CASTRO
AND TERRORISM A CHRONOLOGY
by
Eugene Pons, with a foreword by Jaime
Suchlicki
Institute
for Cuban & Cuban-American Studies
Occasional Paper Series September 2001
"Iran
and Cuba, in cooperation with each
other, can bring America to its knees.
The U.S. regime is very weak, and we are
witnessing this weakness from close
up."
Fidel
Castro, during his tour of Iran, Syria
and Libya. Agence France Press, May 10,
2001
OPS
Advisory Board
Luis Aguilar León, Institute for Cuban
& Cuban-American Studies
Graciella Cruz-Taura, Florida Atlantic
University
José Manuel Hernández, Georgetown
University (Emeritus)
Irving Louis Horowitz, Rutgers
University
Antonio Jorge, Florida International
University
Armando Lago, Association for the Study
of the Cuban Economy
Lesbia Orta Varona, University of Miami
Jaime Suchlicki, Director Institute for
Cuban & Cuban-American Studies
FOREWORD
Since 1948
when, as a young student, Fidel Castro
participated in the violence that rocked
Colombian society and distributed
anti-U.S. propaganda, he has been guided
by two objectives: a commitment to
violence and a virulent
anti-Americanism. His struggle since and
his forty-two years rule in Cuba have
been characterized primarily by these
goals.
In the 1960's
Castro and his brother, Raul, believed
that the political and economic
conditions that produced their
revolution existed in Latin America and
that anti-American revolutions would
occur throughout the continent. Cuban
agents and diplomats established contact
with revolutionary, terrorist and
guerrilla groups in the area and began
distributing propaganda, weapons and
aid. Many Latin Americans were brought
to Cuba for training and then returned
to their countries.
At the
Tricontinental Conference held in Havana
in 1966 and attended by revolutionary
leaders from throughout the world,
Castro insisted that bullets not ballots
was the way to achieve power and
provided the institutional means to
promote his anti-American, violent line.
He insisted that "conditions exist
for an armed revolutionary
struggle" and criticized those who
opposed armed struggle, including some
Communist leaders in Latin America, as
"traitorous, rightists, and
deviationists."
Castro's
attempts in the 1960's to bring
revolutionary, anti-American regimes to
power failed. His support for guerrillas
and terrorist groups in Guatemala,
Venezuela, and Bolivia only produced
violence and suffering to those
countries and their people, which
repudiated violence as a means to
achieve power. Violence resulted in
military regimes coming to power in
several Latin American countries
For the next
two decades, the Cuban leadership,
supported by the Soviet Union, modified
its tactics. In addition to agents from
the America Department, the subversive
arm of Cuba's Communist Party, Castro
used his Armed Forces to help friendly
groups achieve power in Latin America
and Africa. In Nicaragua Cuban military
personnel, weapons and intelligence
supported and helped bring to power the
Sandinistas. In El Salvador, a bloody
civil war in part fomented and aided by
Cuba, ended in a stalemate and a
negotiated peace. In Africa, Castro
achieved his most significant victories.
The Soviet-Cuban backed Movement for the
Liberation of Angola (MPLA) faction was
installed in power in Angola and other
Cuban supported regimes came to power
throughout the continent. The Cuban
military also trained and supplied the
South-West African Peoples Organization
(SWAPO) and the African National
Congress (ANC), forces fighting the
South African regime.
Castro also
became involved with African-Americans
in the U.S. and with the Macheteros, a
Puerto Rican terrorist group. Cuba
focused particular attention on the
black struggle in the U.S., providing
aid and training to the Black Panthers
and the Black Liberation Army, as well
as a safehaven on the island for black
leaders. Castro continuously promoted
the independence of Puerto Rico and
supported the Macheteros who committed
terrorist acts and bank robberies in the
United States. Several still live in
Cuba.
Cuban
military and intelligence personnel
aided Middle Eastern groups and regimes
in their struggle against Israel, and
Cuban troops fought on the side of Arab
States, particularly Syria, during the
Yom Kippur war. Castro sent military
instructors and advisors into
Palestinian bases; cooperated with Libya
in the founding of World Mathaba, a
terrorist movement; and established
close military cooperation and exchanges
with Iraq, Libya, Southern Yemen, the
Polisario Front for the Liberation of
Western Sahara, the PLO and others in
the Middle East.
Despite the
collapse of the Soviet Union, Castro
continues to undermine U.S. policies in
the Middle East in several ways: a) by
portraying U.S. actions and diplomacy in
the region as those of an aggressor,
seeking to impose hegemony by force,
particularly in Iraq and the
perpetration of unjustified economic
sanctions on Iraq and Iran; b) by
portraying the U.S. as the main obstacle
to a peaceful settlement of the
Israel/Arab conflict; and c) by
discrediting U.S. policies and seeking
support for Cuba at the U.N. These
anti-American views and policies are
conveyed as a systematic message through
a network of Cuban embassies and agents,
as well as at the U.N. and other
non-governmental political, religious
and cultural organizations.
While not
abandoning his close relationships in
the Middle East, Castro has recently
concentrated his support on several
groups: the Fuerzas Armadas
Revolucionarias de Colombia (FARC),
where Castro, and his new ally Hugo
Chavez of Venezuela, see significant
possibilities for success; ETA, the
Basque terrorist/separatist organization
from Spain, which has found refuge and
support in Cuba, and the Irish
Republican Army (IRA), which established
its Latin American headquarters in
Havana.
American
policymakers should pay careful
attention to the intricate web of
relationships which emerges so clearly
from this chronology. It carefully
details Castro's involvement with and
support for terrorist regimes and
organizations during the past four
decades. Cuba's geographical location,
Castro's continuous connections with
these groups and states and the
harboring of terrorists in Havana
creates a dynamic that requires
vigilance and alertness. It should be
emphasized that in addition to violence
and terrorism, Castro and his regime,
have been for more than four decades,
the most vocal and active proponents of
anti-Americanism. The often-repeated
view in many countries that the United
States is an evil power, guilty for much
of the problems and sufferings of the
developing world, is owed in great part
to the propaganda efforts of Fidel
Castro.
Jaime
Suchlicki Director Institute for Cuban
and Cuban-American Studies September
2001
Castro
and Terrorism A Chronology By Eugene
Pons
1959-1967
Raúl Castro and Che Guevara
visited Cairo and established contacts
with African liberation movements
stationed in and supported by Cairo.
Both Cuban leaders visited Gaza and
expressed support for the Palestinian
cause.
Members of the Dominican
Republic "Agrupación Política
Catorce de Junio" received military
training in Cuba.
Major emphasis was placed on
instructing several hundred pro-Castro
Latin Americans in violence and
guerrilla warfare. Dominicans,
Guatemalans, Venezuelans and Chileans
were trained in special camps in Cuba
and infiltrated back to their countries.
Castro established relations
with the Algerian FLN; official and
public support was extended, weapons
were shipped to the FLN through Morocco
(1960-1961). Cuba provided shelter,
medical and educational services and
cooperation in the fields of
counter-intelligence and intelligence.
African leaders from Congo,
Ghana, Kenya, Mali, Nigeria, South
Africa, Spanish Guinea, Tanganyika and
Zanzibar arrived in Cuba for military
training.
Che Guevara engaged in
guerrilla operations in Congo-Kinshasa
(former Zaire) in 1965.
A revolutionary trained in
Cuba, John Okello, overthrew the
pro-Western government in Zanzibar in
1964 and proclaimed the "People's
Republic of Zanzibar" which was
promptly recognized by Cuba and the
Soviet Union.
Conference of Latin American
Communist Parties held in Havana agreed
to "help actively the guerrilla
forces in Venezuela, Guatemala,
Paraguay, Colombia, Honduras and
Haiti".
Group of Venezuelans, members
of the Movimiento de la Izquierda
Revolucionaria (MIR), trained in Cuba
and landed in the Venezuela coast in the
State of Miranda.
Cuban trained Guatemalans Cesar
Montes and Luis Turcios Lima led a
violent terrorist/guerrilla campaign
against the government in Guatemala.
Montes organized the Ejercito
Guerrillero de los Pobres (EGP) in
Guatemala. In the 1980's he joined the
FMLN in El Salvador and participated
actively in the bloody civil war in that
country.
Cuba welcomed the founding of
the PLO. First contacts with Palestinian
FATAH in 1965 in Algiers and Damascus.
The Tricontinental Conference
was held in Havana in January, 1966 to
adopt a common political strategy
against colonialism, neocolonialism, and
imperialism. Cuba provided the
organizational structure to support
terrorist, anti-American groups in the
Middle East and Latin America. The
Organization for the Solidarity with the
Peoples of Africa, Asia and Latin
America (OSPAAL) was created.
Fidel Castro created The
National Liberation Directorate (DLN) in
Cuba to support revolutionary groups
throughout the world. DLN was
responsible for planning and
coordinating Cuba's terrorist training
camps in the island, covert movement of
personnel and military supplies from
Cuba and a propaganda apparatus.
A Cuban controlled Latin
American Solidarity Organization (LASO),
with its permanent seat in Havana was
created to "coordinate and foment
the fight against North American
imperialism".
In Venezuela, Castro made a
relentless and determined effort to
create another Cuba by supporting the
Fuerzas Armadas de Liberación Nacional
(FALN) and promoting violence and
terrorism against the democratically
elected regime of Rómulo Betancourt.
Castro sent weapons via Cairo,
to the NLF in Southern Yemen. Cuban
agents were sent on fact-finding
missions to North and South Yemen (1967-
1968).
Cuba published a small book by
French Marxist journalist Regis Debray
Revolution in the Revolution, promoting
guerrilla warfare in Latin America. The
book was translated into various
languages and distributed widely.
Cuban supported guerrillas led
by Che Guevara moved into Bolivia in an
attempt to create "many Vietnams
" in South America.
Cuba and Syria developed a
close alliance and supported FATAH and
the Eritrean Liberation Front (ELF).
1968-1975
Cuba continued its military and
political support for FATAH after the
Syrians broke with the latter, and Cuban
military, political and intelligence
support was granted to other Palestinian
organizations.
Castro sent military
instructors and advisors into
Palestinian bases in Jordan to train
Palestinian Fedayeen (1968); first
high-level delegation from FATAH-PLO
visited Cuba (1970).
Several missions sent to
Southern Yemen to support NLF/FATAH
Ismail both politically and militarily.
Castro began supporting and
training of M19, a Colombian guerrilla
group that captured the Dominican
Embassy and the Justice building in
Bogota and assassinated several
prominent Colombian judges.
In 1970 a "Mini Manual for
Revolutionaries" was published in
the official LASO publication
Tricontinental, written by Brazilian
urban terrorist leader Carlos
Marighella. The mini manual gives
precise instruction in terror tactics,
kidnappings, etc. The short book was
translated into numerous languages and
distributed worldwide by Cuba.
Cuba commenced political and
military cooperation with Somalia's Siad
Barre (1969).
Economic and political
cooperation began with Libya in 1974.
In 1974 the National Liberation
Directorate (DLN) was reorganized into
the America Department (DA) under the
Communist Party of Cuba Central
Committee. The DA centralized control
over Cuban activities for supporting
national liberation movements. The DA
was responsible for planning and
coordinating Cuba's secret guerrilla and
terrorist training camps, networks for
the covert movement of personnel and
material from Cuba, and a propaganda
apparatus. DA agents also operated in
Europe and other regions. Trusted Castro
ally Manuel Piñeiro, "
Barbaroja" was placed in charge.
Cuba provided training and
support to the Tupamaros, a terrorist
group operating in Uruguay.
Cuba's America Department (DA)
set up a network for the funneling of
weapons and supplies to the Sandinistas
in Nicaragua.
In 1979 second in command in
Cuba's America Department (DA) Armando
Ulises Estrada, helped unify Sandinista
factions fighting Somoza.
Closer connections with
FATAH-PLO and other Palestinian
organizations were reinforced, including
training of Latin American guerrillas in
Lebanon; Cuba's military support
included counter-intelligence and
intelligence training.
Arafat visited Cuba in 1974.
Cuba provided military support
and personnel to Syria during the Yom
Kippur War (1973-1975).
Black Panther Party members
from the U.S. were trained in Canada by
Cuban personnel. Black Panther leaders
and other U.S. blacks also received
weapons and explosives training in
Havana.
Cuba joined with Algeria and
Libya on a diplomatic/political
offensive in support of Frente POLISARIO
(People's Front for the Liberation of
Western Sahara and Río del Oro); later
on provided military cooperation, and
medical services.
1976-1982
The U.S. Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA) estimated that there were
300 Palestinians training in Cuban
camps.
Cuba supported the so-called
"Steadfastness Front" against
the U.S. backed Camp David accord.
Illich Rámirez Sánchez, known
as "Carlos, the Jackal",
responsible for numerous terrorist acts
in Europe, trained in Cuba. He attended
the 1966 Tricontinental Conference in
Havana and later trained in urban
guerrilla tactics, automatic weapons,
explosives and sabotage in Cuba.
Abu Iyad, a close aid to Yasser
Arafat, stated in 1978 that hundreds of
Palestinian had been sent to Cuban
terrorist camps.
Additional military and
political support provided to the
Palestinian cause; Arafat attended the
Sixth Non-Aligned Conference in Havana
(1979).
During Havana visit, Arafat
signed agreement for military
cooperation and arms supply.
Significant hard currency loans
(tens of million) were facilitated by
Arafat-PLO to the Cuban government under
very soft terms; Cuba granted diplomatic
and political support to Arafat during
the 1982 Israeli invasion of Lebanon.
The Aden (South Yemen) regime
supported the Ethiopian radical officers
commanded by Mengistu Haile Mariam,
sending Yemeni military units in support
of the latter against Somali aggression,
and asking the Cubans to do the same.
Cuba joined in, first with a group of
officers headed by General Arnaldo
Ochoa, a move that was followed later on
by the deployment of large Cuban forces
against the Somali invasion. Also as
part of the alliance with the Aden
regime, Cuba granted some small-scale
support to the Dhofaris in their armed
struggle against the monarchy in Oman.
The Cuban trained Congolese
National Liberation Front invaded Shala,
Zaire.
As part of Cuba's alliance with
Mengistu Haile Mariam's regime in
Ethiopia, the Cuban leadership decided
to engage in active political and
military support of the Liberation
Movement of Southern Sudan headed by
John Garang against the Arab-Muslim
regime in Khartoum.
Cuba developed closer ties with
and sent military advisors to Iraq.
Cuba's America Department (DA)
operated a weapons pipeline to the
Farabundo Martí National Front (FMLN) a
terrorist group attempting to gain power
in El Salvador.
Cuba cooperated with Libya in
the political founding of the World
MATHABA in Tripoli, to provide political
support and coordinate revolutionary
violence throughout the world. Cuba
supported Libya's stand on Chad and the
FRENTE POLISARIO.
Cuban trained terrorists
members of the Guatemalan EGP kidnapped
a businessman in Guatemala. Several were
arrested in Mexico when attempting to
collect ransom.
Despite its close links with
Baghdad, Cuba recognized and praised the
Iranian Revolution. Once Iraq attacked
Iran, Castro withdrew his military
advisors from Baghdad and adopted a
position of official impartiality,
though more sympathetic to Baghdad, due
to his past relations.
1983-1990
Argentine born Cuban
intelligence agent Jorge Massetti helped
funnel Cuban funds to finance Puerto
Rican terrorists belonging to the
Machetero group. The Macheteros
highjacked a Wells Fargo truck in
Connecticut in September 1983 and stole
$7.2 million.
Cuba's America Department (DA)
provided, thru Jorge Massetti, weapons
and several thousand dollars to the
Chilean MIR.
Libyan support to Latin
American revolutionary movements,
especially in Central America and the
whole of the World MATHABA project,
declined after the U.S.bombing of
Tripoli in 1986.
Cuban agents in Mexico engaged
in bank robberies to finance several
terrorist groups from Latin America
operating out of Mexico.
The Palestinian Intifada
increased Cuba's support for Arafat and
the PLO, both diplomatic and military.
Several dozen Mexicans received
training in terrorism and guerrilla
warfare in Sierra del Rosario, Pinar del
Rio Province and in Guanabo, in eastern
Cuba.
After the negotiations leading
to the establishment of the Palestinian
National Authority, Cuban-Palestinian
military cooperation was enhanced,
including the areas of
counter-intelligence and intelligence.
In early 1989, Cuban General
Patricio de la Guardia directed a plot
in Havana and charged Jorge Massetti
with blowing up the U.S. transmission
balloon of TV Martí located in the
Florida Keys.
Cuba condemned Iraq for its
invasion and annexation of Kuwait,
supporting the latter's sovereignty; it
also condemned U.S. military operations
in the Gulf and abstained at the U.N.
from supporting the bulk of the
sanctions imposed on Baghdad. A Cuban
military delegation was sent to Iraq to
learn and share what was considered
vital information and experiences from
U.S. combat operations in Kuwait and
Iraq.
Cuba provided advanced weapons
and demolition training to the Tupac
Amaru Revolutionary Movement (MRTA) in
Perú. The Tupac Amaru attacked the U.S.
Embassy in 1984; bombed the Texaco
offices in 1985 and attacked the
residence of the U.S. Ambassador in 1985
all in Lima, Perú.
1991-2001
ETA, a Spanish terrorist
organization seeking a separate Basque
homeland, established the Cuartel
General (General Headquarters) in
Havana.
A high-level PLO military
delegation including the head of
Intelligence paid a visit to Cuba.
On February 24, 1996, Cuban Air
Force Migs shot down, in international
waters, two small unarmed civilian
planes belonging to Brothers to the
Rescue, a Miami based group. All
occupants were killed, including three
American citizens.
The election of Abdelaziz
Bouteflika (April 1999) as President of
Algeria, opened new opportunities for
Cuba, given Bouteflika's close
relationship with the Cuban government
for more than three decades.
PLO leaders continue to have
close relations with the Cuban
leadership, having access to specialized
military and intelligence training,
either in Cuba or Palestinian territory,
and in the sharing of intelligence.
A spokesman for the Basque
government in Spain met in Havana with
two high level ETA terrorist taking
refuge in Cuba, José Angel Urtiaga
Martinez and Jesús Lucio Abrisqueta
Corte.
Cuba continued to provide safe
haven to several terrorists fugitives
from the U.S. They include: Black
Liberation Army leader Joanne Chesimard
aka Assata Shakur, one of New Jersey's
most wanted fugitives for killing a New
Jersey State trooper in 1973 and Charlie
Hill a member of the Republic of New
Afrika Movement wanted for the hijacking
of TWA 727 and the murder of a New
Mexico State trooper
A number of Basque ETA
terrorists who gained sanctuary in Cuba
some years ago continued to live on the
island, as did several Puerto Ricans
members of the Machetero Group.
Castro refused to join the
other Ibero-American heads of state in
condemning ETA terrorism at the 2000
Ibero-American Summit in Panamá and
slammed Mexico for its support of the
Summit's statement against terrorism.
Castro continues to maintain
ties to several state sponsors of
terrorism in Latin America. Colombia's
two largest terrorist organizations, the
Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia
(FARC) and the National Liberation Army
(ELN), both maintain a permanent
presence on the island.
Colombian officials arrested
IRA members Niall Connelly, Martin
McCauley and James Monaghan and accused
then of training the Revolutionary Armed
Forces of Colombia (FARC). Connelly had
been living in Cuba as the
representative of the IRA for Latin
America.
Former Defense Department
counter-terrorism expert John More told
UPI that Cubans, militant Palestinians,
Hezbollah and even advisors from the
leftist government of Venezuela are all
active in Colombia.
During the trial of several
Cuban spies in Miami, one of the accused
Alejandro Alonso revealed on December
30, 2000 that he was instructed from
Havana to locate areas in South Florida
"where we can move persons as well
as things, including arms and
explosives."
Speaking at Tehran University
in Iran on May 10, 2001 Fidel Castro
vowed that "the imperialist king
will finally fall".
Eugene
Pons is the Coordinator of Cuba's
Information System at the Institute for
Cuban and Cuban-American Studies,
University of Miami.
Glossary
BPP - Black Panther Party -
Founded in the United States in 1966 by
Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale. It
adopted Marxist-Leninist principles
along with urban guerrilla warfare, and
a structure similar to the American
Communist party.
DGI - Directório General de
Inteligencia - The Cuban Department in
charge of collecting intelligence and
carrying out covert operations outside
Cuba.
DA - America Department -
Centralized control over Cuban
activities for supporting national
liberation movements, responsible for
planning and coordinating Cuba's secret
guerrilla and terrorist camps, and
propaganda apparatus.
DLN - National Liberation
Directorate - Organization created in
Cuba to support revolutionary groups
throughout the world. Responsible for
planning and coordinating Cuba's
terrorist training camps in the island,
covert movement of personnel and
military supplies from Cuba, and
propaganda apparatus.
EGP - Ejercito Guerrillero de
los Pobres - A political-military
Marxist-Leninist organization that
followed Cuba and Vietnam as
revolutionary models. This Guatemalan
insurgent organization was trained in
Cuba and was very active during the
1970s, seeking to depose the political
and military structure of the country.
ELF - Eritrean Liberation Front
- The most influential Eritrean
organization fighting for secession from
Ethiopia in the 1960s, actively
supported by the Cuban and Syrian regime
since 1965. Various internal divisions
developed later on until the late 1970s,
when a new front was built based on very
different domestic and external
alliances and, eventually led the
Eritreans to victory. Cuba's support to
Mengistu Haile Mariam's regime in 1978
meant the cessation of previous Cuban
backing to the Eritrean cause.
ELN - National Liberation Army
- Organized by the Castro regime, this
Colombian Marxist insurgent group was
founded in 1965. Its main terrorist
activities includes kidnappings and
extortion targeting foreign employees of
large corporations.
ETA - Basque Separatist
Movement - This organization was founded
by militants and leftist students from
the University of Madrid in 1962. They
formed guerilla units that commit
violent terrorist acts claiming that
they are fighting for freedom of the
Basque Region, in Spain. This group has
close relations with the IRA. The two
groups have offices in Havana and their
members have found safe haven in Cuba.
FALN - Fuerzas Armadas de
Liberación Nacional - A Venezuelan
guerrilla organization trained by Cuba
in violence and terrorism.
FARC - Revolutionary Armed
Forces of Colombia - Established in
1964, the FARC is the oldest and
best-equipped Marxist insurgency in
Colombia. It is a well-organized
terrorist group that controls several
rural and urban areas. It has received
financial and military aid from Cuba and
many of its members were trained in
Havana. FATAH - Palestine National
Liberation Movement - Founded in 1959 by
younger generations of Palestinians that
had experienced the defeats of 1948 and
1956. The FATAH are strongly committed
to a radical nationalist platform to
fight for Palestine and against Arab
intervention and manipulations of the
Palestinian problem. Mostly an
underground organization until the June
War in 1967 when it transformed itself
into the most powerful and influential
party inside Palestinian and Arab
politics. FLN - Front de Libération
National - The political and military
organization that led the war of
national liberation against French
colonial rule between 1954 and 1962.
Ruling political party until the 1980s
in Algeria.
FMLN - Farabundo Martí
National Front - Formed in 1970, the
FMLN is a terrorist Marxist-Leninist
organization intent on establishing a
communist revolutionary regime in El
Salvador. The FMLN was extremely active
in its terrorist campaign, receiving
assistance from Nicaragua and Cuba.
FSLN - Frente Sandinista de
Liberación Nacional - This organization
was founded in Havana in 1961 when
Carlos Fonseca-Amador's Nicaraguan
Patriotic Youth organization merged with
Tomas Borge's Cuban-supported insurgent
group. The group adopted
Marxist-Leninist ideology and gained
support from the Castro government,
employing low-level guerrilla warfare
and urban terrorism tactics to overthrow
the Somoza dictatorship.
IRA - Irish Republican Army -
The IRA is the most dangerous terrorist
organization of Northern Ireland dating
back to the early 1920s. Although, it
wasn't until the 1970's when the IRA
began terrorist actions and resurrected
the historical conflicts. The IRA
targets political transformation for
United Ireland by eliminating Britain
from Northern Ireland and replacing the
government of Northern Ireland with a
socialist government. Its Latin American
headquarters are in Havana.
LASO - Latin American
Solidarity Organization - A Cuban
controlled organization founded during
the 1966 Tri-Continental Conference in
Havana to "coordinate and foment
the fight against North American
imperialism."
M-19 - Movimiento 19 de Abril -
A Castro supported group formed in 1974
to disrupt Colombia's government through
acts of terrorism and violence. The M-19
was very active throughout the 1980s
receiving assistance and training from
the Montoneros and Tupamaros groups and
the Cuban government, causing Colombia
to temporarily sever diplomatic
relations with Cuba.
M-6-14 - Agrupación Politica
Catorce de Junio - Dominican guerrilla
organization trained in Cuba.
MACHETEROS - This terrorist
organization is composed of four Puerto
Rican groups: 1) the Macheteros, 2) the
Ejercito Popular Borícua (EPB), 3) the
Movimiento Popular Revolucionario, and
4) the Partido Revolucionario de
Trabajadores Puertorriqueños. Most of
the Macheteros have been trained in
Cuba, were they have established
relations with other terrorist groups.
They are responsible for several
terrorist acts within the United States
and throughout Puerto Rico.
MIR - Movimiento de la
Izquierda Revolucionaria - A Chilean
insurgent organization founded in 1965
and supported by Castro. The MIR was
very active in the mid-1970s when they
promoted violence and occupied several
rural areas in Chile. The group
encountered several set backs during the
1980s that essentially ended their
activity.
MONTONEROS - An Argentinean
guerilla organization that was formed in
1968 as a Peronist urban anti-government
group. It adopted a Marxist ideology in
the mid-1970s after it united with the
Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de
Argentina. In 1977, many of its members
were exiled and its numbers reduced to
less than 300.
MRTA - Tupac Amaru
Revolutionary Movement -
Marxist-Leninist revolutionary
organization formed in 1983 and
supported by the Castro regime. The
MRTA's intent was to establish a Marxist
regime in Peru through terrorism,
although Peru's counter terrorism
program diminished the groups' ability
to effectively carry out terrorist
attacks.
NLF - National Front for the
Liberation of South Yemen - Created in
1962 in the course of the revolution in
North Yemen against the monarchy and
supported by Nasser, the NLF is another
important and successful branch of the
Arab Nationalist Movement. Since 1965 it
has had very close relations with Cuba.
In 1966-1967, it broke with Nasser and
finally forced the British to negotiate
and evacuate Aden. OSPAAL - Organization
for the Solidarity of the Peoples of
Africa, Asia and Latin America - Founded
in 1966 in Cuba at the Tri-Continental
Conference, this organization aims to
support the struggle of the people of
Africa, Asia and Latin America against
imperialism, colonialism and
neo-colonialism. PLO - Palestine
Liberation Organization - This
organization was founded in Cairo in
1964 under the auspices of Egypt (then
known as the United Arab Republic) to
serve Nasser's manipulations of the
Palestinian cause. The group was
composed mostly of conservative
Palestinian intellectuals and
bureaucrats serving Arab governments.
The PLO was an instrument of Nasser's
foreign policy until the June War of
1967, when the old PLO leadership
collapsed to be replaced by FATEH's
leadership headed by Arafat. POLISARIO -
People's Front for the Liberation of
Western Sahara and Río del Oro - The
Frente POLISARIO was inspired by the ANM
tradition and the Algerian FLN and was
created to fight against the
Spanish-Morrocan-Mauritinian
arrangements to split the former colony
of Saguía el Hamra/Río del Oro (known
as Western Sahara) between the two
African states. This group enjoyed
active support from Algeria and Libya
and Cuba. POPULAR FRONT FOR THE
LIBERATION OF PALESTINES - The most
important branch of the Arab Nationalist
Movement (ANM), created in the 1950s as
radical followers of Nasser. After the
June War of 1967, the group
disassociated itself from Nasser and
focused on building a more radical
alternative within the Palestinians
under the name of Popular Front. The
group has strong alliances within
Lebanon, Jordan, Yemen, and the Gulf,
and was heavily engaged in terrorist
activities during the 1970s.
TRICONTINENTAL - Cuban publication
disseminated by the Organization for the
Solidarity of the Peoples of Africa,
Asia and Latin America (OSPAAL) in four
languages: Spanish, English, French, and
Italian / promoting the Castro line of
armed struggle.
TUPAMAROS or MNL - Movimiento
Nacional de Liberación Tupamaros - This
Uruguay insurgent group was organized in
the early 1960s by law student Raul
Sendic. The Tupamaros were one of the
first terrorist groups to use guerrilla
warfare in urban areas and established
independent terrorist cells throughout
the country.
WORLD MATHABA - A Libyan
project from the late 1970s to promote
political, financial, and military
support for revolutionary movements
throughout the world. Ghaddafi called on
other "revolutionary
governments" to support this
project, which Cuba did. MATHABA was
essentially a tool in the hands of the
Libyans to project their individual
goals and agenda. Financial and military
assistance was never a collective
decision, but responded for the most
part to bilateral arrangements between
Ghaddafi's regime and individual
organizations, some of which resorted,
at different stages, to terrorist
methods like the IRA and ETA.
Insurgencies in Central America, like
the Sandinistas and others, were
privileged beneficiaries along with the
African National Congress, Frente
POLISARIO, and others.
Select
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