Posted on 01/08/2002 12:25:31 AM PST by JohnHuang2
Following a six-hour meeting with Cuban President Fidel Castro in Havana, Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., attacked the U.S. House of Representatives for its refusal to accept Castro's previously extended offer of mutual cooperation between U.S. and Cuba in drug-interdiction efforts.
At a press conference following his discussions with the dictator, Specter declared, "I think it is unconscionable [that the House failed] to take [Castro] up on that offer."
Specter's remarks were recorded and later broadcast by Radio Havana Cuba, the official broadcasting service of the communist Cuban government.
According to Radio Havana, Castro "last year" offered to assist the United States in drug-interdiction efforts. Other reports state that Specter has sought funding for U.S.-Cuban anti-drug operations.
Radio Havana reported that Castro "asked for nothing in return" for his offer to aid the U.S.
During the press conference, Specter made reference to Cuba's need for "state-of-the-art" radar to assist in the interception of aircraft and high-speed boats used by drug smugglers.
"There's a lot that could be done," Specter stated after recounting Cuba's presumed need for U.S. technical assistance.
Last week's meeting, in which Sen. Lincoln Chafee, R-R.I., also participated, included a discussion on possible Cuban cooperation in America's war on terrorism.
"Cuba has vast intelligence sources around the globe," Specter stated, according to an AP report.
A spokesperson from Specter's office was not available for immediate comment.
Specter's call for cooperation with Cuban intelligence has been greeted with deep skepticism by opponents of the Castro regime.
"That's tantamount to putting the fox in charge of the hen house," retorted Mariela Ferretti, spokesman for the anti-communist Cuban American National Foundation, during an interview with WorldNetDaily.
"We do agree," Ferretti said, "that Cuba has a worldwide intelligence network including in the United States."
Ferretti referred to the recent trials of five Cuban spies in the United States, known as the "Wasp Network," as well as the current case of Ana Belen Montes.
Montes, arrested on Sept. 22, was a senior analyst for the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency and considered a rising star within the U.S. intelligence community, according to press reports.
Montes is accused of working closely with Cuban intelligence.
Specter's concern that Cuba lacks sufficient technical resources runs counter to observations made by a 30-year counterintelligence veteran in an interview with WorldNetDaily in June.
David Major, former director of counterintelligence in Ronald Reagan's National Security Council, is dean of The Centre for Counterintelligence and Security Studies. He stated that the Wasp Network case demonstrated the sophistication of Cuban intelligence. The Wasp Network trial "shows that the Cubans have all the toys," Major stated.
Cuba remains the recipient of technical and military aid from China and Russia, with recent visits from high-ranking military personnel and the heads of state from both nations.
Pete Jeffries, press secretary for House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., refused immediate comment on Specter's verbal attack on the House, stating that Hastert was currently out of the country.
Jeffries, however, did defend Hastert's personal record in the war on drugs.
"Hastert has led the fight against illegal drugs since 1991," he declared.
Specter's meeting with Castro was part of a larger series of visits from U.S. citizens sanctioned by the federal government. According to reports, some 2,000 U.S. citizens are to travel to Cuba in January.
Cuba is currently under a U.S. travel ban, and those wishing to go to Cuba legally must obtain governmental approval. Observers note, however, that thousands of Americans find ways to circumvent the legal restrictions and visit the island.
Scottish law my arse!
Yeah, and Sen. Dim-wit is stupid enough to expect the Cuban communists to pay with 'pesos'.....
Traitor, this man has no material leverage against anti-Castro people, save maybe for obvious support for marxist soft crap as the fulcrum. He should be impeached.
Why isn't Senator Spector helping President Bush get a hearing for Otto Reich?
Elian's "hostess" in D. C. escorts seven U.S. representatives to Cuba
----Bush might appoint while Senate's away
Don't subsidize a tyrant --Miami Herald--(Excerpt) -- While the embargo restricts most U.S.-Cuba trade, it does not impose a humanitarian burden. Cuba frequently has bought wheat from Canada, rice from Vietnam, and medicine from Europe, Asia and Latin America. Donations of food and clothing and the licensed sale of U.S. medical products are permitted.
The real cause of Cuba's hardship is not the embargo but the state's Soviet-style economy. Traditional exports such as sugar cost the regime more to produce than they sell for on the global market. Tourism brings in hard currency but not nearly enough to provide for Cuba's needs. Debt payments are so uncertain that major trade partners often must extend new loans.--(End Excerpt)
Friends of Fidel--Washington Times--(Excerpt) Louisiana rice and Illinois wheat producers should not assume that selling to Havana is synonymous with getting paid. U.S taxpayers should be wary. Mr. Castro desperately needs credits and subsidies, and Washington is being pressured to provide them.
If the United States begins to subsidize trade with Cuba estimated at $100 million a year five years from now, U.S. taxpayers could be holding, or paying off, a $500 million tab. That´s real money.
Before extending Mr. Castro credit, grain growers should visit any street corner in Manhattan and observe a game played there. Called three-card monte, it consists of convincing the player that he knows exactly where the card carrying his money is. Until it disappears. In this game, the gambler takes his own chances. Where trade with Mr. Castro is concerned, the U.S. taxpayer will be left holding the losing card. --(End Excerpt)
Sept. 29, 2001, 11:53PM/ Analyst at Pentagon arrested on charges of spying for Havana / FBI says espionage goes back 5 years / By CHRISTOPHER MARQUIS / New York Times ---[Excerpt] WASHINGTON -- A few days after the Sept. 11 terrorist attack, Ana Belen Montes, a top Defense Department intelligence analyst, sent an e-mail note to an old friend saying she was all right and had not known anyone who died at the Pentagon.
"I could see the Pentagon burning from my office," she wrote. "Nonetheless, it pales next to the World Trade Center. Dark days ahead. So much hate and self-righteousness."
The days darkened especially quickly for Montes. A week after she signed off, sending love to her friend's family, federal agents surprised her at work and charged her with spying for Cuba. She is the highest-ranking official ever accused of espionage at the Defense Intelligence Agency, which, as a sister agency to the CIA, handles analysis for the Pentagon.
Snip
But professionally, Montes seemed above reproach. She spoke fluent Spanish because of her Puerto Rican heritage, and in 1990 she was tapped to brief Nicaragua's new president, Violeta Chamorro, about the Cuban-backed Sandinista military.
In 1992 or 1993, she pulled off what seemed to be an intelligence coup. She traveled to Cuba and interviewed Cuban generals about economic reforms on the island. In 1998, she played an important role in drafting a widely cited analysis that found that Cuba's much diminished military posed no strategic threat to the United States. As recently as the week before last, she briefed top Pentagon policy-makers on Cuba.
According to the FBI affidavit, Montes, who had a high-level security clearance, spied for Cuba for at least five years, and possibly longer. She identified at least one U.S. undercover agent to the Cubans, disclosed a top-secret intelligence-gathering program and reported on U.S. training in the Caribbean, the FBI said.
Current and former U.S. officials say she was in a position to tell have told Havana virtually everything the intelligence community knew about Cuba's military and might even have disclosed U.S. contingency plans for taking the island by force.
"I would think, if damage was done, it would be about what she learned about the U.S., how it was militarily prepared vis-a-vis Cuba," said Richard Nuccio, who was President Bill Clinton's special adviser on Cuba. [End Excerpt]
Orlando Sentinel--Open your eyes - Cuba belongs on list
"Greatest deliberative body?" Hardly!
Indeed, especially the idiotcy component.
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