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Insight on the News  - World  Issue: 10/15/02

Castro Weaponizes West Nile Virus

By Martin Arostegui
As the Bush administration prepares for war with Iraq a growing
threat to its rear flank is being ignored, according to senior officials
who believe that Cuba's biological-weapons (BW) program is at
more advanced stages than officially is acknowledged. There now
are reports that P-4 containment systems used to store the
deadliest toxins have been identified at suspected bioweapons labs
inside Cuba.

A member of the intelligence community expresses concern, but
says that an open hearing on this issue would provide "feedback" to
Cuba on "how much we know about its BW effort." Undersecretary
of State for Arms Control and International Security John Bolton, the
source says, was scheduled to deliver details of the Cuban program
to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in June, but the
testimony was suppressed by the intelligence bureaucracy.

In his gagged statement, a copy of which was obtained by Insight,
Bolton expresses "frustration" at the apparent unwillingness of U.S.
intelligence agencies to disclose information about Cuba's biological
weapons which could include anthrax, smallpox and variants of
encephalitis such as West Nile virus. Recent outbreaks of West Nile
virus that have killed more than 30 Americans and infected another
675 have been traced to birds that may have been infected at
Cuban bioweapons labs, according to defecting scientists who
report Fidel Castro's experiments using animals as carriers of
weaponized germ agents.

Carlos Wotzkow, a leading Cuban ornithologist who defected in
1999, says that Castro's "Biological Front, which coordinates military
and scientific research, was extended to the Institute of Zoology in
1991 to develop ways of spreading infectious diseases, including
encephalitis and leptospirosis, through implantations in migratory
birds."

Roberto Hernandez, another exiled Cuban scientist, says, "We were
instructed to look into viruses such as encephalitis which are highly
resistant to insecticides. Military-intelligence officers running the labs
ordered us to trap birds with migratory routes to the United States
with the idea of releasing contaminated flocks which would be bitten
by mosquitoes which, in turn, infect humans."

A dead crow infected with West Nile virus recently was discovered
on the White House lawn, according to the Washington Post. Sixty
similarly infected birds fell around the U.S. Navy base in Boca
Chica, Fla., during September 2001, causing an encephalitis
epidemic that killed a civilian employee.

Scenarios worthy of Stephen King's sci-fi horrors are corroborated
by Col. Alvaro Prendes, a former vice chief of the Cuban air force
and exiled leader of Union de Soldados y Oficiales Libres (USOL), a
clandestine pro-democracy movement within Cuba's armed forces.
He tells Insight that Castro's biotech facilities operate under the
close control of a colonel of the Directorate of General Intelligence
(DGI), Librado Reina Benitan, a longtime protégé of Raul Castro,
Cuba's defense minister and brother of Fidel Castro [see "Fidel
Castro's Deadly Secret," July 20, 1998].

One fortified compound near a military hospital in east Havana is the
size of two football fields and contains six giant bubbles to retain
toxic gases. It is fronted as a cattle-feed producer, according to
documents smuggled out of Cuba by military dissidents. The
laboratory is equipped with a 10,000 Reid vapor-pressure centrifugal
reactor and has its own water system and backup generators. It is in
any case supported by high-priority circuits that feed a nearby
artillery base storing Russian-made SS-22 medium-range missiles
capable of reaching south Florida, according to Cuban documents
obtained by Insight.

"Castro plans a Götterdämmerung if his regime becomes seriously
threatened by an invasion or internal upheaval," warns Prendes,
citing a doomsday plan that is code-named Lucero. "Known
dissidents would be rounded up and herded into tunnels beneath
Havana to be exterminated with poison gas," according to the
former fighter pilot who was close to Castro and was decorated as a
"hero of the revolution" for shooting down CIA-manned bombers
during the aborted Bay of Pigs operation in 1961.

Cuba already has some experience using weaponized poison gas,
having employed it against South African troops and forces from the
National Union for the Total Independence of Angola (UNITA),
according to Aubin Heyndrickx, a senior U.N. consultant on
chemical warfare. Cuban-supported rebels of the Revolutionary
Armed Forces of Colombia also used poison gas in an attack on the
Colombian town of San Adolfo last year, according to an analysis of
bomb residues by the U.S. Army's chemical- and biological-warfare
center at Fort Detrick in Maryland.

But despite the publicly available evidence presented by highly
authoritative sources, U.S. officials are not cleared to make
unambiguous statements about Cuba's bioweapons threat. And it
has yet to be mentioned by the president or any member of his
Cabinet. The CIA's national intelligence officer for Latin America,
Fulton Armstrong, is "coordinating talking points" on the issue. But
when contacted by Insight he declined comment.

While U.S. intelligence agencies understandably are reluctant to
reveal classified material that might compromise methods and
informants, a variety of sources in the State Department, the
Pentagon, congressional staffs and among media professionals
covering national security confirm that Clinton holdovers who retain
key positions in the intelligence agencies are using their authority to
mislead public opinion on Cuba. This is especially galling to
members of the  Bush national-security team, and they are known to
be complaining loudly about it.

The pro-Castro clique under Bill Clinton was nothing if not brazen.
When the British Broadcasting Corp. (BBC) was researching a
segment on Cuba for its internationally acclaimed 1998 TV
documentary on the proliferation of biochemical weapons to rogue
states, Clinton's national-security shop defended Castro at every
turn. "A member of the U.S. intelligence community discredited
published reports about Cuba's biowarfare capabilities," a BBC
executive producer tells Insight, "saying that no Russian scientists
involved in the former Soviet Union's biological-weapons program
had ever worked in Cuba."

That was disinformation. Ken Alibek, former deputy director of the
Soviet Biopreparat, reveals in his 1999 book, Biohazard, that Castro
obtained bioweapon technology directly from top-ranking
Biopreparat generals and scientists who made repeated trips to
Cuba to provide advice and training during the late 1980s and early
1990s. "We knew that Cuba was interested in biowarfare research.
We knew that there were several centers, one of them very close to
Havana, involved in military biotechnology," Alibek told a
congressional hearing last year. He called the contradictory U.S.
government statements on Cuban bioweapons a "confusing
situation."

Why this fog has been allowed to persist into the Bush
administration is even more confusing, if that is the euphemism, say
critics. While Bolton was blowing the whistle on Cuba's biowarfare
threat in a speech to the Heritage Foundation on May 6, a top CIA
analyst identified as a former member of Clinton's National Security
Council (NSC) team and a known advocate of rapprochement with
Cuba, was telling Jimmy Carter that there was no evidence to
support Bolton's accusations. Carter then embarrassed the
administration by citing this U.S. intelligence briefing during a press
conference in Havana following a tour of a suspected biochemical
lab at the invitation of Fidel Castro.

"There is sufficient information to alert the American public, which
deserves to know about the developing threat from Cuba," says
Bolton. His view is supported by John Ford, head of the State
Department Bureau of Intelligence and Research, who on June 5
told an open congressional hearing that "Cuba does indeed have an
offensive biological-weapons research program."

Bolton's more sharply worded statement also criticized "a tendency
to underplay Cuba." He drew attention to the case of Ana Belen
Montes, a Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) analyst who has
pleaded guilty to charges of spying for Castro after being caught
red-handed communicating with her DGI handlers in the wake of the
Sept. 11 attacks.

"Montes used her position at the Pentagon to try to delete Cuba
from the national-security list and influence her colleagues," says
Rep. Lincoln Diaz-Balart (R-Fla.), who is trying to condition current
legislation easing Cuban travel restrictions upon presidential
certifications that biological weapons are not being developed on the
island. Staffers of the House and Senate intelligence and foreign-
relations committees tell Insight that there nonetheless is resistance
within the intelligence bureaucracy to "reviewing assessments filed
by Montes which underplay Cuban biowarfare capabilities and
discredit defectors warning of the danger."

Constantine Menges, a former NSC officer and CIA analyst, says,
"We are looking at the same type of intelligence failure which led to
last year's Sept. 11 attacks. I don't think it's as much a case of
ideological conspiracy as of our intelligence community not wanting
to admit that they have been asleep at the switch."

Encouraging the inertia are pressures from an increasingly powerful
business lobby of food producers, farming interests and
pharmaceutical companies eager to trade with Cuba. Proof of
Cuba's biowarfare activities likely would poison congressional
support to lift the economic embargo. Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.),
currently a supporter of easing trade restrictions, says, "If it is true
that Cuba has biological weapons it would be very serious and we
would have to act on this. It would be an entirely new ball game."

Aside from the direct threat that Cuba's bioweapon capabilities pose
to U.S. security, senior administration officials, who include Special
Negotiator for Chemical and Biological Weapons Donald Mahley,
also worry about ongoing Cuban transfers of dual-use biotechnology
to Islamic countries closely connected to Middle Eastern terrorist
networks. Castro's vice president, Carlos Lage, inaugurated a new
biotechnology-research plant in Iran in 2000, purportedly producing
Hepatitis B vaccines. According to José de la Fuente, the former
director of research at Cuba's Center for Biological Investigations
and Genetics, the transferred technology involves biological agents,
pathogens and germ-strengthening processes that also are
applicable to weaponizing bacteria.

The deal with Iran was transacted through banks in the United Arab
Emirates (UAE), which was Castro's next stop following a state visit
to Tehran last year during an Islamic tour that also included the
terrorist states of Libya and Syria.

A seemingly neutral gulf kingdom with a low international profile, the
UAE would seem an odd destination for Castro. But the small oil
state is one of the main international money-laundering centers of
the Arab world — one where a series of bank accounts and financial
companies has been directly linked to al-Qaeda and the Iranian-
backed Hezbollah terror network. Debit cards uncovered at al-
Qaeda bases in Afghanistan, inspected by Insight, invariably were
issued by banks in the UAE.

Alibek explains how Soviet biotechnology simultaneously was
transferred to Cuba, Iran, Iraq and other former Russian allies that
share similar bioweapons programs: "The Soviet Union organized
courses in genetic engineering and molecular biology for scientists
from Eastern Europe, Cuba, Libya, Iran and Iraq. Some 40 foreign
scientists were trained annually. Many of them now head
biotechnology programs in their own countries."

According to Alibek, Iraq copied Cuban methods to cover up
acquisitions of bioweapons technology, such as large industrial
fermentation vessels and related equipment. "The model was one
we had used to develop and manufacture bacterial biological
weapons. Like Cuba, the Iraqis maintained the vessels were
intended to grow single-cell protein for cattle feed. What made the
deals particularly suspicious were additional requests for exhaust-
filtration equipment capable of achieving 99.99 percent air purity —
a level we only used in our bioweapons labs," says the world's top
biowarfare expert.

On Nov. 4, 2001, Castro was delivering an informal two-hour chat
on Havana television about the war on terrorism. He said that
Afghanistan was going to be a new Vietnam, that it would take the
United States 20 years to defeat the Taliban and that al-Qaeda
never would be destroyed. In a brief sound bite that piqued the
interest of some U.S. military-intelligence analysts, the Maximum
Leader also said that 40 envelopes "containing strange powders"
had been intercepted in Cuba, of which five were directed to the
United States, Pakistan, Italy and Costa Rica.

Yet, despite the reports of Cuba's biowarfare activities and possible
involvement in the Sept. 11 attacks [see "Fidel May Be Part of
Terror Campaign," Dec. 3, 2001], Castro never has been named as
a "person of interest" in the FBI's anthrax investigations, which
instead have focused on Stephen Hatfill, a white, Rhodesian-born
U.S. Army scientist who more closely fits the profile of a politically
correct villain. A former FBI deputy director told CNN on Aug. 25
that he was perplexed as to why the bureau had failed seriously to
investigate a "foreign source" for the anthrax mailings to leading
politicians and the media.

U.S. investigators appear to be overlooking two Cuban DGI deep-
cover agents indicted in Florida on Aug. 4, 2001, who told the FBI
that they had obtained jobs in the U.S. Postal Service on instructions
from Havana, which wanted studies of post-office security, through
which the deadly anthrax letters moved to kill Americans.

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