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GAETON FONZI
The arrogance of the Bush government
matches Posada’s
BY JEAN-GUY
ALLARD—Special for Granma International—
“THE arrogance
of power the Bush administration is now exhibiting
regarding inquiries about Luis Posada Carriles
having been illegally infiltrated back into Miami is
the same sort of arrogance I saw in the man on a
personal level when I first met him,” says Gaeton
Fonzi, when asked about his thoughts on the asylum
request the Cuban American terrorist has made in the
U.S.
Fonzi is a former
House Select Committee on Assassinations
investigator, famous for having told the truth about
the assassination conspiracy of President John F.
Kennedy. His book on the subject, The Last
Investigation, is considered by many specialists
on this controversial subject to be their most
respected reference.
Posada's lawyer
filed his petition last week with Immigration and
Customs Enforcement of the Department of Homeland
Security, but remained hidden in an unknown location
in South Florida.
A Cuban native
who also has Venezuelan citizenship, the 77-year-old
terrorist entered the United States illegally
through Mexico about one month ago. Por Esto!,
Yucatan's main daily newspaper, reported that a
Miami shrimp boat, "La Santrina," owned by Cuban-American
developer Santiago Alvarez, picked up Luis Posada
Carriles from Isla Mujeres on March 14 to secretly
take him to Miami.
In an interview
from Havana by e-mail, Fonzi recalled how he met
Posada in the Venezuelan jail where he was
imprisoned for the 1976 Cubana Airlines bombing in
which 73 people died.
“I was then an
investigator for the U.S. House Select Committee on
Assassinations and my immediate interest in Posada
revolved around something Antonio Veciana had told
me.”
Cuban American
terrorist Antonio Veciana was the founder of Alpha
66 and was involved in a number of assassination
attempts on Cuban President Fidel Castro, including
one in Chile in 1971.
“The seed of that
plan, Veciana said, was planted by his secret 'advisor,'
an American he knew only as Maurice Bishop — that
was the name, we later would learn, used by David
Atlee Phillips before he became head of the CIA’s
Western Hemisphere Division.
“The Chile plan
involved using two assassins credentialed as
legitimate television reporters from Venezuela,
their weapons hidden in their TV camera.” Veciana
said that among those involved in setting up the
scheme, obtaining press credentials and authentic
documents from Caracas, was Luis Posada, Fonzi
remembers. “ It was an easy task for Posada because
at the time, although still on the CIA payroll, he
was working for DISIP, the Venezuelan secret police.”
But something
more than this plot was intriguing the Kennedy
assassination investigator: “Not the main plan but
a subplot which Veciana said was the brainchild of
Posada.
“Just as Oswald
was set up to be the 'patsy' in the Kennedy
conspiracy, Posada had devised a scheme where an
unsuspecting co-conspirator was set up to be the 'patsy'
in the Castro assassination plan. Where an Oswald
imposter was sent to be photographed entering the
Cuban embassy in Mexico City, thereby linking him to
Castro, Posada had an individual resembling one of
the gunmen photographed while approaching and
speaking with Russian intelligence agents in
Caracas, while actually only asking for a light for
his cigarette.
“Counter-intelligence expert David Phillips would,
of course, make sure those photographs would get
world-wide distribution after Castro was
assassinated. The whole plan collapsed, of course,
when the gunmen froze into inaction at the last
moment.”
When released,
the House Select Committee’s report on the Kennedy
assassination was described as "a full and complete
investigation," as mandated by law when Congress
established the committee.
But Mr Fonzi has
a very different opinion: “In fact, the
investigation was mostly a farce, stunted by
political and bureaucratic restraints and sabotaged
from within by the CIA. Time and again leashes were
put on committee investigators who wanted to dig
deeper into what looked like crucial areas to
explore or important suspects to interview. That
happened a lot to me and my investigative partner in
Miami, Al Gonzales, a former ace homicide detective
in New York.”
They had long
pressed unsuccessfully for permission to interview
both Luis Posada and Orlando Bosch under oath.
“Our request kept
getting deferred for various reasons, not the least
of which was chief counsel Robert Blakey’s strong
insistence that organized crime killed JFK. However,
as the committee’s time was running out it became
apparent that its final report might reveal a few
gaping holes in the committee’s 'full and complete'
investigative effort.
“The depth of the
effort or lack of follow-up didn’t matter, as long
as the base was touched. It became obvious even to
Blakey that not touching base with Posada and Bosch
would result in a much too apparent omission in the
final report.”
By that time,
Posada and Bosch were in jail in Venezuela.
“Both Gonzales
and I were pleased when Blakey gave us permission to
go to Venezuela to interview them, even though they
would not be under oath and the threat of possible
additional charges for perjury.
“To arrange our
interviews with Posada and Bosch we had to first
meet with the Venezuelan chief of state security,
Orlando García Vásquez whom, we later learned, was
another Cuban exile on the CIA’s payroll. García was
very cordial and cooperative and arranged for us to
interview Posada and Bosch individually in a small
visiting room in the Cuartel San Carlos, a prison
that seemed to be run rather casually by the
Venezuelan air force.
"In retrospect,
what struck me most about the interviews with Posada
and Bosch was the contrast in the degree of candor
and, I believe, honesty. With his broad, dark brows
and thick glasses, Bosch bore a prison pallor, a
heavy weariness and air of dishevelment. He was
cordial, expressed no reluctance to cooperate and,
in the end, said he would be willing to sign a
deposition or sworn statement to everything he had
told us.”
Bosch’s
assessment of the Kennedy assassination surprised
the two U.S. investigators, although it was the same
as Antonio Veciana’s.
“Bosch said he
had never studied the details but, unlike many of
his fellow Miami exiles eager to stir up a U.S.
reaction against Fidel, Bosch said he didn’t believe
that Castro was involved. "What could Castro gain by
doing that?" Bosch asked.
Bosch admitted he
was "a good friend" of Veciana and was aware of his
plot against Castro in Chile in 1971.
“He said, however,
he did not learn of the details of the plan from
Veciana but from an associate. That "associate,"
from other points Bosch revealed, was obviously his
prison pal and co-conspirator in the airline bombing,
Luis Posada. Bosch expressed deep anger that the two
gunmen in the plot failed in their mission. He
called them cowardly bastards.
The candid
assessments offered by Bosch were in striking
contrast to what they got from Luis Posada, says
Fonzi.
“He strolled into
the room casually self-assured, then a good-looking
guy in his late forties, tanned and with no hint of
prison pallor. His brown hair was trimmed and styled,
his shirt tailored, his trousers sharply creased.
Prison life in Venezuela seemed to agree with him.
“Posada put his
feet up on his desk, smiled and admitted to very
little. He said he did not know Veciana well, may
have met him once or twice and was not involved with
him in a Castro assassination plot. Posada was
deliberately vague about the chronology of his
association with the CIA. He said he did not
remember when he left the agency’s employ. He also
said he did not know David Atlee Phillips, the
agency’s key figure in its secret war against
Castro."
Posada did not
know then that Phillips himself, aware that the
committee had access to some agency records, had
admitted that Posada was one of his operatives and
worked with him closely on Chilean activities.
“The arrogance
and disdain with which Posada treated official
investigators sent by a U.S. congressional committee
representing the people of the United States
reflects the power of a secret government within the
U.S. government.
"For at least a
few decades now, a key part of that secret
government’s power core has involved the political
and financial influence of the anti-Castro Cuban
community in Miami.
”From this
community also came the secret government’s most
effective covert action elements, including men like
Luis Posada. It is no wonder now that men like
Posada should return to their home base of Miami and
seek, in their last years, solace and acceptance for
their life-long dedication to terrorism as a
political weapon,” concludes the investigator, who
adds ironically, “Only in Miami.” |