184 lines
8.2 KiB
Plaintext
184 lines
8.2 KiB
Plaintext
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Conspiracy Nation -- Vol. 7 Num. 39
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======================================
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("Quid coniuratio est?")
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DID CFR APPROVE CUBAN DOWNING?
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==============================
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Shades of April Glaspie {1}: Was Castro Told
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He Could Shoot Down U.S. Craft? What Did the
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CFR Prez Tell Castro in January?
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--------------------------------------------
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[Spotlight, 03/11/96]
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Exclusive To The Spotlight
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By Martin Mann
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The four unarmed search-and-rescue pilots who met their death
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over the Florida Straits on February 24, and the Cuban MIG
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fighters that downed them, may have been pawns in a larger game
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plan set up by strategists of the Council on Foreign Relations
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(CFR).
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At first glance the attack appears to have been a "reckless,
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mindless mid-air murder," noted Dr. Alvarado Tarquin, a former
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Cuban foreign service officer who is now a research fellow at
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George Mason University.
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The Cessnas of "Brothers to the Rescue," a Cuban exile group of
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volunteer pilots, have been flying up and down the Cuban
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coastline for almost 10 years, spotting -- and trying to save --
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refugees adrift on rafts or inner tubes.
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"Why fire on them now?" Tarquin asked.
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News reports sounded similarly stymied by the savagery and timing
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of the incident. "The Question: Why Did Castro Do It?" asked the
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headline of the Wall Street Journal.
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The Washington Post, noting the Cuban government's recent
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breakthrough successes in ending its diplomatic isolation,
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obtaining foreign financing and lifting its fallen economy,
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called the timing of the attack "perplexing."
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One of the last significant American visitors to arrive in Havana
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for private meetings with Fidel Castro, the island's communist
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dictator, in recent weeks was Leslie Gelb, the president of the
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Council on Foreign Relations (CFR).
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David Rockefeller, Henry Kissinger and their policy aides at the
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CFR have maintained a secret diplomatic back-channel to communist
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Cuba for almost a year, well-placed sources say.
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"Since 1993, Castro has become a problem, and then a threat to
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Wall Street," explained Casimir Menges, a veteran New York trader
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in Caribbean securities. "He gradually abandoned his Marxist
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restrictions on foreign capital, inviting European and Latin
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American money moguls to acquire controlling stakes in Cuba's
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tourism business, industrial infrastructure and even the island's
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natural resources, such as mining sugar and oil exploration."
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Rockefeller, and his principal international affairs adviser,
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Kissinger, did not take this threat lightly, Wall Street sources
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say.
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A small but potentially wealthy nation in Latin America, where
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the Rockefellers have played a dominant behind-the-scenes role
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since World War II, was being invaded by foreign competitors.
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To counteract this challenge, the Rockefeller consortium set out
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to develop an intense relationship of its own with Cuba's
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communist rulers.
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When Castro landed in New York City last fall to attend the UN's
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50th anniversary assembly, Rockefeller assumed the role of his
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unofficial host.
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The last communist dictator in the West found himself closeted in
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high-level meetings with top executives of Chase Manhattan Bank
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and other Rockefeller fiefdoms at the tightly guarded CFR
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headquarters on Park Avenue.
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But the bearded strongman was not to be dissuaded from inviting
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European and Latin American corporations to take over such key
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Cuban assets as the hotel industry, the national telephone
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company, the rich mineral deposits in Cuba's eastern mountains,
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and even the newly privatized sector of banking services, says a
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New York economist who served as one of the CFR's advisors last
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year.
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The only remaining threat to this rolling takeover of Cuba's
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economy by giant competitors of Rockefeller's own conglomerate
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remained a proposed congressional measure named after its
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Republican sponsors (Sen. Jesse Helms [R-N.C.] and Rep. Dan
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Burton [R-Ind.]) as the Helms-Burton bill.
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Helms-Burton was designed to penalize any foreign corporation
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that tried to muscle in on Cuba.
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"In effect, this bill is a declaration that anyone who did
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business with Cuba would be cut off by the United States, and
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suffer legal sanctions," explained Menges.
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President Bill Clinton, however, engaged in his own attempts to
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improve relations with Cuba, threatened to veto Helms-Burton if
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adopted by Congress this year.
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The only way to get around that hurdle was to lure Castro into
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some abrupt and explosive action -- something so violent and
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outrageous that it made U.S. reprisals inevitable.
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"Castro has been complaining about the flights of the 'Brothers
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to the Rescue' group for years, but fear of American retaliation
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kept him from doing anything about them," Tarquin said.
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But this year, the visit of the CFR president to Havana seems to
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have put the Cuban dictator's fears to rest, sources say.
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"Castro learned, from this authoritative contact, that the U.S.
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government no longer supports -- does not even condone -- exile
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incursions across the Florida Straits," said Robert Maldonado, a
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former U.S. wire service correspondent in Havana. Castro "was
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persuaded the time had come to get rid of the bothersome refugee
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rescue patrols."
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Now events followed each other in quick succession. Castro
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ordered the planes of "Brothers to the Rescue" blasted from the
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sky.
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Clinton, confronting a crisis, announced that he would cut off
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charter flights to Cuba, restrict the movements of Castro's
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envoys in New York, and, most importantly, throw his support
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behind the passage of the Helms-Burton bill.
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---------------------------<< Notes >>---------------------------
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{1} April Glaspie: "On July 25, 1990... U.S. Ambassador April
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Glaspie assured Iraq's Saddam Hussein that the United States had
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no interest in its conflict with Kuwait. These assurances were
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interpreted by Saddam Hussein as clearance to invade Kuwait,
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which he did several days later. This sequence of events almost
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suggests that Saddam Hussein was encouraged to attack Kuwait
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while the United States waited to retaliate." (*Defrauding
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America* by Rodney Stich. Book may not be available in stores;
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phone 1-800-247-7389 to order.)
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The claim that April Glaspie gave Saddam Hussein a "green
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light" to invade Kuwait is corroborated in Robert Parry's book,
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*Fooling America*. (New York: William Morrow & Co., Inc., 1992.)
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So "Shades of April Glaspie" in the sub-header for the
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Spotlight article (above) suggests that Castro was subtly led to
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believe that any attacks by him on Brothers to the Rescue
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aircraft would *not* cause a notable U.S. government reaction.
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Spotlight nor am I compensated by them. I also neither
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necessarily agree nor disagree with either all or parts of the
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views expressed in The Spotlight.
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Want to know more about Whitewater, Oklahoma City bombing, etc?
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(1) telnet prairienet.org (2) logon as "visitor" (3) go citcom
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See also: http://www.europa.com/~johnlf/cn.html
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See also: ftp.shout.net pub/users/bigred
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Aperi os tuum muto, et causis omnium filiorum qui pertranseunt.
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Aperi os tuum, decerne quod justum est, et judica inopem et
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pauperem. -- Liber Proverbiorum XXXI: 8-9
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