 4,
2000, that a young Afghani who trained at
a camp run by bin Laden in northeast
Afghanistan says he saw advisers there
from Chechnya, Sudan, Libya, Iran, North
Korea and Cuba. Some of these foreigners,
he said, had brought biological/chemical
weapons, which were stored in caves.
Three Afghani nationals and suspected
al-Qaeda members caught trying to deposit
$2 million in a bank in the Cayman Islands
last August were found to have entered the
British colony on a commercial flight from
nearby Cuba using false Pakistani
passports. British authorities who
arrested the three men believe that they
were handling drug proceeds laundered in
Havana.
Colombia's former national police chief,
Gen. Rosso José Serrano, maintains that
Cuba also has facilitated contacts between
radical Muslim militants and leftist
Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia
(FARC) guerrillas. Serrano says that about
100 Afghanis have entered Colombia during
the last decade to introduce cultivation
of heroin poppies in guerrilla-held areas.
An Egyptian terrorist belonging to
al-Gamal al-Islamiya — who was wanted in
connection with the 1997 massacre of 80
Western tourists near Cairo — entered
Colombia illegally in 1998 to hold talks
with FARC and was arrested and turned over
to U.S. authorities.
Cuban biological/chemical-warfare
technology also has been detected in
Colombia. A FARC bomb that burned out the
lungs of an entire police garrison in the
Colombian town of San Adolfo last
September contained chlorine-based poison
gas, according to a lab analysis of the
device. Some 20 Cuban military advisers
currently are operating with FARC,
according to Colombian army intelligence.
It also has intercepted guerrilla radio
communications in which FARC's military
commander, Jorge Briceno, alias "Mono
Jojoy," talks about forming an
"anti-imperialist front" to
launch terrorist attacks against targets
in the United States. "To take away
their economic resources wherever they may
be, reach into North America and get to
their own territory," says Briceno,
"to make them feel the pain which
they have inflicted on others."
In September, meanwhile, as Montes
frantically transmitted information to her
DGI spymasters through Cuba's mission to
the United Nations, according to an FBI
affidavit, Castro was ordering a military
alert in Cuba and calling up reserves. A
CIA psychiatric profiler who has studied
Castro's personality believes that the
Cuban dictator was displaying
"geriatric overexertion." But
top intelligence specialists tell Insight
that Castro may have had reasons to fear a
possible U.S. retaliation when President
George W. Bush declared his war on
terrorism.
"Tours through radical Islamic states
by Castro and his close Venezuelan ally,
President Hugo Chavez, in the months prior
to the September attacks indicate some
level of complicity or knowledge of what
was going to happen," says Lisette
Bustamante, a former aide to Castro who
currently works on the Spanish daily
newspaper La Razon.
Not only were statements by both leaders
in their Middle Eastern trips laced with
violent anti-American rhetoric, Bustamante
points out, but Chavez quite candidly told
reporters that his talks with Saddam
Hussein and heads of other oil-producing
states involved the creation of a
"new anti-imperialist axis"
against Western industrialized economies.
It was just the sort of anti-American
blather that tends to excite the faithful
remnant of the old-guard communists, say
U.S. intelligence analysts. Mysterious
predictions about some catastrophic event
in the United States began to circulate in
the electronic traffic and even were
voiced by Russia's Pravda on Aug. 1 under
the headline, "The Dollar and the
U.S. Will Fall." Based on interviews
with the Malaysian ambassador to Moscow
and a group of Russian economists, the
report was taken seriously enough for
members of Russia's parliament, the Duma,
to advise Russian citizens to cash out
dollars. An adviser to the Duma's
Commission on Economic Politics, Tatyana
Koryagina, even specified late August or
early September as the likely time for an
attack on the United States that would
lead to its economic collapse.
Martin Arostegui is a free-lance writer
for Insight magazine.
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