A Double Standard on Terrorism
by Saul Landau
In These Times magazine, March 4, 2002
President Bush repeatedly warns other nations of the consequences
of harboring terrorists, yet he seems to have forgotten the long
list of men- living freely in his brother Jeb's home state-who
have terrorized and swear they will continue to terrorize Cuba.
This story begins in 1990, when, with the collapse of the
Soviet Union, Cuba's economy nose-dived. By 1991, lacking jobs
and sufficient food, thousands of Cubans propelled themselves
toward Florida on inner tubes. In response to this wave of rafters,
some of whom died at sea, emerged Brothers to the Rescue, ostensibly
a corps of volunteer pilots to spot rafters in the dangerous waters
separating Cuba and the Florida Keys and radio their positions
to nearby ships.
However, by 1995, after Washington and Havana had agreed to
implement a legal migration process, the wave of rafters subsided.
Brothers to the Rescue changed their mission from an allegedly
humanitarian one to outright provocation.
Brothers to the Rescue was founded by Jose Basulto, a man
whom the CIA had trained for the Bay of Pigs Invasion. In August
1962, a year and a half after that fiasco, Basulto went on a CIA-authorized
raid into Cuba during which he shot at a hotel, fired into a theater,
and blasted a Havana residential section. Twenty people died.
More than 30 years later, in June 199S, Basulto filed a false
flight plan, claiming a mission to the Bahamas, and instead flew
his plane from Florida to Cuba, dropping anti-Castro leaflets
over Cuban territory. On July 13, he returned to drop religious
medals, dipping his small plane over the rooftops of populated
areas.
These flights coincided with a terrorist campaign by other
militant anti-Castro exiles to cripple Cuba's tourist economy.
Luis Posada Carriles, an exile linked to dozens of bombings and
assassination attempts in the past 40 years, told a New York Times
reporter that the prestigious Cuban American National Foundation
financed a scheme to bomb tourist sites in Havana. Posada Carriles'
agents planted more than a dozen bombs, killing one Italian tourist,
wounding several people and doing extensive property damage.
However, the FBI showed little enthusiasm in responding to
Cuba's request to investigate the Florida-based exiles' role in
the tourist bombings. In January 1996, one National Security Council
official even wrote a letter on White House stationary to the
FAA, requesting that the Brothers' pilots licenses be suspended
for having filed false flight plans. But the FAA, like the FBI,
did nothing.
After getting little satisfaction from its formal demands
that the State Department stop the flights, Cuba covertly sent
spies to Florida. Posing as Castro-haters, the spies penetrated
some of the violent anti-Castro groups. Cuba's intelligence chiefs
directed some of the spies who were pilots to infiltrate Brothers
to the Rescue.
On February 24, 1996, after receiving warnings from the U.S.
government not to fly over Cuba, and direct orders from Cuban
air traffic control not to enter its territory, a trio of aircraft
with Basulto flying in the lead entered Cuban airspace. Cuban
MlGs shot down two of the three encroaching planes; only Basulto's
escaped the missiles. (A debate continues as to whether the actual
shootdowns occurred over Cuban or international airspace.)
The FBI had discovered the spy network in 1996 and monitored
their communications until arresting them in 1999. At their trial,
U.S. prosecutors charged the spies with complicity in murder of
the pilots, downplaying the fact that a U.S. official had indirectly
informed the Cuban government of the Brothers' flight plan. And
Basulto testified that he had changed the violent approach of
his youth to that of Ghandi and Martin Luther King, except in
the case of Cuba where, he maintained, violence was still necessary.
A federal judge then handed down sentences ranging from life imprisonment
to 15 years.
Yet what would the U.S. Air Force have done-or what would
they do now-if unauthorized planes entered our airspace?
In the case of the Brothers, the Cuban government showed patience,
giving repeated warnings to the State Department. This soft approach
by Cuba was unusual in light of the terrorist air tragedy that
anti-Castro exiles had inflicted on a Cuban commercial airliner.
In October 1976, Posada Carriles and Orlando Bosch, another terrorist
with strong links to U.S. intelligence agencies, blew up a Cubana
Airlines passenger jet carrying 73 people. Both were protected
by the U.S. government. And in 1991, George Bush 1, over the objections
of the FBI and INS, granted Bosch asylum in the United States.
In a recent speech, Fidel Castro raised this apparent contradiction
in U.S. anti-terrorist policy. "We have the right to ask,"
Castro said, "what will be done about Posada Carriles and
Orlando Bosch, the perpetrators of that monstrous terrorist act
... and about those who planned and financed the bombs that were
placed in the hotels in [Havana], and the assassination attempts
against Cuban leaders, which haven't stopped for a minute in more
than 40 years?"
In short, the Bush administration continues to harbor some
terrorists, as if this policy in no way contradicted its profession
that terrorism is the world's worst sin. H
Saul Landau is director of digital media and international
outreach at Cal Poly Pomona University. His latest film is Maquila:
A Tale of Two Mexicos.
Terrorism
watch
Index
of Website
Home
Page