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The Bay of Pigs 60th Anniversary, Part II—the Shooting’s Over But the Heroism and Betrayal Continue
Townhall.com ^ | April 24, 2021 | Humberto Fontova

Posted on 04/24/2021 4:44:45 AM PDT by Kaslin

Outnumbered over ten to one by Soviet led forces and betrayed by their sponsor, these mostly civilian volunteers fought till the last bullet. In three days of relentless close-quarter fighting they made monkeys of the Soviet commanders at the scene and their Cuban lackeys and cannon-fodder, inflicting losses of 20 to one. 

Castro and Che were jittery there for awhile, urging caution in the counterattack. From the lethal fury of the attack and the horrendous casualties their troops and militia were taking, the two Soviets satraps assumed they faced at least 20,000 invading "mercenaries," as they called them. 

Yet it was a band of mostly civilian volunteers they outnumbered laughably. But to hear Castro's echo chamber (the Beltway media and leftist academics), Fidel was the plucky David and the invaders the bumbling Goliath!

(We discussed the battle in greater detail last week here.)

In fact, if JFK wanted some genuine Profiles in Courage he might have looked at the men he betrayed on that heroic beachhead. Some of most jaw-dropping heroics, however, came after the shooting ended, after they’d spent their last bullets and knew no more were coming from their ally, the most powerful nation on earth, the same one that enforced a "no-fly zone" half a country wide on another continent (Iraq) with half the U.S Air Force for a decade—but refused to provide one three miles across, 90 miles away, for half a day with two planes.

At any rate, the battle was over in three days, but the heroism was not.

Now came almost two years in Castro’s dungeons for the captured Brigada, complete with the physical and psychological torture that always comes with communist incarceration. During almost two years in Castro’s dungeons, the freedom-fighters lived under a daily death sentence. 

Escaping that sentence would have been easy: simply sign the little paper confessing they were “mercenaries of the Yankee imperialists” or go on camera denouncing the U.S.  Given these freedom-fighters' betrayal, you might think Fidel and Che Guevara had a cakewalk here.

Hah! None of these men signed the document, or uttered a peep against their “ally.” The freedom-fighters stood tall, proud, defiant, even sparring with Castro himself during their televised Stalinist show trials. “We will die with dignity!” snapped their commander Erneido Oliva (a black Cuban, by the way, Ms. Maxine “VIVA FIDEL!”  Waters” and Jesse, “VIVA FIDEL!” Jackson) at the furious Castroites again, and again, and again. To a Castroite, such an attitude not only enrages but also baffles.

Think about it, amigos: even after that betrayal these men (and boys, some as young as 16-17) refused to utter any anti-American slogan for Castro and Che Guevara’s cameras and propaganda mill. The very slogans that half-wit, grandstanding “woke” celebrities and politicians parrot daily for free publicity, these betrayed men refused to utter even while thinking it might save their lives!

The Castroites also staged a classic Soviet-style show-trial attempting to showcase (for all the world to see) the Bay of Pigs prisoners admitting they were “mercenaries in the pay of the Yankee Imperialists.” And initially they thought they’d get the propaganda bonanza they so desperately desired.  

For this big production the prisoners were thoroughly interrogated beforehand (the KGB had been coaching Castro’s secret police for almost two years by then) to see who’d crack, who’d play along. Only these would get in front of the cameras.

Tomas Cruz, Felipe Rivero and a few other Bay of Pigs freedom-fighters gave every impression of having broken down. They whimpered to their Castroite “interrogators” that they’d be willing to go on camera and denounce the U.S. 

“AHA!”  Fidel and Che snickered while rubbing their hands. “Now we got ‘em!” (Rivero and Cruz were also snickering.)

So the day came. The Stalinist stage was set at Havana’s Sports Arena and the communist cameras rolled. Castro and Che Guevara’s lackey vice President Carlos R. Rodriguez was the opening act. He put the microphone to Felipe Rivero.

"Nobody paid us to do a damn thing!" Rivero blurted…..Whoops! The Castroites’ mouths dropped. They gaped nervously. They looked around. A rumble went through the crowd. 

"We came here to fight communism!" Rivero continued. "Men from every class and race in Cuba volunteered to come here and FIGHT you!"

“Holy s**t! What now?!” the Castroites were frantic! The cameras were rolling but started shifting around nervously. Rodriguez’s lips trembled. He wiped his forehead. He stretched his collar. Some heads would (literally!) roll when the Maximum Leader saw this! The cameras didn’t know where to focus.

"And another thing!" Felipe shouted. "We outfought you!” The Castroites were frantic now, they looked from one to another aghast and cleared their throats. They looked like Democrats during the Ollie North hearings. 

Rodriguez finally caught his breath and with a trembling voice started with the usual commie mumbo-jumbo about "the masses" and "the people…bah…blah…”

"Ok, fine!” Rivero rolled his eyes and waved his hand. "You say you have the people with you? Then hold an election! That’ll really tell us, won’t it!"

Complete pandemonium, amigos. Even the diehard commies in the crowd couldn’t restrain themselves. Che Guevara himself had to snicker. A rumble of laughter, a rustle of claps and hoots erupted from all corners. All this was on Cuban national TV, remember.  

And Cuba – that impoverished and squalid little Third World country Castro’s echo chamber (the mainstream media) always tells us about – besides having net immigration from Europe shortly before the glorious liberation, also had more TVs per capita than Canada or Germany. 

The very island almost shook with a collective roar.

Finally the Maximum Leader himself (Fidel Castro) pranced on the stage. Only he could straighten things out. He had it all figured out. He had an ace up his sleeve. So he approached the black parachutist prisoner Tomas Cruz. "We opened the beaches for you blacks," he sneered. (In 1958 Cuba had a private whites-only country club with a private beach.) "So what on earth are you doing with these Yankee mercenaries?"

Tell it to Obama and the Congressional Black Caucus, Fidel. Tell it to Maxine Waters and Jesse Jackson – they’ll swallow your BS and ask for seconds. But Cruz didn’t flinch. He looked Castro straight in the eye. "I didn’t come here to swim," he glowered. "I came here to fight communism. I came here with my brothers of every race to free my homeland from communism.”

Well, amigos, the Castroites decided to hold these "trials" behind closed doors and with the cameras off after that.

A guilt-stricken JFK finally ransomed the Brigade back from Castro's dungeon. The negotiations took almost two years while the men suffered the mental and physical tortures that always accompany Communist incarceration. One source claims that Castro had agreed to terms seven months earlier. But the Kennedy brothers (both President and Attorney General) feared the Bay of Pigs issue in the news for the November '62 congressional races. They feared the issue of how those men came to be prisoners in the first place might skew the races Republican. So the prisoners were conveniently released Christmas Eve of '62. A few died in prison during those intervening seven months. 

Outrageously, thanks to yet another Democrat administration, Castro might have gotten the last laugh with Rivero. In 1967 Felipe Rivero found himself in a U.S. federal prison. His crime? Organizing attacks from the U.S. trying to overthrow Castro! 

You read that right. The same man accused and jailed by Castro for being a U.S. mercenary and lackey, of being bribed by the U.S. to overthrow communism in Cuba was later jailed by the U.S. for trying to overthrow Communism in Cuba!  LBJ had to honor that Kennedy-Khrushchev Missile Crisis swindle to safeguard Castro, you see.

"We ended up getting exactly what we'd wanted all along," snickered Nikita Khrushchev about the Missile Crisis in his diaries, “security for Fidel Castro’s regime and American missiles removed from Turkey and Italy. Until today the U.S. has complied with her promise not to interfere with Castro and not to allow anyone else to interfere with Castro. After Kennedy's death, his successor Lyndon Johnson assured us that he would keep the promise not to invade Cuba." 

The Brigadistas' ordeal was mostly over by late 1962. But when it came to JFK's lies I'll yield to Bachman Turner Overdrive: "You ain't seen nothing yet! B--ba-ba-ba-BY you just AIN'T seen nothing yet!" 

"I promise to deliver this Brigade banner to you in a free Havana!" That was JFK addressing the recently-ransomed Brigade and their families in Miami's Orange Bowl, Dec. 29, 1962. I guess those people hadn't been subject to enough lies, to enough betrayal. They hadn't suffered enough. And the mothers, widows children-- they hadn't been through enough either. In Camelot's eyes, they deserved more shameless lies. 

Kennedy’s secret deal with Khrushchev to safeguard Castro was made barely a month before JFK made his liberation promises in the Orange Bowl. Yet he addressed those men, their families and compatriots with a straight face. 

Small wonder that these Brigadistas, their families, and most of their compatriots always refused to file meekly into the liberal plantation, like obedient little "hispanics," or “latinos,” with a nice pat on the head by the condescendingly smirking doyens of the Democrat-Media complex. 


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: bayofpigs; betrayal; castro; cheguevara; conservatism; cuba; jfk; kennedy
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1 posted on 04/24/2021 4:44:45 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin
I remember this - and that is one of the reasons I joined the Marines to fight in Vietnam. I was ashamed of the weaselly cowardice our country had shown at the Bay of Pigs and failing the Hungarians in their anticommunist revolution.

Unfortunately for us, those who did serve, the communists with their carefully-planned and executed "antiwar" movement won - and now we have those traitors and their children leading our country now.

2 posted on 04/24/2021 5:02:30 AM PDT by Chainmail (Remember - that half the people you meet are below average intelligence)
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To: Chainmail

I dont think the 2MARDIV could have gotten to Budapest.

But Havana, yeah. . .


3 posted on 04/24/2021 5:13:18 AM PDT by RaceBannon (Rom 5:8 But God commendeth his love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for )
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To: RaceBannon

Don’t you think THAT would’ve been a kick! Imagine how surprised those Soviets would’ve been to run into ONTOS gunners in those streets...


4 posted on 04/24/2021 5:48:29 AM PDT by Chainmail (Remember - that half the people you meet are below average intelligence)
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To: Chainmail

I remember this as well. My father was the base commander at Homestead AFB at the time. he only came home to shower and grab something to eat for several days.
Later learned they had been trying to work a plan to rescue “those Cuban patriots” as he called them. They kept getting denied!
He despised JFK for what he had done and, knowing my father, probably made no secret of that.
Some time afterward the family was heading cross country to Travis AFB where we would leave for Saigon for 2 years.
That was my introduction to “the Kennedys” and what they were. I haven’t forgotten.


5 posted on 04/24/2021 7:52:35 AM PDT by BOATTRASH1 (NRA Endowment Member)
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To: BOATTRASH1
A lot of people despised JFK and his brothers back then - despite the uniformly fawning press - and I don't doubt that after three years of intervention in some places, abandonment of some allies, assassinations of various leaders, and near nuclear war at least twice, that he was taken out by one or more agencies of our government.

Oswald was mostly likely a government agent since his discharge from the Corps and was likely "burned" to provide cover for the official killing.

6 posted on 04/24/2021 8:16:23 AM PDT by Chainmail (Remember - that half the people you meet are below average intelligence)
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To: Chainmail

Yes, my father said the only decent Kennedy got killed in WW II on an ill fated mission.


7 posted on 04/24/2021 8:23:38 AM PDT by BOATTRASH1 (NRA Endowment Member)
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To: Kaslin

Having just read a account of the Bay of Pigs the myths of what happened and the blame on Kennedy for failure are till there.

That operation was planned during Eisenhower’s administration and after Kennedy was elected, instead of Nixon, the parameters of the mission were expanded and enlarged. Kennedy signed off on it.

At the last minute a bombing mission to take out the last of Castro’s airfare was called off, not by Kennedy, but by his Special Assistant MacGeorge Bundy. To this day no one knows who told Bundy to do that and why.

Also this was a CIA operation all the way. Curious thing Allan Dulles, Director of the CIA, and the brains behind this as well as the one in charge, was not at his post and for some reason took a vacation out of the country at the crucial time. Why? Only Dulles could have put the airstrike back in and he was gone.


8 posted on 04/24/2021 8:35:51 AM PDT by Captain Peter Blood (https://www.freerepublic.com/focus/bloggers/3804407/posts?q=1&;page)
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To: Captain Peter Blood

In Ike’s time, Castro had not outed himself as a Communist yet.


9 posted on 04/24/2021 8:36:49 AM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: Chainmail

And what did you end up fighting in Vietnam, what was the objective in that war?


10 posted on 04/24/2021 8:40:23 AM PDT by Captain Peter Blood (https://www.freerepublic.com/focus/bloggers/3804407/posts?q=1&;page)
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To: dfwgator

Then why was the operation planned under his administration? That is a fact.


11 posted on 04/24/2021 8:41:32 AM PDT by Captain Peter Blood (https://www.freerepublic.com/focus/bloggers/3804407/posts?q=1&;page)
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To: Captain Peter Blood

Because even though Castro hadn’t declared himself a Communist loyal to the Soviet Union, they were still nationalizing industries there.


12 posted on 04/24/2021 8:43:25 AM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: dfwgator

Look up operation mongoose.


13 posted on 04/24/2021 8:55:57 AM PDT by Captain Peter Blood (https://www.freerepublic.com/focus/bloggers/3804407/posts?q=1&;page)
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To: Kaslin

“The Devil’s Chessboard: Allen Dulles, the CIA and the Rise of America’s Secret Government” by David Talbot.

Smarter Faster


14 posted on 04/24/2021 9:14:03 AM PDT by Yollopoliuhqui
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To: Yollopoliuhqui

Read Col. Fletcher Prouty’s books on this, I just did recently.
Also Professor Greg Poulgrain, JFK vs Dulles


15 posted on 04/24/2021 9:18:05 AM PDT by Captain Peter Blood (https://www.freerepublic.com/focus/bloggers/3804407/posts?q=1&;page)
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To: Captain Peter Blood

The overall objective was to help South Vietnam stay alive while they were being overwhelmed by massive attacks by the communist local Vietcong and the North Vietnamese Army, all supported by streams of weapons, munitions and assistance by the Soviets, Warsaw Pact, and the Chinese.

There was also the issue of Vietnam’s neighbors during this “National Liberation War” and the security of the Straits of Malacca from Soviet control. This was latest arena of the Cold War, gone hot.

My own personal objective was to keep the men to my left and my right - and me - alive while killing as many of the enemy as possible, while also protecting the local villagers.


16 posted on 04/24/2021 9:49:34 AM PDT by Chainmail (Remember - that half the people you meet are below average intelligence)
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To: Chainmail

Given the information I have read recently, Vietnam was a CIA operation from the beginning. It had nothing to do with trying to keep South Vietnam afloat, which was not even a real country by any standard.

Without U.S. support it would not have existed. Did you know that in 1945 we supported Ho Chi Minh when he found the Republic of Vietnam, we gave him a vast cache of weapons and munitions that were not longer needed for the invasion of Japan.

More than anything else Vietnam was a war that was fought on a limited basis with no real objective, except for the Military-Industrial Complex, Deep State, to make money. $500 Billion was spent on the war with no results. Example, 5000 helicopters were lost.

It was a sham war and the flower of our country was wasted along with so many resources that could have gone elsewhere.


17 posted on 04/24/2021 9:58:58 AM PDT by Captain Peter Blood (https://www.freerepublic.com/focus/bloggers/3804407/posts?q=1&;page)
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To: Captain Peter Blood

The problem with Prouty was that he refused to connect the remaining necessary dots and state the obvious conclusions. The plot to assassinate JFK was born when LBJ agreed to accept JFK’s offer to join the GOP ticket as the VP candidate. The CIA joined up after the Bay of Pigs, the mob and Hoover’s FBI got onboard after RFK’s betrayals as AG, the military agreed to help after Second Naval Gorilla was canceled, the Secret Service joined the plot over LBJ’s urging and JFK’s ongoing duplicity, and Big Oil jumped in when JFK tried to eliminate the Oil Depletion Allowance, plus the mayor of Dallas was the brother of the CIA’s 2nd banana (fired along with Dulles over Bay of Pigs). There’s more but this is enough for now.
I’m not knocking Prouty, he was a brave man who put himself in peril to reveal a great deal of potentially deadly information. He was a patriot who couldn’t bring himself to see just how big the picture actually was.


18 posted on 04/24/2021 10:22:17 AM PDT by Knocker (SIC SEMPER TYRANNIS)
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To: Captain Peter Blood
OK, fine: the standard Leftist desiformatsiya, parroted by yet another nonserving dupe. Get all your information from the People's Coalition for Peace and Justice?

Ho Chi Minh was Moscow's boy from early on and we only supported him while we were fighting the Japanese. The South Vietnamese, which included about a million North Vietnamese refugees, thanks to the vicious oppression of Uncle Ho, wanted to just live their lives without the communists stealing their food, their young men, and killing their elected leaders.

I was there, saw what was happening and lived through it- no thanks to safe, comfortable "experts" like you.

19 posted on 04/24/2021 11:01:03 AM PDT by Chainmail (Remember - that half the people you meet are below average intelligence)
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To: Kaslin

My family didn’t arrive in Florida until late 1961 so I’ve no personal recollections of the Bay of Pigs period. The Cuban Missile Crisis of late 1962 is another story. Living in an area across the bay from MacDill AFB, we had neighbors who were either active duty or civilian employees on the base. Tense period as some of them were temporarily restricted to base. In a hurry aircraft flying about at all hours became some SOP. Rumor had it that troops flown in from bases in the Carolinas were bivouacked in makeshift spaces onboard the base. Those troops would be first in if things went hot.
Events came to their historical conclusion but it was a “lesson learned” for me and others.
In another year I was again living in the Washington, DC area. By 1968 and out of the service, I became acquainted with and worked with a few Cubans my age who migrated to the US via refugee flights – “Operation Pedro Pan”. At least one family ties to veterans of “Brigado 2506”.
For those interested in Cuba and related areas, I’ve found Humberto Fontova to be both accurate and objective.


20 posted on 04/24/2021 11:59:03 AM PDT by Huaynero
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