LUIS Posada Carriles was actively working for the
CIA in February 1976 in Caracas, just a few months
before the sabotage of the Cubana Aviation passenger
plane, although the agency tried to cover up the
relationship by means of a deceptive document.
This was confirmed by a recently declassified
document from headquarters of the Venezuelan
Intelligence Agency (DISIP) during the Carlos Andrés
Pérez government, which describes the terrorist’s
activities and clearly defines the level of
relationship that he maintained at that time with
the U.S. embassy in Caracas.
For now, Posada is to remain detained in the
United States, According to a written statement from
the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency
issued on March 22, which does not rule out "removing
him to a third country" other than Cuba or
Venezuela.
To date, the U.S. authorities have not expressly
stated the true status of Posada’s relationship with
the CIA at the time of the attack, which led to the
death of 73 people, apart from declassifying scant
elements of information that were released with the
obvious intention of deflecting responsibility for
the terrorist act from the Agency.
Dated February 26, 1976, the aforementioned
document was written on a form titled AGENT
REPORT with the control number 00314.
In the first box is written verbatim:
Subject: LUIS POSADA CARRILES (aka.) EL BAMBI,
C.I. 5.304.069
Place: Caracas.
Regarding: INFORMATION ABOUT THE SUBJECT,
COPEY AND U.S. AGENT (COPEY is an obvious
misspelling of the political party acronym COPEI)
The text is typed and in the bottom corner a box
titled "Agent Code," reads "A-12."
DEATH THREATS
The first point of the document explains that the
agency "has information" that Posada is carrying out
an investigation into the whereabouts of a DISIP
Inspector, "specifically in his residence."
It details that "the subject has threatened the
life of civilian William Casas for accusing the
subject’s employee, civilian Adolfo Reyes Mejias (aka.
Hernan), of blackmail and extortion."
According to the text, this Hernan used his job
in the National Inspectorate of Identification and
Aliens "to facilitate investigations carried out by
the agency headed by the subject, which is located
at Edificio Majestic, Piso 7, Oficinas-apartamento
78" on the downtown Avenida Libertador.
This document is of course referring to the
Commercial and Industrial Investigations Agency (ICICA)
that Posada created in June 1975.
In the document’s second point, agent "A-12"
defines the subject as having 36 employees who
engage in investigations, track individuals, tap
telephones, and enter homes with the aid of modern
locksmiths’ equipment, etc."
"Much of this equipment was unduly appropriated
and is the property of the DISIP. The equipment was
stolen by civilian Adolfo Reyes Mejías", specified
the individual who drafted the report.
JOAQUIN CHAFARDET AND HERMES ROJAS
Listed in the third point, among the names of
Posada’s collaborators, is Joaquín Chaffardet Ramos,
the Venezuelan lawyer who was the sole witness for
the defense in Luis Posada Carriles’ recent trial
before an immigration judge in El Paso, Texas.
Also mentioned is "Hermes José Rojas Peralta, C.I.
3.185.945". Incredibly, up until 2004, Rojas
occupied the post of police chief for the state of
Miranda, Venezuela and was the right-hand man of
coup leader Governor Enrique Mendoza. Fortunately,
both were swept away in the 2004 elections.
It has also been revealed, 30 years later, that
this character worked under the orders of Luis
Posada Carriles during the operations leading to the
overthrow and death of Chilean President Salvador
Allende.
He currently maintains relations with Venezuelan
and Cuba- American terrorist circles in Miami,
including Rodolfo Frómeta, who heads the
paramilitary group Comandos F4, tolerated by the
FBI. Frómeta was one of the most loquacious of the
extremists who made a recent statement on Miami
television in favor of the use of terrorist violence
against Cuba.
CIA AGENT FROM WHEN TO WHEN?
Regarding the clandestine character of Posada’s
activities and those of his investigation agency,
the declassified DISIP document states in a fourth
point:
"We have information that the subject has
undertaken special tasks for the U.S. embassy,
specifically for the CIA, which has him classified
as a mercenary."
And added as a "note" to signal the importance of
the reported matter: "Regarding the present report,
Inspector (NAME CROSSED OUT) would like to
personally discuss other points with the ranking
Colonel of the Interior Security Division."
According to another document declassified in May
2005 by the National Security Archives of George
Washington University, Luis Posada Carriles was
recruited by the CIA when he was in the U.S. army,
between 1963 and 1965. However, other sources reveal
his ties to the Agency began when he was recruited
as a participant in Operation 40, which united a
group of specially trained thugs at the same time as
the failed Bay of Pigs invasion in April 1961.
The CIA placed Posada Carriles in Venezuela in
1967, as a functionary of DIGEPOL, which later
became the DISIP where, under the name Commissioner
Basilio, he directed bloody operations of repression.
In the course of 1976, Posada and his
investigations agency was linked to a series of
violent actions carried out in various countries by
the CORU, an organization which he directed in
partnership with Orlando Bosch and with the
complicity of terrorists such as José Pepe Vázquez
Blanco, Ricardo Morales Navarrete, Héctor Carbonel
Arenas, Francisco Pimentel, Nelly Rojas and Salvador
Romaní Orúe, several of whom are still engaging in
conspiratorial activities.
The U.S. declassified document tries to place the
end of relations between Posada and the CIA in 1974,
although it admits to some contact with him as late
as June 1976.
The sabotage of the Cuban passenger plane
occurred on October 6, 1976. Venezuelans Freddy Lugo
and Hernán Ricardo Lozano concealed two bombs on the
DC-8. All 73 passengers died, including a pregnant
woman.
Upon interrogation by the Barbados police, Lugo
and Ricardo stated that they had contacts with the
CIA – a notebook with the telephone numbers of
various officers located in Caracas was taken from
them – and they immediately exposed their bosses:
Luis Posada Carriles and Orlando Bosch. The DISIP
subsequently arrested both Posada and Bosch and
found abundant evidence in Posada Carriles’ office
not only of his participation in this crime together
with his accomplices, but also of various other
crimes.
Oddly, it was through the FBI — and NOT its own
agency — that this document was declassified in May
2005. The CIA report dated October 16, 1976 attempts
to explain the agency’s relation with Posada just
days after the explosion of the aircraft. The author
of the declassified text maintained the necessary
confusion and did not specify when Posada joined
that controversial U.S. intelligence agency.
The text simply says:
The employer in Caracas of both Lugo and Lozano
is Luis Posada Carriles, former chief of the
counterintelligence division of the DISIP (…).
Posada is a former agent of the CIA. He was amicably
terminated in July 1967 but contact was
reestablished in October 1967. He lost his position
with the DISIP in March 1974 as a result of a change
in the Venezuelan government and was amicably
terminated. We have maintained occasional contact
with him. His last reported contact with us was
in June 1976 when he unsuccessfully sought
assistance regarding a visa problem."
Lies. The facts demonstrate much more clearly the
real relationship of Posada and his partner Orlando
Bosch with the CIA at that time: only four days
after having been arrested, due to the confessions
of Lugo and Lozano regarding the sabotage of the
plane in Barbados, the U.S. government began
maneuvers to extradite both terrorists to the United
States for reasons still undisclosed.
Another secret report, written only days after
the explosion of the plane and declassified by the
Venezuelan Direction of Military Intelligence,
literally explains not only the support given by the
U.S. State Department to Posada and his agency but
also the material aid provided to him precisely by
the CIA.
This recently revealed document specifies that "information
has been received that the U.S. Department of State,
through the CIA, assisted him with technical
equipment for the tracking and interception of
communications and to set up an Investigations
Office."
Posada escaped from the San Carlos Prison in
Caracas August 18, 1985, and immediately joined the
trafficking of drugs for weapons operation devised
by the CIA and managed by Félix Rodríguez Mendigutía,
operating out of the Salvadorian airport of Ilopango.
What is irrefutable is that in one way or another,
with or without a formal contract, U.S. authorities
maintained a frequent, close, and constant
relationship with their "mercenary" and his
investigations agency and that they not only learned
of his plans but also could have perfectly known,
directed, revised, authorized and even financed them.
And for this reason, they have always protected,
in one way or another, Posada, Bosch and other
related criminals. Just like they are doing now in
the totally manipulated immigration case of Posada,
a man who, under the nickname Commissioner Basilio,
freely tortured and murdered people in the basement
of the DISIP offices for years.
That is why the work of the five Cubans still
imprisoned in the United States for having
infiltrated the ranks of the Miami mafia is so
deserving of respect and why the struggle for their
liberation is such a noble one.