The Bush family,
the Cuban mafia and the Kennedy assassination
BY REINALDO
TALADRID and LAZARO BAREDO
IN 1959, a young officer and businessman from
Texas received directions to cooperate in funding
the nascent anti-Castro groups that the CIA decided
to create, but it wasn’t until 1960 that he was
assigned a more specific and overt mission: to
guarantee the security of the process of recruiting
Cubans to form an invasion brigade, a key aspect
within the grand CIA operation to destroy the Cuban
Revolution.
The CIA Texan quickly took a liking to the Cuban
assigned to him for his new mission. The system of
work, although intense, was simple. Féliz Rodríguez
Mendigutía, "El Gato," would propose a candidate to
him, who would then be checked out, both in the
Agency and among the Miami groups, and finally, the
Texan would give the go-ahead.
In that period, Félix Rodríguez already knew
quite a few Cubans, like Jorge Mas Canosa (subsequently
the leader of various counterrevolutionary
organizations and then president of the Cuban-American
National Foundation) and had confirmed his loyalty
to "the cause" and to the Americans. For that reason
he was among the first to be proposed. He passed
through the process satisfactorily, and in a meeting
in the city of Miami, which the Texan liked to make
as formal as possible, Jorge Mas Canosa officially
became an agent of the U.S. Central Intelligence
Agency.
Jorge Mas didn’t know how to thank Félix for what
he had done for him. From that moment he was
constantly grateful to him and, at the same time,
obedient to his every petition.
But Jorge Mas was far from imagining the
significance of this recruitment on the rest of his
life. The significance rested on the fact that that
Texan officer who undertook his recruitment process,
approved it and then notified him at that meeting,
was none other than George Herbert Walker Bush, the
same man who, later, between 1989 and 1992, was the
41st president of the United States.
Various sources coincide on the foregoing. Paul
Kangas, a Californian private investigator,
published an article containing part of his
investigations in The Realist in 1990, in
which he affirms that a newly discovered FBI
document places Bush as working with the now famous
CIA agent Félix Rodríguez on the recruitment of
ultra-right wing exiled Cubans for the invasion of
Cuba.
For his part, in his "Report on a Censored
Project," Dr. Carl Jensen of Sonoma State College
states: "… there is a record in the files of
Rodríguez and others involved in the Bay of Pigs
invasion, which expounds the role of Bush: the truth
is that Bush was a senior CIA official before
working with Félix Rodríguez on the invasion of
Cuba."
But Kangas is more precise in his quoted article,
when he states:
"Traveling from Houston to Miami on a weekly
basis, Bush, with Félix Rodríguez, spent 1960 and
1961 recruiting Cubans in Miami for the invasion."
Other publications that have referred to the
theme are The Nation magazine, whose August
13, 1988 edition reveals the finding of "a
memorandum in that context addressed to FBI chief J.
Edward Hoover and signed November 1963, which reads:
Mr. George Bush of the CIA;" or the Common Cause
magazine that, on March 4, 1990, affirmed: "The CIA
put millionaire and agent George Bush in charge of
recruiting exiled Cubans for the CIA’s invading army;
Bush was working with another Texan oil magnate,
Jack Crichton, who helped him in terms of the
invasion."
Without knowing it, Jorge Mas had become part of
something far more complex than the planned
mercenary invasion. The recent recruited CIA agent
became one of the participants in what was
originally known as Operation 40.
Operation 40 was the first plan of covert
operations generated by the CIA to destroy the Cuban
Revolution and was drawn up in 1959 on the orders of
the administration of President Ike Eisenhower.
In his book Cuba, la Guerra secreta de la CIA
(Cuba, the CIA’s Secret War), Divisional General (ret)
Fabián Escalante Font, former head of the Cuban
Counterintelligence Services, explained what
occurred in the early 1960.
"A few days later (end of 1959), Allen Dulles,
chief of the CIA, presented to the King (Colonel,
chief of the Western Hemisphere Division of the CIA)
memorandum to the National Security Council, which
approved the suggestion of forming a working group
within the agency which, in the short term, would
provide ‘alternative solutions to the Cuban problem.’"
The group, Escalante Font relates, was composed
of Tracy Barnes as head, and officials Howard Hunt,
Frank Bender, Jack Engler and David Atlee Phillips,
among others. Those present had one common
characteristic: all of them had participated in the
fall of the Jacobo Arbenz government in Guatemala.
General Escalante recounts in his book that,
during the first meeting, Barnes spoke at length on
the objectives to be achieved. He explained that
Vice President Richard Nixon was the Cuban "case
officer" and had met with an important group of
businessmen headed by George Bush and Jack Crichton,
both Texas oil magnates, to collect the necessary
funding for the operation.
In a 1986 edition of the Freedom Magazine
U.S. journalist L.F. Proury explains that Richard
Nixon had long and close links with the Bush family
dating back to 1946 when Nixon, responding to a
petition by Preston Bush (George’s father) presented
himself as a candidate for the U.S. Congress,
financed by the old Bush.
The group constituted within the CIA, states
Escalante in his book, set up various teams in
charge of organizing clandestine operations,
psychological warfare actions and exerting economic
and diplomatic pressure, which would put paid to the
island government. This was compounded by the
preparation of an elite group of Cuban agents who,
after specialized training, would infiltrate Cuba
and deal a mortal rearguard blow to the Revolution,
which included the assassination of its principal
leaders.
Jorge Mas Canosa gave his recruiters a very
positive impression and was immediately assigned to
a special mission. "Now things are going to take off,"
he said enthusiastically.
In the Exito magazine, Mabel Dieppa
narrates:
"He was sent to a U.S. Marines training camp
close to the Mississippi River, where he was trained
to participate in the Bay of Pigs invasion."
But Jorge Mas, as stated, had been attached to a
very special group, still within the preparations
for the mercenary invasion. The group was composed
of 160 men of total confidence and was headed by the
traitor and likewise CIA agent Higinio Díaz Ane (Nino).
In the abovementioned book, General Escalante
explains: "These men were given the mission to
attack the town of Baracoa, in the easternmost part
of the island, in order to distract the
revolutionary forces when the brigade landed at the
Bay of Pigs." Once they had taken Baracoa, they were
to head for the Guantánamo Naval Base and,
simulating Cuban troops, organize a provocation by
attacking the installation, thus facilitating a U.S.
military response with a formal reason for
intervening in the conflict created by the mercenary
invasion. That plan was the secret mechanism that
the CIA and the Pentagon had up their sleeve, and
nobody, not even President Kennedy, knew of it.
On the day of the invasion, the 160 "elite"
agency men left in a boat for their destination but,
on reaching Baracoa, fear at the movement of Cuban
troops in the area won out over the sterling
training they had received, and they confined
themselves to continue navigating south of the
island until they reached the westernmost extreme.
From there, they headed for Puerto Rico, arriving
there the same day. In Miami, as a joke, this action
was christened "Skirting round Cuba."
After the Bay of Pigs defeat in April 1961 the
CIA recouped its men. It reiterated its confidence
in them and assigned them new missions, maintaining
the objectives that gave rise to Operation 40.
In the weekly Política, the author Natacha
Herrera explained:
"Along with another 207 agents, Mas went to Fort
Benning, Georgia for basic U.S. army training and
was selected to take a special intelligence,
clandestine communication and propaganda course."
In his extensive work published for the
Esquire magazine in January 1993, Gaeton Fonzi
affirms that in Fort Benning, Mas Canosa’s friends
with whom he was most closely linked in complex
covert operations were Félix Rodríguez and Luis
Posada Carriles," the latter of whom became
notorious for the sabotage of a Cubana Airline
passenger plane in full flight over Barbados in
1976.
"After Fort Benning," says the U.S.
investigator, "there was some CIA connection in
every move or action in Jorge Mas’ career."
Precisely because of the outstanding results
obtained in Fort Benning, the Agency later assigned
Mas Canosa to another delicate mission. On this
occasion, he would have to move to an "ultra-secret"
base located a little south of Fort Benning, to join
what was known as the "New Orleans group." That
group, which took its name from the location of the
base on the outskirts of the southern U.S. city, was
mainly composed of veterans from the Bay of Pigs and
Fort Benning, although some agents of confidence
like Antonio Veciana, recently arrived from the
island and reportedly very close to Jorge Mas in
that period, were incorporated. Their preparation
was sui generis. The group took a course on the use
of means and methods of combat of the Cuban army.
The content of the mission was disclosed by
General Escalante in his book: "Once again, the plot
consisted of a self-provocation against the Yankee
base (of Guantánamo), via the infiltration of a
commando of 150 men who trained in an ultra-secret
CIA base on the outskirts of the southern U.S. city
of New Orleans."
The mission was cancelled due to the occurrences
that gave rise to the Missile Crisis in October
1962, which convinced the organizers of the
inevitability of a direct military intervention by
the U.S. army without the need of any pretext."
After this new failure, Mas Canosa was full of
rage and impotence and acknowledged to the U.S.
writer Pat Jordan in an interview that, "the two men
he most hated were Fidel Castro and John F.
Kennedy."
In the United States, the media has once again
picked up on the relationship of the émigré Cubans
who worked for the CIA with the assassination of
President Kennedy in Dallas in 1963.
During a long conversation with the investigator
Gaeton Fonzi in Havana, we discovered a story that,
given its content, it is worth reproducing. Fonzi is
not just any common or garden investigator. He had
devoted much of his life to working for various
congressional committees, including those
responsible for investigations into the covert
activities of the CIA and the assassination of
President John F. Kennedy.
A few years ago, and after much effort, Fonzi
managed to get a private interview with Antonio
Veciana, the same old buddy of Jorge Mas in the "New
Orleans group," where the two of them became close
friends while fulfilling CIA missions. Veciana had
been interrogated by the Grand Jury charged with
investigating the assassination of President
Kennedy, and years later, had had some drug-related
problems; but he vehemently affirmed to Fonzi that
these difficulties were nothing more than a "trap"
set up by somebody.
"I have a lot of information, but I am keeping
that to myself because it is my life insurance,"
Veciana told Fonzi."
Antonio Veciana Blanch was a public accountant
who worked for the Cuban sugar magnate Julio Lobo.
He rapidly opposed the Cuban Revolution and, in 1960
was recruited by the CIA in Havana. He received his
initial training in an English Language Academy
supervised by the U.S. embassy in the Cuban capital.
In October 1961, after the failure of a plot he
devised to assassination Prime Minister Fidel Castro
with a bazooka during an event at the former
Presidential Palace, Veciana fled Cuba.
In the interview that he gave to Fonzi he related
that, once in Miami, he was looked after by a CIA
official who used the pseudonym of Maurice Bishop.
Among other tasks, this "Bishop" ordered Veciana to
promote the creation of the ALPHA 66 organization.
"Bishop" had frequent contact with Veciana from
1962-1963 in the city of Dallas. Veciana recalled
that, at one of those meetings in a public building,
he saw Lee Harvey Oswald.
Fonzi noted that various acts of disinformation
were organized as part of the operation that cost
the life of President Kennedy: one in Dallas,
another in Miami and a third in Mexico City. The
objective of the disinformation was to manufacture
the image of a "revolutionary" Oswald, a "defender
of the Cuban Revolution."
Hence the ex-marine was filmed in acts of
solidarity with Cuba, demonstrating in a very
aggressive manner. But the most daring act of
disinformation was effected in Mexico City. There,
Lee Harvey Oswald turned up at the Cuban embassy to
ask for an entry visa to the island. All of that was
filmed from a surveillance post that the CIA had
opposite the Cuban embassy, so that it would be
documented.
The strange thing is, as Veciana told Fonzi, in
one of his contacts with "Bishop" in early 1963, the
latter said that he knew that he (Veciana) had a
cousin in Cuban Intelligence, who was located at the
Cuban embassy in Mexico. "Bishop" stated that if it
suited his cousin to work for them in a very
specific action, he would pay him whatever he wanted.
Veciana commented to Fonzi that he had never spoken
of this cousin to "Bishop" and also, at that time, "Bishop"
was assigned to the U.S. embassy in Mexico City and
even went directly from the Mexican capital to some
contacts in Dallas.
In fact Veciana was the cousin of the wife of the
then Cuban consul in Mexico City, Guillermo Ruiz,
and in the days following the assassination of
Kennedy, that woman was the victim of a recruitment
attempt in the same city, with the clear proposition
that, once in the United States, she would testify
as to Oswald’s "complicity" with the Cuban secret
services.
Questioned by Fonzi as to the existence of
renewed contacts with "Bishop" after the Dallas
homicide, Veciana answered that there had been,
particularly in 1971, when he received an order to
leave for Bolivia and work in the U.S. embassy in
that country, where he would appear as an official
for the Agency for International Development (USAID)
and should wait for a visit from a known person.
Fonzi checked the USAID archives in Washington and
found an application form to enter the USAID in the
name of Antonio Veciana, handwritten in letters
distinct from those of Veciana and unsigned.
The "known person" who contacted him in Bolivia
was "Bishop," at that time located in the U.S.
embassy in Chile. "Bishop" immediately incorporated
him into a team plotting an attempt on the life of
President Fidel Castro, who was to visit the South
American country.
Fonzi told us that he interviewed Antonio Veciana
again, but this time accompanied by a specialist
with the aim of composing a photofit of "Maurice
Bishop" so as to determine his real identity.
Veciana gave a detailed description and the
photofit was made. Fonzi spent weeks trying to
identify the character, and one Sunday, suddenly
received a call at home from a Republican senator
for Pennsylvania for whom he was working at the
time, and whom he had consulted on the identity of
the man in the drawing.
The senator assured him that the he was
absolutely sure that the man using the pseudonym of
Maurice Bishop was none other than David Atlee
Phillips. He was a veteran CIA officer who was in
Havana on a working visit in 1958 as a specialist in
psychological warfare, participated in the creation
of Operation 40 and later, as part of the same,
organized the Radio Swann transmitter. With time,
Phillips would become head of the Western Hemisphere
Division of the Agency.
However, at the end of 1993, in the documentary
¿Caso cerrado? (Case Closed?), the former
chief of Cuban Security , Divisional General (ret)
Fabián Escalante, revealed a secret report from one
of his agents, which spoke of a meeting between
Antonio Veciana and David Phillips in a hotel in San
Juan, Puerto Rico, in the early 70s.
"Veciana told me," said the Cuban agent, "that he
was a CIA agent and it was the CIA that assassinated
Kennedy and that senior CIA officials including
David Phillips, the official attending to him, were
behind it all. Veciana never wanted to give me any
details of that affirmation, but recently, I have
been able to confirm it, because once when I was in
a hotel with Veciana, I heard a conversation that he
had with his officer, David Phillips, in which
Veciana swore that he would never talk about what
happened in Dallas in 1963."
General Escalante guarantees that the source has
direct access to Veciana, and was in his total
confidence:
"I believe," Escalante affirmed, "that
that is very important information because I have to
say that, in 1973, when Antonio Veciana was
liquidated by the CIA; in other words, when the CIA
took him off their books, he received a compensation
payment of $300,000."
But there is more. According to Cuban State
Security investigations disclosed by General
Escalante in the abovementioned documentary, various
witnesses quoted by the Warren Commission described
two Cubans, one of them black, leaving the Daley
Plaza Book Deposit in Dallas, a few minutes after
the assassination was effected. In parallel, through
secret information and public testimony (the
statement by Marita Lorenz, ex-CIA agent to a
congressional committee), Cuban Security knew that
two days before the assassination various Cubans
were in Dallas with weapons and telescopic sights,
including Eladio del Valle and Herminio Díaz, two
paid killers and expert sharpshooters linked to the
Mafia and Batista politics. The physical
characteristics of Del Valle and Herminio Díaz
matched the descriptions that various witnesses gave
to the Warren Commission of the two Cubans seen
leaving the building seconds after the president had
been assassinated.
The really curious fact is the final fate of both
of them: Eladio del Valle was brutally murdered in
Miami when Jim Garrison, the New Orleans district
attorney initiated his investigation into the
Kennedy assassination; Del Valle was chopped into
pieces with a machete. Even more interesting was the
end of Herminio Díaz, who died near the Havana coast
in 1965, when he collided with a patrol boat while
trying to infiltrate the island with the mission of
assassinating Osvaldo Dortícos and submachine
gunning the Riviera Hotel
In order to fulfill the mission on which he was
sent, Díaz had to infiltrate the island right in the
capital via Monte Barreto in Miramar (where a number
of hotels are currently going up) at a time when,
because of an incident at the Guantánamo naval base,
the Cuban army was on combat alert, and aerial and
coastal vigilance was been reinforced to the maximum.
In the eyes of experts, and the Cuban Security, the
operation was a veritable suicide mission.
The financial organizer and planner of such "a
strange mission" was none other than Jorge Mas
Canosa.
But the history of the CIA’s links with its Cuban
agents and the Kennedy assassination has not only
been explored by Fonzi. Many other authors and
investigators, and even the film studios that gave
origin to the U.S. movies Executive Action
and JFK, have covered the subject.
In an article published in The Realist
magazine, the investigator Paul Kangas affirms:
"Among other members of the CIA recruited by
George Bush for the (Bay of Pigs) invasion) were
Frank Sturgis, Howard Hunt, Bernard Baker and Rafael
Quintero… On the day that JFK was assassinated, Hunt
and some of the subsequent Watergate team were
photographed in Dallas, as well as a group of Cubans,
one of them with an opened umbrella as a signal,
alongside the president’s limousine, right where
Kennedy was shot… Hunt and Sturgis fired on JFK from
a grassy knoll. They were photographed and seen by
15 witnesses."
On May 7, 1990, in an interview with the San
Francisco Chronicle, Frank Sturgis acknowledged:
"…the reason why we robbed in Watergate was
because (Richard) Nixon was interested in stopping
the news leaks related to the photos of our role in
the assassination of President John F. Kennedy."
Another of Bush’s recruits for the Bay of Pigs
invasion, Rafael Quintero, who was also part of this
underworld of organizations and conspiracies against
Cuba, stated:
"If I was to tell what I know about Dallas and
the Bay of Pigs, it would be the greatest scandal
that has ever rocked to nation."
Up to here are certain details of one of the
existing theories on the above-mentioned event but,
will the whole truth come out some day? Will Antonio
Veciana, former member of the "New Orleans group,"
decide to reveal his "life insurance" or Rafael
Quintero, to tell what he knows and thus, "rock the
nation?" •
NB Quotes in English retranslated from the
Spanish.