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TERRORIST IN SEARCH OF CITIZENSHIP
While thousands died in Vietnam, Posada was
torturing in Venezuela
BY JEAN-GUY ALLARD—Special
for Granma International—
WHILE thousands of U.S. youth —many against their
will— were sent to die in Vietnam, Luis Posada
Carriles was being trained in counterinsurgency
techniques at Fort Benning and later assassinated
and tortured individuals in Venezuela where he was
employed as a henchman in 1975 when the Vietnam War
ended.
Today, the terrorist of Cuban origin is trying to
falsely claim the title of Vietnam vet in order to
give himself respectability in the eyes of the U.S.
public and receive privileges granted by U.S.
immigration laws by deceptive means.
Eager to assure his escape from justice by using
anything to turn him into an "honorable" U.S.
citizen, his lawyer Eduardo Soto keeps reiterating
that his client was a soldier during the war on
Vietnam, mentioning the years 1963 and 1965.
Posada in Vietnam? Where? When? How? "He does not
appear in my research into Cubans in Vietnam,"
commented Cuban investigator José Luis Méndez
Méndez, author of several books on terrorism against
Cuba. "If Posada was in Vietnam and is a veteran of
that war, let the CIA and the army prove it…"
If it is true that he was a U.S. soldier "during"
the Vietnam War, there is not a shred of evidence
that Luis Posada Carriles ever stepped on Vietnamese
soil.
April 17, 1961, Posada remained on shore at the
Puerto Cabezas dock in Nicaragua with the rest of
the Operación 40 killers, while the mercenaries of
the 2506 Brigade left for the failed Bay of Pigs
invasion.
Nevertheless, on account of his participation in
that disastrous adventure, in 1963 Posada did enter
the U.S. army in the so-called Cuban Units, with the
rank of 2nd Lieutenant and—like all the others
selected — was sent to the Fort Benning military
base in Georgia directed by the CIA.
There he learned counterinsurgency techniques and
how to handle explosives —in other words: torture,
assassination, and terrorism, alongside Jorge Mas
Canosa and other individuals with similar
characteristics and destinies.
Everything indicates that, in one way or another,
the CIA took him out of there to fulfill dirty
missions.
Reliable and documented sources place him with
other Cuban Americans in Dallas when U.S. President
John F. Kennedy was assassinated in Dealey Plaza.
"SOLDIER" OF THE DIRTY WAR
According to the U.S. Defense Department, the war
on Vietnam officially began December 11, 1961.
Between 1962 and 1964, when the United States had
more had 17,000 troops in Indochina, 392 U.S.
soldiers died while Posada was learning to make
explosive devices and teach others to make them in
Georgia.
In fact, in 1964, Posada’s presence is noted in a
camp in Collier County where the CIA trained
mercenaries to infiltrate Cuba.
Later reports place him aboard the CIA mother
ship The Venus, which engaged in operations
in the Florida Straits.
A declassified CIA memo dated June 18, 1965,
places him in Mexico, conspiring to blow up Soviet
ships in the port of Veracruz. He later reappeared
in training camps for "autonomous operations"
against Cuba located in the Dominican Republic.
Meanwhile, that same year, the United States had
130,000 soldiers in Vietnam and the number of dead
had shot up to 1,926, according to Pentagon figures.
That is, the war was in full swing during the period
in which the terrorist expects us to believe he was
still enlisted in the army.
In October 1967, the CIA transferred Carriles to
Venezuela where he infiltrated DIGEPOL (the
political police) as a "consultant."
In his book Los caminos del guerrero (Paths
of the Warrior), with a lie characteristic of the
Miami mafia hero, Posada claims to have arrived in
Caracas in 1969. "He’s a tremendous storyteller,"
comments Fabián Escalante, former head of Cuban
State Security. "What happened is that (in 1967) he
was a CIA informant and it doesn’t suit him to talk
about that."
IN THE DISIP BASEMENTS
In 1968, the year of the Tet Offensive, 16,869
soldiers fell in Vietnam.
In 1969 Posada received Venezuelan citizenship as
shown by his identification card –number
V-5.304.069— the last digits representing the year
of inscription — in order to become the bloody
Commissar Basilio when the DIGEPOL came to be the
DISIP.
In the DISIP basements Posada kidnapped, tortured,
executed, and "disappeared" dozens of prisoners over
more than six years. One source revealed that Posada
and his personnel went as far as to eliminate the
opposition by throwing its members into the sea.
Posada Carriles was DISIP Chief of Operations
from 1967 to 1974. An organization founded by his
victims has videotaped more than 80 testimonies
documenting his actions, including the dramatic
interview with Brenda Esquivel in which she recounts
how, in July 1972, on Posada’s orders, she was
savagely kicked in the stomach in a DISIP facility
in Maracay when she was eight months pregnant, which
caused her to miscarry.
More than 58,000 U.S. soldiers died in the
Vietnam War, which ended in 1975, just as "soldier"
Posada left the DISIP to direct the Industrial and
Commercial Investigations Agency, a CIA front for
Operation Condor. Soon after, he organized, with
Orlando Bosch, his worst crime: the sabotage of a
Cuban passenger plane in September 1976.
"YOU WERE FOUND GUILTY IN PanamA…"
"He never wanted to be a U.S. citizen before? Why?"
asks José Luis Méndez. "He had little love for the
country that took him in and for which he served
with weapon in hand defending imperial democracy
around the world."
"Without a doubt he’s a poor U.S. patriot… so why
now? Could it be that as a CIA "operative" it was
better for him to remain a John Doe so that
the U.S. government could deny any knowledge in the
case of a fiasco?"
"Like they say on the X-Files, the truth is
out there," he added.
According to U.S. lawyer José Pertiera, U.S. law
says that it is sufficient to prove that a person
belonged to the military during a time of conflict
in order to claim naturalization.
It is enough to have been an active member of the
military. Eduardo Soto is clinging on to this.
However, even with those services to the "homeland,"
Posada does not qualify because a letter from the
U.S. Immigration Customs Enforcement agency dated
March 22, 2006 declared him a national security
threat, which Soto has tried to downplay.
The letter stated: "Moreover, on April 20, 2004
you were convicted in Panama for Crimes against
National Security and Counterfeiting Public Records
for which you were sentenced to seven years and one
year of imprisonment respectively. Although you were
later pardoned of these crimes by the President of
Panama, a foreign pardon, in itself, does not have
any effect in relation to U.S. immigration laws."
It clearly states that the pardon authorized by
Panamanian President Mireya Moscoso in 2004 just
before leaving the presidency did not change in any
way the crimes committed, even though Eduardo Soto
has tried to manipulate the issue.
It is crucial to underline an extremely important
point: when Posada was "pardoned" in Panama, a
prosecution appeal against the short sentence that
Posada received was still underway. And the Panama
anticorruption attorney is currently investigating
his untimely release.
"Posada’s legal strategy appears to be to try and
attenuate his terrorist past by arguing that
although he committed the crimes cited by the
Homeland Security Department in the text of its
Interim Decision to Continue Detention, Posada was a
"soldier" following the orders of his superiors in
the CIA and the White House and therefore is not
guilty of any crime," commented José Pertiera.
"However, the Nuremberg Trial of Nazi murderers
clearly established that the legal responsibility of
a criminal (far less that of a terrorist) is not
mitigated by orders received by the accused from his
superiors," added the attorney for the Venezuelan
government in the extradition application for the
criminal.
On July 6, the judge has to decide whether to
grant U.S. citizenship to the former soldier, CIA
agent and torturer "during the war in Vietnam."
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Posada
Carriles
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