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ARE CNN AND ATHE AMERICAN MEDIA ELITE, CATRO'S PUPPETS?
February 21, 2002 | Jesus J. Chao

Posted on 02/21/2002 9:00:00 AM PST by Dqban22

ARE CNN, AND THE AMERICAN MEDIA ELITE, CASTRO’S PUPPETS?

By: Jesus J. Chao

February 21, 2002

It borders on treason when CNN encourages Americans to travel illegally to Cuba and to break the U.S. laws in order to further CNN’s unflinchingly support of a terrorist state undermining President Bush’s war against terrorism. The fact that Cuba has an horrendous record of human rights violations and that its leader, Fidel Castro, as recently as May 2001, has pledged to destroy us, has no bearing on CNN’s behavior. Since its inception, CNN’s coverage of Cuban affairs seems to come directly from Castro’s propaganda apparatus. Although CNN behaves as it were the official news agency of the Cuban government, it is not alone in its treasonous behavior.

Even before Castro took power in 1959, the American media establishment was already acting as an agent of Castro and kept its support even when he declared Cuba as a totalitarian communist state. There is abundant proof that the media censors any news that might alert the American people about the true nature of Castro's menace to the U.S., or news that expose the brutal violations of human rights going on for 43 years in the prison Island.

Another example of media extreme bias in favor of the Cuban dictator is Peter Jennings’ manipulation of the news by ignoring those that might be detrimental to the interest of the Cuban regime. In the program “Media in the Hot Seat” according to The Miami Herald of 2/9/02 and, by their own admission, ABC News anchor Peter Jennings and Washington Post Executive Director Leonard Downie, admitted they didn’t know about Castro’s spy ring caught in Miami. As Walter Duranty the infamous New York Times’ chief journalist in the Soviet Union during Stalin’s massacres, they did not want to know anything that might detract from their infatuation with Communist mass murderers.

Jennings unashamedly admitted that he didn’t know about Cuba’s Wasp spy Network, even though several of the implicated were sentenced to double life sentences and others to long jail sentences. Nor did Jennings know about Castro’s mole, Ana Belen Montes, the top analyst for Cuban affairs at the highest level of the Pentagon who was in charge of evaluating Castro’s menace to the U.S. was working for the Cuban intelligence services.

When Jennings was questioned by Sylvia Iriondo and the radio commentator Ninoska Pérez Castellón about this important news, Jennings had the arrogance of answering derisively ``Is this how the media is in Miami?'' And these ignorant media pundits are paid millions of dollars yearly to deceive the American people.

The American media’s fascination with Castro started with New York Times journalist Herbert Matthews who was the architect of converting for the American consumption a gangster into a revolutionary romantic and mythical figure. Matthews was following Duranty’s path of unscrupulous journalism, a path that has been followed to this day by most of the media stars.

In 1995, during Castro’s visit to the United Nations, the retired chairman of Chase Manhattan Bank gave the Cuban tyrant a reception where an adoring crowd of media stars was present. The media moguls and TV opinion molder stars could not be more excited in the presence of their idol. Among them were, Mortimer Zuckerman, Barbara Walters (who once received a very expensive antique table that previously belonged to one Cuban exile, as a token of gratitude from the dictator after a very favorable interview), Peter Jennings, Mike Wallace, and many others of the same caliber were present. Dianne Sawyer couldn’t control herself and gave a big hug and kiss to the Cuban dictator for life.

Ms. Sawyer and the pack of Castro’s sycophants who support the Cuban tyrant overlook the fact that Castro is a cold blooded murderer who approved the death by firing squad of each one of over 40,000 Cubans, including some Americans, who opposed his reign of terror and is responsible also for the death of more than 60,000 men, women and children who have drowned while trying to cross the Florida Straits in fragile makeshift rafts in their quest for freedom.

What worries me the most is Castro’s intelligence services’ capability to penetrate the highest levels of the Pentagon, his worldwide efficient network of spies, and a willing crowd of useful idiots at the service of Castro in the Congress and in the media. After the devastating terrorist blow of 9/11/2001 it is unconscionable that the American media elite remains unashamedly supporting a brutal terrorist state at 90 miles off our shores. But I also find very worrisome, why the Secretary of the Treasury responsible for authorizing the permits for traveling to Cuba does not follow a stricter application of the law and why the Attorney General does not punish to the full extend of the law those who violate it?


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: leonarddownie

1 posted on 02/21/2002 9:00:01 AM PST by Dqban22
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To: Dqban22
Why isn't Cuba in the axis of evil?
2 posted on 02/21/2002 9:01:36 AM PST by AshleyMontagu
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To: AshleyMontagu
Why isn't Cuba in the axis of evil?

Good question, the longest running exporters of terror surely. Maybe they don't fit the agenda.

3 posted on 02/21/2002 9:03:57 AM PST by luvzhottea
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To: AshleyMontagu
Why does the UN even allow these axis of evil whackos membership privledges...

aren't there some minimum qualifications for membership...elections--democrasy--rule of law--sanity?

What is the UN---a vehicle of tyranny--whacks---thuggery?

4 posted on 02/21/2002 9:11:25 AM PST by f.Christian
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To: luvzhottea
Cuba is in fact a prominent member of the "axis of evil" club. Castro is the oldest living sponsor of international terrorism, after forty-three years of a reign of terror in Cuba he is still sponsoring worldwide terrorism.
5 posted on 02/21/2002 9:25:35 AM PST by Cardenas
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To: AshleyMontagu
....Why isn't Cuba in the axis of evil?....

Because CFR says so.

6 posted on 02/21/2002 9:28:56 AM PST by DTA
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To: Cardenas
You are right and it is a shame that the evil communist dictator is treated as a dignitary.
There must be no weakening of the sanctions against the regime of Fidel; the Cuban people must be free.
I will never forget little Elian.
7 posted on 02/21/2002 9:36:01 AM PST by luvzhottea
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To: f.Christian
THIS IS AN ARTICLE ABOUT THE SPY PETER JENNINGS DIDN'T WANT YOU TO KNOW ABOUT

November 5, 2001

National ReviewUnder In Castro's Service: The undertold story of Cuba's spying, and terrorBYLINE: by JOHN J. MILLERBODY:

"Attencion! Attencion!" snaps the female voice in Spanish at the start of each broadcast. To all but a few listeners, the message that follows is perfectly unintelligible: a long series of seemingly random numbers that drone on for 50 minutes. Just about anybody with a shortwave radio can hear them several times a day at various frequencies, though their intended audience is small. To these few recipients, however, they make exquisite and terrible sense-because they are spies in the service of Fidel Castro's Cuba.It's not clear how often Ana Belen Montes tuned in to these so-called numbers stations, but there's little doubt that she did or that some of the signals were sent specifically for her. FBI agents on a search warrant last May sneaked into her apartment and checked the hard drive of a laptop computer she kept there.

They found sequences matching those that had been broadcast previously, instructions on how to run them through a decryption program that turns the numbers into words, and messages she traded with Cuban spymasters. On September 21, agents arrested Montes at the Defense Intelligence Agency's headquarters at Bolling Air Force Base in Washington, D.C., where she worked as the DIA's top Cuba expert.

Assuming the charges against her are true-she won't enter a plea before November 5-Montes's actions probably will go down as the Cuban intelligence service's most spectacular penetration of the U.S. national-security apparatus. Montes had access to highly classified information and regularly briefed policymakers on matters involving Cuba.

If Havana had been given a choice about where it would most like to place a spy, the sensitive DIA post held by Montes certainly would have made the short list.How badly Montes damaged U.S. interests remains an open question. She surely doesn't rank with the Soviet Union's two deadliest American spies, Aldrich Ames and Robert Hanssen, even though their lawyers, Plato Cacheris and Preston Burton, now represent her.

An FBI affidavit says she blew the cover of at least one agent (who survived the betrayal) and delivered "information relating to the national defense of the United States, with the intent and reason to believe that the information was to be used to the injury of the United States and to the advantage of Cuba."

Yet Montes is only part of a bigger problem-a broad espionage effort waged by Cuba against the United States that has brought death to Americans. There's even a startling connection between Cuba and the September 11 terrorist strikes.As the Cold War recedes into history, there's been a growing suspicion that the United States takes the Cuban threat too seriously-and specifically that Cuba policy is "held hostage" to an outspoken minority of Florida swing voters.

New evidence from the Montes case and elsewhere, however, strongly suggests that we haven't been treating the Cuban threat seriously enough.If September 11 had been just another day, Montes probably would still be at large-and under the close watch of FBI agents. They only began to investigate her in May, acting on information whose source and nature remain undisclosed. They followed Montes around Washington all summer as she embarked on numerous roundabout journeys to pay phones, where-it is believed-she communicated with her handlers. Agents rummaged around her apartment twice and found additional proof linking her to Cuban intelligence. Normally the FBI does not pounce after only a few months of surveillance-sometimes it waits for years as it quietly builds a case against a spy and patiently tries to discover the identities of her contacts.

Yet the FBI moved against Montes with unusual speed, taking her into custody less than two weeks after the terrorist attacks. The possibility that she would pass along vital information to the Cubans, who then might share it with America's other enemies, was a risk not worth taking.Montes started working at DIA in 1985, and was assigned to Cuba seven years later. The FBI believes she's been a spy since at least the fall of 1996. She's tall and slender, looking a bit younger than her 44 years.

Plenty of Cuba experts know Montes from attending her briefings or sitting with her at other meetings, such as those sponsored by Georgetown University's Caribbean Project. In public she was reserved, as intelligence officers are prone to be, but behind closed doors she left distinct impressions. "She was a severe person, a hard-edged person," recalls Richard Nuccio, a Cuba adviser in the Clinton White House.

She was also well known for advocating a softened Cuba policy-to the point where at least two people with links to intelligence had expressed concern over her views long before anybody questioned her loyalty. Her motivation for spying remains a mystery: The FBI affidavit says nothing about payments. By all appearances she lived modestly, fighting her landlord over tenant dues and driving a Toyota Echo.

She is of Puerto Rican heritage. And there don't seem to be any obvious expressions of Communist sympathy in her past.After her arrest, an important 1998 DIA report-suggesting that Cuba no longer poses much of a strategic threat to the United States-was immediately called into question. As the DIA's senior Cuba specialist, Montes would have exercised a major influence over the final product.

When the report was completed, in fact, defense secretary William Cohen considered it too weak. He toughened the language, though not to the extent Castro's strongest critics would have liked. The broader problem with the report, however, is that it reflects the views of the foreign-policy establishment, which continues to downplay Cuba. Castro has "done good things for his people," said secretary of state Colin Powell at an April 26 House hearing. "He's no longer the threat he was."It's true that ever since the Soviet Union quit its role as patron, Cuba has suffered from chronic cash shortages, and it desperately relies on the tourist dollars of Canadian and European vacationers. Yet it does continue to pose a significant threat.

Castro maintains the ability to spark a migration crisis whenever he wants, and Cuba is a money-laundering magnet. Even more worrisome is Cuba's biological-weapons capability. Castro may not be willing to provide his people with aspirin, but he has invested heavily in a biotechnology infrastructure with frightful capabilities. Jose de la Fuente, a top Cuban scientist who escaped the island by boat in 1999, said recently that Castro's minions know how to manufacture anthrax bacteria and the smallpox virus.Then there's the espionage. By using an agent such as Montes to influence threat assessments, Havana may hope to build support for ending the U.S. economic embargo. A less menacing Cuba, after all, is a more attractive trading partner.

A House vote on lifting the embargo drew 201 votes earlier this year-a failure, buttantalizingly close to success.A more direct benefit from Montes involved specific knowledge of U.S. contingency planning-in other words, secret information on how the American government intends to respond to potential crisis situations.

Shortly before Montes observed a war-games exercise put on by the U.S. Atlantic Command in Norfolk, Va., for instance, she received this message from Cuba: "Everything that takes place there will be of intelligence value. Let's see if it deals with contingency plans and specific targets in Cuba, which are prioritized interests for us." This type of knowledge helps Cuba understand how much it can provoke the U.S. without suffering consequences. What would happen, for instance, if it encouraged a throng of women and children to climb the fences at the Guantanamo Bay naval base? Or if it tried to spark a new Mariel boatlift incident?If Montes represents one major prong of Cuban espionage, another recently has come to light in Miami.

Over the last three years, the government has indicted 16 members of a spy ring called La Red Avispa, or the Wasp Network. Five admitted involvement following their arrests, another five were convicted in June, two more pled guilty in September, and four have fled the country. Just like Montes, they communicated with Havana by unlocking coded messages received over shortwave radios.

The Wasp Network did just about everything, from counting takeoffs at a Key West airbase to attempting the penetration of military facilities. Their most successful operation, however, involved the infiltration of anti-Castro exile groups. "The Miami community is heavily penetrated," says Mark Falcoff, a Latin Americanist at the American Enterprise Institute. "It's full of provocateurs who try to embarrass and discredit Cuban-Americans.

We saw them out in full force during the Elian Gonzalez controversy."Some of the Wasp Network's deeds were relatively modest, such as making hostile phone calls to Miami Herald editors in the name of anti-Castro groups; the point was to create tension between the press and certain Cuban-American leaders. Other actions, however, were monstrous.

Two members, Rene Gonzalez (code name: Castor) and Juan Pablo Roque (code name: German), succeeded in joining Brothers to the Rescue, an organization that flies private planes over the Florida Straits in search of people fleeing Cuba in rickety rafts. Once inside the group, they obtained closely held flight schedules, which they passed along to Wasp Network leader Gerardo Hernandez. He transmitted these to Havana in early 1996. Cuba then sent back an order: "Under no circumstances should agents German or Castor fly with BTTR or another organization on days 24, 25, 26, and 27."

They didn't-and on February 24, 1996, three planes piloted by the Brothers departed on one of their humanitarian missions. There's been some dispute over whether they actually entered Cuban airspace, but none over the fundamental fact of what happened that day: A Cuban MiG jet destroyed two of the planes, killing four people. A week after the shootdown, Cuban intelligence sent its Miami agents a congratulatory message through a numbers station: "We have dealt the Miami Right a hard blow, in which your role has been decisive." They called their murderous effort "Operation Scorpion."Some have speculated that one of the captured Wasp Network spies provided federal agents with the information that led them to Montes. This seems unlikely.

"The Cuban intelligence service is one of the best in the world," says a former CIA official. They almost certainly would have built firewalls between Montes and the Wasp Network. Yet it's difficult to keep all their efforts completely compartmentalized.What makes Cuban espionage especially troubling now is the Castro regime's longstanding support of terrorism.

Cuba is one of the seven countries on the State Department's terrorism list. It may not compare to Iraq or the Taliban, but its indulgence of terrorists is beyond dispute. Last year, Cuba was the only country attending the Ibero-American Summit in Panama that refused to join a condemnation of terrorism.

This spring, Castro toured Libya, Syria, and Iran. At Tehran University on May 10, the dictator declared, "Iran and Cuba, in cooperation with each other, can bring America to its knees. The U.S. regime is very weak, and we are witnessing this weakness from close up."Some 20 fugitives from American justice currently call Cuba home, including Victor Gerena, who pulled off a $7 million bank robbery in Connecticut in 1983 as a member of the terrorist group Los Macheteros. He's currently on the FBI's Ten Most Wanted list, and much of what he stole is believed to have made its way to Cuba in diplomatic pouches.

Los Macheteros is also responsible for the ambush of a Navy bus in Puerto Rico that left two sailors dead in 1979 and an attack on a Puerto Rico Air National Guard base in 1981 that wrecked eleven planes. Other terrorist linksto Cuba involve more recent activities: On August 11, Colombian officials arrested three members of the Irish Republican Army as they returned from a part of the country controlled by the narcoterrorist group FARC. Two were explosives experts and the third, Niall Connolly, has been identified as Sinn Fein's Havana representative.

Then there's the bizarre case of Mohammed Raza Hassani, Nez Nezar Nezary, and Ali Sha Yusufi-three Afghan men recently detained in the Cayman Islands. They carried fake Pakistani passports and claimed to have gotten off a boat bound for Canada from Turkey. The police commissioner, however, determined that they actually had arrived by plane from Cuba. They were still in the Caymans on August 29 when a local radio station received an anonymous note saying that they share an association with Osama bin Laden. "The three agents are here organizing a major terrorist act against the U.S. via an airline or airlines," said the letter. The station gave it to the authorities.

Soon after September 11, they tracked down its author, Byron Barnett, a local building contractor, who says his note was "pure speculation" and based on "a premonition." This incident has received scant attention from the media.It's a startling story, perhaps even revelatory; then again, maybe there's nothing to it apart from amazing coincidence. But what is beyond doubt is that even though the Wasp Network has been busted and Ana Belen Montes is under arrest, those Cuban numbers stations continue to broadcast their coded messages several times each day.

Who is listening to them?

8 posted on 02/21/2002 3:26:54 PM PST by Cardenas
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To: Cardenas
"Pulling it all together, what we have right here in our own country are all of the ingredients necessary for a totalitarian police state. We have a federal government that nobody in his right mind would trust, which lies to us incessantly, uses illegal force against its citizens with impunity, and collaborates with totalitarian dictators under cover of a massive propaganda campaign conducted by our supposedly free press. Our major information media are dominated by closet totalitarians who pay lip service to democracy while covertly promoting the interests of communist despots. The political opposition is made up largely of cowards who are so intimidated by our totalitarian propaganda media they are unable to offer effective resistance to even the most egregious violations of civil liberties by the corrupt Clinton regime. They have become, in the fullest sense of the term, Weimar Republicans. And finally, we have that which makes it all possible, a listless, docile, dumbed-down public who gape mindlessly at all of the above phenomena without the slightest glimmer of comprehension, and prattle the latest propaganda cliches dumped into their empty heads by the mainstream media."

"The Elian affair has truly given us a glimpse into the abyss of tyranny. The message that comes through loud and clear is that the system isn't working. The question that remains to be answered is whether we still possess the intelligence and fortitude necessary to fix it."

Edward Zehr(deceased...Nov--2001) can(not) be reached at ezehr@capaccess.org

Published in the May. 22, 2000 issue of The Washington Weekly

Copyright 2000 The Washington Weekly(defunct).

Now Free Access to All Stories at http://www.federal.com

What is the UN---a mouthpiece for losers!

9 posted on 02/21/2002 3:56:39 PM PST by f.Christian
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