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Carole King Sings to Castro
dailynews.yahoo.com ^ | February 12, 2002 | AP

Posted on 02/12/2002 9:14:29 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife

HAVANA - Singer Carole King recently accompanied a delegation of U.S. representative from California to Cuba for a dinner with Fidel Castro.

The visit was meant to warm relations between the two countries.

King serenaded Castro with "You've Got A Friend" and a new song, "Love Makes the World." King says her songs were a message she wanted to bring there. She says her life and her work are all about communication and she wants to set an example of good will.

Carole King is best known for her 1971 album "Tapestry" that had the hit single "It's Too Late."


Singer Carole King, right, speaks with Cuban singer Carlos Varela, cantante cubano, in Havana Monday Feb. 11, 2002. King serenaded Fidel Castro with "You've Got a Friend" at a weekend dinner, and U.S. representatives from California shared wines from Napa and Sonoma, part of the latest effort to change U.S. policy toward Cuba. (AP Photo/Cristobal Herrera)


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: castrowatch; hollywoodpinglist
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To: tjg
You need to see the Arturo Sandoval story which recently played on HBO. It shows how Castro brings out all of his musicians when foreigners come the Cuba, then the moment the leave, he goes back to telling them what they can and cannot play. It reminded me of what the Nazis did in Theresinstadt whenever the Red Cross came to visit.
41 posted on 02/12/2002 10:14:09 AM PST by dfwgator
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Carole should ask her pal, "By the way, how come you don't have any political rivals in Cuba?"
42 posted on 02/12/2002 10:14:46 AM PST by Jack Wilson
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To: tjg
Castro is free to freely trade with the rest of the world. So why do you think that hasn't helped?
43 posted on 02/12/2002 10:15:40 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: jrewingjr
I think you're on to something. These old lefties really are a puzzle.
44 posted on 02/12/2002 10:17:50 AM PST by Eric in the Ozarks
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To: Jack Wilson
It's amazing, isn't it?

Castro locks up homosexuals and wears miltary fatigues and the Hollywood crowd swoons
and LIBERALS come down from Capital Hill and willingly kneel to kiss his commie ring.

45 posted on 02/12/2002 10:20:07 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: f.Christian

Definitely cracked.

46 posted on 02/12/2002 10:23:59 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: tjg, all
I personally think the best weapon to defeat totalitarianism is capitalism.

Here's an analogy for you. - Castro goes into a convenience store, shoots the owner in the head and stands behind the cash register ready for business.

I'm not willing to patronize the store in hopes that capitalism will reform him.

47 posted on 02/12/2002 10:25:13 AM PST by Barnacle
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
The US should ship noodniks like Barbra Streisand, Alec Baldwin, Kim Basinger, Cameron Diaz, Gabriel Byrne and host of Hollywoodites to Fidel permanently with the US' blessings.
48 posted on 02/12/2002 10:26:31 AM PST by lilylangtree
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To: lilylangtree
I'd sure go for that lily but I don't think they really want to live like that.
It's so drab with everyone so poor and that bag of shampoo and soap once a month, gosh how could that meet their needs?
49 posted on 02/12/2002 10:31:39 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: tjg
Embargos only hurt the common people.

No tig Castro hurts the common people.
Why aren't these people allowed to move around freely, travel, read what they want, learn what they want, start businessess, worship openly, or own property?

50 posted on 02/12/2002 10:34:10 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Oldeconomybuyer
Wasn't she on the cover of a recent "CIGAR AFICIONADO"?

No wonder she's down there...probably wants to sign an exclusive import deal for Cohibas and Hoyos.

51 posted on 02/12/2002 10:37:35 AM PST by muleskinner
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To: MotleyGirl70
Yes, she did all of what you stated. I wonder if she and Fido,I mean Fidel,sit in a circle and sang "We shall overcome?"
52 posted on 02/12/2002 10:37:49 AM PST by mymanbush
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
a related trip
Former President Carter Planning To Visit Cuba
(CNSNews.com) - The date has not been set yet, but former President Jimmy Carter is making plans to visit Cuba, according to a spokesperson. "He does hope to go to Cuba. It is a matter now of putting in place an agenda and a timetable, which we don't have yet and I don't know when we will have one," said Deanna Congileo, a spokesperson for the former president in an interview with CNSNews.com. Congileo added, "There isn't an announcement yet really to be made as far as we are concerned. When we know all the details, we will announce it." More To Come.

53 posted on 02/12/2002 10:38:39 AM PST by Stand Watch Listen
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To: Stand Watch Listen
Former President Carter Planning To Visit Cuba

Zimbabwe rejects EU poll observer-murder/mayhem rule:opposition "stretched to the limit"

Odd isn't it Jimmy Carter isn't traveling to help led a hand"
Oh that's right this election seems to be firmly in the bag for the dictator.


Zimbabwe farmer William Gau arrives at an emergency care center in Harare with multiple injuries after he was alledgedly attacked by two suspected war veterans on his farm in the Harare South area, Thursday, Feb 7, 2002. Thursday's attack followed an incident Wednesday in which 30 suspected government supporters trashed his workers' compound and badly injured several of his workers. (AP Photo)

54 posted on 02/12/2002 10:49:11 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: dfwgator
While these people feast and serenade Fidel Castro, the Cuban dictator moves his puppets in the U.S. congress in order to get the American taxpayers to finance his terrorist regime. Ending the embargo means the openning of international and American bank credits that would result in the American taxpayers footing the bill for Castro's purchases.

FIDEL MAY BE PART OF TERROR CAMPAIGN

By Martin Arostegui*

Insight Magazine

Washington

At 6:30 p.m. on Sept. 14, Ana Belen Montes, a senior analyst at the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), walked into a public telephone booth outside Washington's National Zoo and made two calls to pager numbers later traced by federal agents to Cuba's Directorate of General Intelligence (DGI). She already had compromised the identities of CIA agents, revealed U.S. military secrets and exposed the contents of classified files. But, as Montes sent repeated signals to her DGI handlers during the days immediately following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on the Pentagon and the twin towers of the World Trade Center, the FBI was given orders to act.

The Sept. 21 arrest of a Fidel Castro mole deeply burrowed into the U.S. defense establishment at such a moment - even as weapons-grade anthrax was being mailed to media and congressional targets - raises serious questions about a possible Cuban connection with the international terrorist conspiracy targeting the United States. Concerns about Cuba's continuing threat to U.S. national security were voiced recently by the DIA director, Vice Adm. Tom Wilson. Before entering a closed session of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence he told reporters that "Cuba could initiate information warfare or computer-network attacks that could seriously disrupt our military."

While there has been a tendency to play down Castro's capabilities to engage the United States in asymmetrical warfare, "they are getting renewed attention in the light of recent events," according to a Pentagon source. The source tells Insight that only a highly sophisticated espionage network, such as the one operating from Cuba, could have cracked the code of Air Force One in an apparent breach of security that caused U.S. Secret Service officials to whisk the president out of sight on the morning of Sept. 11.

A sudden decision by Russian President Vladimir Putin to shut down Russia's electronic listening station at Lourdes near Havana by next year, announced just hours before his meeting with President George W. Bush at the Oct. 19 economic summit in Shanghai, "reflects the degree of alarm over Cuba's intelligence operations," according to a U.S. defense analyst in Washington. Congress already was threatening to freeze financial aid to Moscow unless it dismantled the intelligence facility that gives Castro a degree of international leverage out of proportion to the bankrupt state of his communist regime.

Despite some residual support for Castro in the Kremlin, a Cuban delegation visiting Moscow to procure additional funding for the Lourdes facility abruptly was dismissed with the announcement that instead the listening post would be closed. Influential elements in Moscow fear that the rogue use of Cuban spy facilities could drag Russia into an unwanted onfrontation with Washington. According to Cuban exile Ernesto Betancourt, some Russian officials were highly disturbed by a 1999 incident recorded by the Federal Communications Commission in which Cuban electronic-warfare specialists penetrated New York's air-traffic-control system by simulating U.S. Air Force flight codes. The signals, which seriously threatened to disrupt air traffic, were traced to a 1,500 kilowatt transmitter operating west of Havana.

As Russia and the United States try to close ranks against the common threat posed by Muslim terrorist networks in Central Asia, say intelligence insiders, Castro's growing ties with radical Islamic movements have become a source of worry for both governments. During his recent tour of Syria, Libya, Iran, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Malaysia, the Cuban dictator told a cheering crowd of Muslim students at the University of Tehran, "Together we will bring America to its knees."

Agence France-Presse reported that Castro, in an apocalyptic speech on May 10, told his Muslim audience in Iran: "America is weak. I have studied its weaknesses from very close by. I tell you, the imperialist king will finally fall." Following the Sept. 11 attacks, Castro followed the lead of hard-line Muslim leaders by blaming "this tragedy" on "the terrorist policies of the United States."

There are signs that Castro's new alignment with fundamentalist Islam could go beyond crowd-pleasing declarations. U.S. law-enforcement agencies have indications that Cuba may have assisted the logistics and planning for the latest wave of terrorist attacks. Insight has learned that al-Qaeda ringleader Mohammed Atta, who organized the Sept. 11 attacks and crashed a hijacked airliner into one of the twin towers of the World Trade Center, may have met secretly with Cuban undercover agents shortly after his arrival in the United States last year. The Czech government has confirmed that Atta similarly had met with Iraqi intelligence officers in Prague.

Federal investigators believe that Castro had been exploiting the international controversy unleashed by the Elian Gonzalez case to flood the United States with intelligence agents - including high-level officials of Cuba's biological-warfare program who allegedly spoke with Atta at a Miami motel. Federal investigators suspect that Atta's Cuban contact was a top defense-ministry officer with personal ties to Castro who entered the United States under cover of assignment to a Cuban-government delegation escorting Elian's two grandmothers, who supposedly were coming to mediate the custody battle.

"Information which Atta's al-Qaeda cells readily possessed on flight schools, airport security and airline flight patterns only could have been obtained through an intelligence infrastructure already in place," says a federal law-enforcement official. FBI affidavits filed in connection with the roundup of a Cuban spy ring involved in the 1996 shootdown of two small aircraft over the straits of Florida charge the Cuban DGI with conducting espionage against U.S. military and civil aviation through a network of some 300 agents operating across the continent.

Exchanges between bin Laden's al-Qaeda network and Cuban intelligence also could involve the provision of weaponized biological strains produced by Cuba's extensive chemical/biological warfare facilities exposed by Insight three years ago (see "Fidel Castro's Deadly Secret," July 20, 1998). Kenneth Alibek, who developed anthrax as deputy director of the Soviet biological warfare Biopreperat program, says in his book Biohazard, published last year, that Castro has since been running an advanced biological-weapons program administered by scientists trained in Moscow in the 1990s.

Reports smuggled out by Cuban dissident scientists confirm that Castro's research has concentrated on developing undetectable methods of spreading deadly bacteria, including the use of contaminated bird flocks. Cuba, meanwhile, has been engaging in scientific exchanges with Iraq, say these scientists. A year ago, Cuban Vice President Carlos Lage opened a biotechnological research-and-development plant in Iran, paving the way for Castro's visit to that country last May.

Atta's dealings with the DGI are not the only contacts reported between Cuba's military intelligence and al-Qaeda. The Associated Press reported on March 4, 2000, that a young Afghani who trained at a camp run by bin Laden in northeast Afghanistan says he saw advisers there from Chechnya, Sudan, Libya, Iran, North Korea and Cuba. Some of these foreigners, he said, had brought biological/chemical weapons, which were stored in caves.

Three Afghani nationals and suspected al-Qaeda members caught trying to deposit $2 million in a bank in the Cayman Islands last August were found to have entered the British colony on a commercial flight from nearby Cuba using false Pakistani passports. British authorities who arrested the three men believe that they were handling drug proceeds laundered in Havana.

Colombia's former national police chief, Gen. Rosso José Serrano, maintains that Cuba also has facilitated contacts between radical Muslim militants and leftist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) guerrillas. Serrano says that about 100 Afghanis have entered Colombia during the last decade to introduce cultivation of heroin poppies in guerrilla-held areas. An Egyptian terrorist belonging to al-Gamal al-Islamiya - who was wanted in connection with the 1997 massacre of 80 Western tourists near Cairo - entered Colombia illegally in 1998 to hold talks with FARC and was arrested and turned over to U.S. authorities.

Cuban biological/chemical-warfare technology also has been detected in Colombia. A FARC bomb that burned out the lungs of an entire police garrison in the Colombian town of San Adolfo last September contained chlorine-based poison gas, according to a lab analysis of the device. Some 20 Cuban military advisers currently are operating with FARC, according to Colombian army intelligence. It also has intercepted guerrilla radio communications in which FARC's military commander, Jorge Briceno, alias "Mono Jojoy," talks about forming an "anti-imperialist front" to launch terrorist attacks against targets in the United States. "To take away their economic resources wherever they may be, reach into North America and get to their own territory," says Briceno, "to make them feel the pain which they have inflicted on others."

In September, meanwhile, as Montes frantically transmitted information to her DGI spymasters through Cuba's mission to the United Nations, according to an FBI affidavit, Castro was ordering a military alert in Cuba and calling up reserves. A CIA psychiatric profiler who has studied Castro's personality believes that the Cuban dictator was displaying "geriatric verexertion." But top intelligence specialists tell Insight that Castro may have had reasons to fear a possible U.S. retaliation when President George W. Bush declared his war on terrorism.

"Tours through radical Islamic states by Castro and his close Venezuelan ally, President Hugo Chavez, in the months prior to the September attacks indicate some level of complicity or knowledge of what was going to happen," says Lisette Bustamante, a former aide to Castro who currently works on the Spanish daily newspaper La Razon.

Not only were statements by both leaders in their Middle Eastern trips laced with violent anti-American rhetoric, Bustamante points out, but Chavez quite candidly told reporters that his talks with Saddam Hussein and heads of other oil-producing states involved the creation of a "new anti-imperialist axis" against Western industrialized economies.

It was just the sort of anti-American blather that tends to excite the faithful remnant of the old-guard communists, say U.S. intelligence analysts. Mysterious predictions about some catastrophic event in the United States began to circulate in the electronic traffic and even were voiced by Russia's Pravda on Aug. 1 under the headline, "The Dollar and the U.S. Will Fall."

Based on interviews with the Malaysian ambassador to Moscow and a group of Russian economists, the report was taken seriously enough for members of Russia's parliament, the Duma, to advise Russian citizens to cash out dollars. An adviser to the Duma's Commission on Economic Politics, Tatyana Koryagina, even specified late August or early September as the likely time for an attack on the United States that would lead to its economic collapse.

*Martin Arostegui is a free-lance writer for Insight magazine.

55 posted on 02/12/2002 10:58:35 AM PST by Dqban22
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To: Dqban22
Big BUMP!
56 posted on 02/12/2002 11:09:01 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Register at caroleking.com and freep away in the forum. A thread is already started.
57 posted on 02/12/2002 11:16:17 AM PST by Sanjuro68
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To: Sanjuro68
Just getting there. Oh, yeah a whole lotta airbrushing going on.

Oh No! "Please send me more information on current environmental issues:"

Sorry Sanjuro68 I can't register at this site, even to have the opportunity to post. Send them over here!

58 posted on 02/12/2002 11:23:25 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Jhensy
LOL, good observation. I couldn't have come up with that one. No, that combo doesn't make for an attractive woman.
59 posted on 02/12/2002 12:03:09 PM PST by MotleyGirl70
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Castro locks up homosexuals and wears miltary fatigues

I wonder why he does this? Because he's so deeply insecure with his own masculinity that he has to so radically overcompensate?

60 posted on 02/12/2002 1:25:58 PM PST by nickcarraway
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