Well, this could be an answer to my question a few days ago as to whether
there could be anything pertinent to this list in the Elian Gonzalez case.
I thought perhaps my imagination was running wild, but here's an article
from Robert Parry's website www.consortiumnews.com!

David Goldman


        Behind the Elian Case


        By Jerry Meldon

        The Elian Gonzalez case has centered on the
        fate of a six-year-old boy and the no-risk politics
        of talking tough about Fidel Castro. But the
        controversy also underscores the moral
        ambiguity of the U.S. diplomatic position on Cuba
        for the past four decades.

         The boy landed among those old antagonisms when he
        was pulled from the Straits of Florida on Thanksgiving
        Day after an over-crowded 17-foot powerboat capsized
        killing Elian’s mother, her boyfriend and other
        passengers. Legal principle required that the boy
        promptly be returned to his surviving father.

        But anti-Castro politics soon intervened. The powerful
        Cuban-American National Foundation labeled Elian
        “another child victim of Fidel Castro.” Hard-line elements
        of the Miami community seized on the case as another
        way to do battle against their old enemy in Havana.
        Politicians, including Gov. George W. Bush and Vice
        President Al Gore, voiced opposition to sending the boy
        back to Cuba.

        Little noticed by the U.S. news media, however, was the
        fact that some of the Cuban-Americans fanning the
        flames had long-standing ties to anti-Castro terrorism.
        Some also collaborated with drug-tainted right-wing
        forces that carried out bloody human rights violations in
        the 1970s and 1980s. Their commitment to family values
        and the rule of law might have been drawn into question.

        For instance, one prominent Miami-based spokesman
        on the Elian case is Jose Basulto. A Bay of Pigs
        veteran, Basulto has acknowledged past involvement in
        terror attacks on Cuba in the 1960s as well as work for
        Argentina’s military government, a regime that tortured
        and “disappeared” an estimated 30,000 political
        dissidents from 1976-83 -- and allegedly financed some
        of its operations with drug proceeds.

        Basulto’s experiences in secret wars against Castro and
        other leftists dated back to 1959. In that year, Castro’s
        revolutionary army overthrew a Mafia-connected
        dictator, Gen. Fulgencio Batista, and Basulto emigrated
        to the United States. In Miami, he and his friend Felix
        Rodriguez signed up with the CIA-backed Brigade 2506.
        They were infiltrated into Cuba before the ill-fated Bay
        of Pigs invasion in 1961.

        After the invasion failed, Basulto and Rodriguez escaped
        back to Miami, where they nursed grievances over
        alleged U.S. betrayal. They also continued work for
        CIA-funded groups and plotted new ways to strike at
        Castro.

        On Aug. 24, 1962, the 22-year-old Basulto manned a
        22mm cannon aboard a boat that had maneuvered 200
        yards off the coast of Miramar, west of Havana. Castro
        was known to frequent the Hornedo de Rosita Hotel, a
        crowded tourist spot that also housed Soviet bloc
        specialists. At 11:30 p.m., Basulto opened fire,
        shattering windows and sowing terror but failing to kill
        Castro (who wasn’t there) or anyone else.

        Reflecting back on these activities 35 years later,
        Basulto acknowledged that “we were pretty [lousy]
        terrorists, let me tell you.” [Washington Post Magazine,
        May 20, 1997]

        On March 20, 1963, Basulto and 50 other Bay of Pigs
        veterans enlisted in the U.S. Army with commissions as
        second lieutenants. Basulto received psychological
        warfare training at Fort Bragg, N.C., and Fort Benning,
        Ga. After leaving the Army, he returned to the shadowy
        world of anti-Castro politics in Miami.

        [One of Basulto’s Cuban comrades in the U.S. Army
        was his friend, Felix Rodriguez, who would go on to a
        long career in the CIA before representing Vice
        President George Bush’s office in Central America
        during the 1980s.]

        In the years after the Army, Basulto claimed he adopted
        the pacifist teachings of Mahatma Gandhi. But outside
        experts believe Basulto remained active in the
        anti-Castro terrorist underground.

        In an interview with The Washington Post, Basulto
        seemed to confirm that suspicion. He said: “About that
        time in my life, I have only one thing I want to say. We
        had come to the conclusion that the only hope for the
        Cuban people lay in the physical elimination of Fidel
        Castro.”

        Basulto insisted that he dropped out of politics in the
        1970s. But his old political passions apparently were
        rekindled by Ronald Reagan’s election in 1980.

        After Reagan’s victory, American ultraconservatives
        sought out the Argentines to fight the new leftist
        Sandinista government in Nicaragua. John Carbaugh, an
        aide to Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., first broached the
        idea with the defeated remnants of Nicaraguan dictator
        Anastasio Somoza’s National Guard who were licking
        their wounds in Honduras.

        Carbaugh then flew to Buenos Aires for talks with
        Argentine intelligence officers who agreed to assist the
        contras. [For details, see Roy Gutman’s Banana
        Diplomacy.]

        In March 1981, two months into the Reagan-Bush
        administration, Argentine leader, Gen. Roberto Viola,
        made a state visit to Washington. After Viola’s trip,
        President Reagan authorized the CIA to begin
        collaborating with Argentina’s contra-support operation.

        When word of this Argentine training agreement reached
        Miami, anti-Castro Cubans began shipping out to
        Central America, optimistic that the road to Havana ran
        through Managua. Basulto was one of the volunteers
        who advised “Argentine forces in Central America,” he
        acknowledged to a Wall Street Journal reporter. [WSJ,
        Aug. 9, 1988]

        According to William Turner, a former FBI agent who
        kept tabs on Basulto’s anti-Castro activities, the Cuban
        émigré served as an adviser to Argentine intelligence
        officers who were training the contras in methods of
        torture. [Chicago Tribune, March 3, 1996]

        Years later, congressional investigators learned that the
        Argentine intelligence services had turned to the drug
        trade to finance their regional anti-communist
        operations.

        In sworn U.S. Senate testimony, Leonardo
        Sanchez-Reisse, a financial officer for the Argentine
        intelligence services, said Bolivian drug lord Roberto
        Suarez contributed more than $30 million to finance the
        Argentine-backed “Cocaine Coup” in Bolivia in June
        1980 and to support the Nicaraguan contra rebels and
        other paramilitary operations in Central America.
        Sanchez-Reisse said Suarez’s $30 million was
        laundered through businesses in Miami. [See Robert
        Parry’s Lost History.]

        In 1998, a CIA inspector general’s report also found that
        contra operatives subsidized their activities with cocaine
        smuggling into the United States. Through the decade,
        as this contra-connected cocaine trafficking continued,
        the CIA took special steps to head off criminal and
        congressional investigations that threatened to reveal
        the secret, the inspector general’s report admitted. [See
        Lost History.]

        Although Basulto was not mentioned in the CIA report,
        the inspector general found that other Cuban-Americans
        who had volunteered to assist the contras were
        moonlighting as drug traffickers or were serving as
        money launderers for the Medellin cocaine cartel.

        The Argentine military also had an odd way of
        demonstrating its commitment to family values.

        During the Argentine "dirty war," when the military’s
        secret police captured a pregnant female deemed
        subversive, they would subject the woman to a
        Caesarean section or induce labor. They then would
        give the baby to a military family and murder the new
        mother, usually by shackling her naked to other captives
        and then dumping her from a plane into the ocean to
        drown. Sometimes, the infants were literally raised by
        their mothers’ killers.

        For his part, Basulto underwent a dramatic public
        makeover in the 1990s. He transformed his image from
        renegade terrorist to the leader of a humanitarian group
        called Brothers to the Rescue, an organization that
        mixed the rescue of Cubans crossing to Miami by sea
        with provocative flights over Cuba that dropped
        anti-Castro propaganda.

        Basulto’s operation led to a new crisis in U.S.-Cuban
        relations on Feb. 24, 1996, when Cuban MiGs shot
        down two of the group’s unarmed planes after they left
        Cuban airspace. Four pilots died, but Basulto escaped
        in a third plane. Because of the incident, President
        Clinton agreed to sign the Helms-Burton Act, a law that
        tightened the U.S. economic embargo against the island.

        Basulto was back in action again after the rescue of
        Elian Gonzalez. Basulto launched his group’s planes for
        an unsuccessful search for other survivors. He also
        cranked up the rhetoric as the boy’s status became an
        international cause celebre.

        “This is not a simple case of delivering a child to his
        father,” Basulto said. “It’s delivery of a child to a
        government. He’ll be like an orange and they’re going to
        squeeze the last drop of juice from him.” [USA Today,
        Jan. 6, 2000]

        Later, Basulto hailed Elian’s survival as a case of Divine
        Intervention against Castro’s Cuba. “This was a clear
        case of a miracle,” Basulto declared. “When they found
        Elian, he was surrounded by dolphins,” the mammals
        presumably sent by God to protect the boy. However,
        the fisherman who pulled the boy out of the water and
        the U.S. Coast Guard reported no dolphins in the vicinity
        at the time of the rescue. [The New Republic, Jan. 24,
        2000]

        When 100 demonstrators marched on the Immigration
        and Naturalization Service in support of an initial U.S.
        government decision to return Elian to his father, Basulto
        was drawing headlines again. He denounced the
        marchers as dupes of Castro. “They’re following
        directives from Cuba,” he charged. [Dallas Morning
        News, Jan. 30, 2000]

        The onetime “terrorist” had helped transform the Elian
        tragedy into a propaganda club against his old enemy,
        Fidel Castro.

        -----

            Jerry Meldon is chair of the chemical engineering
            department at Tufts University.

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