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'Friend' Named to Cuba Post (Transition coordinator to hasten democratic transition in Cuba)***WASHINGTON - A Republican congressional staffer with 20 years of involvement in hemispheric issues was named Thursday to a new State Department post to hasten democratic transition in communist Cuba.

Caleb McCarry, 43, will serve as the Cuba ''transition coordinator,'' a position mandated by President Bush a year ago to implement measures designed to help bring an end to Fidel Castro's 46-year rule and provide assistance to a subsequent democratic Cuba.

''For nearly 50 years, the regime of Fidel Castro has condemned the people of Cuba to a tragic fate of repression and poverty,'' Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said as part of McCarry's introduction, adding that the appointment will ``accelerate the demise of Castro's tyranny.''

Before an audience of Cuban-American legislators, exile leaders and other supporters of U.S.-Cuba policy, McCarry said, ``It is the responsibility of the civilized world to act to see that the Cuban family is reunited under political and economic freedom.''

Speaking on Miami's Radio Mambi, McCarry summed up his appointment with the words he said will soon be shouted from every corner of José Martí's Cuba: ``Viva Cuba libre.''

Many Cuban Americans welcomed McCarry, calling him ''a friend'' of the exile mission to oust Castro.

''He knows our cause well,'' said Horacio García, a director of the Cuban Liberty Council. ``They chose a person with commitment and passion.''

''He's extremely bright and thoroughly knowledgeable on the issue of Cuba,'' said Rep. Lincoln Díaz-Balart, R-Miami. ``He knows who's who and he knows where we need to go.''

The new post was one of the initiatives in the May 2004 Commission for Assistance to a Free Cuba report. Other measures include tightened restrictions on travel and remittances, increased support for the island's dissident movement and additional funding for Radio and TV Martí transmissions.

The appointment follows a new round of arrests in Havana and a stern warning by Castro earlier this week that ''acts of treason'' would not be tolerated. Castro has accused opponents of being paid U.S. ''mercenaries,'' a charge denied by U.S. officials.

McCarry has worked for the House International Relations Committee for eight years after moving from the Washington-based Center for Democracy.

Roger Noriega, assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere affairs, called the choice critical to advance Bush's ``freedom agenda.''

''[McCarry] is going to be the point man on Cuba,'' Noriega said. ***

751 posted on 07/29/2005 7:58:40 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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3 IRA-linked fugitives back in Ireland - Trained FARC in Columbia - hid out in Venezuela/Cuba*** DUBLIN -- Three men linked to the Irish Republican Army who were convicted of training rebels in Colombia have returned surreptitiously to Ireland, eight months after going on the run.

RTE, the Irish national broadcasters, carried an interview with one of the fugitives, Jim Monaghan. He said all three had returned to Ireland recently, ''and, as you can imagine, a lot of people in a lot of countries had to help us."

Monaghan would not provide details of how the three evaded the international arrest warrant facing them. He insisted he did not consider himself ''on the run" -- and hoped that Ireland would not extradite them to Colombia.

Monaghan, Niall Connolly, and Martin McCauley were arrested in August 2001 as they were trying to board a flight out of Colombia after spending about 18 months with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, Colombia's major rebel group known by the acronym FARC.

The men were charged with training rebels to make and deploy IRA-style weaponry, including truck-mounted mortars. They initially were acquitted of all major charges, but were ordered to remain in Colombia pending the government's appeal to a higher court, which in December convicted and imposed 17-year prison sentences on the men. The three immediately disappeared.

Since then, Irish and British media reports have placed all three either in Venezuela or Cuba, where Connolly had been based for several years.

The trio's unexpected reappearance on Irish soil sent shock waves through Northern Ireland's peace process, which has been taking dynamic turns in recent days.

The IRA last week declared that its 1997 cease-fire was permanent and promised to resume disarmament soon, and Britain began dismantling army installations in response.

Spokesmen for the British and Irish governments denied yesterday any advance knowledge of the three men's return....***

752 posted on 08/06/2005 1:38:18 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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