http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/19/world/19spies.html?_r=1&ref=global-home


Couple's Capital Ties Said to Veil Spying for Cuba 


 
A family photo of Kendall and Gwendolyn Myers in 1997. 

By GINGER THOMPSON
Published: June 18, 2009 
WASHINGTON - She was twice divorced and fresh out of South Dakota when she fell 
for his worldly sophistication. He came from one of this city's most privileged 
families, and admired her work helping ordinary people.

Enlarge This Image
 
A. Rea, via Reuters
Kendall Myers and his wife, Gwendolyn Myers, in Washington in February. They 
have been charged with spying for Cuba. 

Together, Gwendolyn and Kendall Myers set out to give the second half of their 
lives new meaning. At first, disillusioned with the pace of change in 
Washington, the great-grandson of Alexander Graham Bell, who at the time was a 
State Department contract employee, and the housewife turned political activist 
moved to South Dakota, where they embraced a counterculture lifestyle, even 
growing marijuana in the basement. They marched for legalized abortion, 
promoted solar energy, and repaired relations with six children from previous 
marriages. 

When the wide-open spaces of the West quickly grew too small, the couple 
returned to Washington a year later, renewing their ties to the establishment 
that they had rejected.

But the government says the real reason for the Myerses' 1980 return was to spy 
for Cuba. In a complaint that reads in parts like a novel, federal prosecutors 
allege that Mr. Myers, now 72, used his top-secret clearance as a State 
Department analyst to steal classified information from government files for 
nearly three decades, and that Ms. Myers, 71, who worked as a bank clerk, 
helped pass the information to Cuban handlers. They were arrested earlier this 
month and are being held without bail.

The strongest argument in support of the government's case may have been made 
by the Myerses themselves. In the 40-page complaint they are quoted telling an 
undercover F.B.I. agent how much they admired Fidel Castro, how they sent 
secret dispatches to Havana over short-wave radio, dropped packages to handlers 
in shopping carts at local grocery stores, traveled across Latin America to 
meet with Cuban agents and used false documents to travel to Havana for an 
evening with Mr. Castro. 

American officials say they are still trying to determine what secrets were 
stolen and the consequences for the nation's security. 

It appears that the Myerses were not motivated by money. The authorities said 
that other than being reimbursed for equipment, the couple were not paid for 
spying. On the contrary, according to the statements cited in the complaint, 
which one federal magistrate said made the case against the couple 
"insuperable," the couple felt disdain for America's foreign policy - Mr. 
Myers's diary described watching the television news as a "radicalizing 
experience" - and a romanticized view of Cuba's Communist government.

And, just months after Mr. Myers's retirement supposedly ended the scheme, they 
hinted that spying provided adventure to what seemed to have otherwise been a 
relatively mundane life. "We really have missed you," Mr. Myers said in April 
to the undercover F.B.I. agent who was posing as a Cuban intelligence official. 
"You, speaking collectively, have been a really important part of our lives, 
and we have felt incomplete."

The arrests of Mr. and Ms. Myers, who have been held without bail since their 
arrests earlier this month, made headlines around the world and ignited a 
flurry of messages between Miami and Havana. Prosecutors have refused to speak 
about the continuing investigation. 

Meanwhile, the couple's friends and relatives from Washington to South Dakota 
are still in shock over the allegations. 

"When the F.B.I. came to the door and told me my mother had been arrested, I 
kept thinking they must have the wrong house," said Ms. Myers's daughter, Jill 
Liebler, 52. 

"The media has painted a picture of him as a loner, a zealot, a man with an 
agenda," said Michael Myers, referring to his father. "That's not who he is."

But others acknowledged that there were glimpses of the couple they knew in the 
portrait painted by the government.

Jay Davis, a public defender in South Dakota, remembered a weekend years ago at 
a mineral bath resort, where Cuba was about all that Mr. Myers talked about. 
"He made it sound so wonderful, I started thinking seriously about going," Mr. 
Davis recalled. 

Court documents say that Mr. Myers, an expert on European history, became 
interested in Cuba in 1978. Divorced, he immersed himself in world affairs as 
an adjunct professor at the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced 
International Studies and a contract instructor at the State Department's 
Foreign Service Institute.

According to the complaint, Mr. Myers was invited to Havana by an unnamed Cuban 
official who had made a presentation at the institute. The trip, according to 
Mr. Myers's diary, had a profound effect on him.

Going through the Museum of the Cuban Revolution in Havana "was a sobering 
experience," Mr. Myers wrote about the trip in his diary. "Facing step by step 
the historic interventions of the U.S. into Cuban affairs, including the 
systematic and regular murdering of revolutionary leaders, left me with a lump 
in my throat. They don't need to try very hard to make the point that we have 
been exploiters."

Meanwhile, Gwendolyn Steingraber was getting her own crash course in world 
affairs as an aide to Senator James Abourezk, a South Dakota Democrat who was 
one of the leading proponents for ending the United States embargo against 
Cuba. 

A homemaker and a mother of four, she had been swept up in Senator George 
McGovern's anti-Vietnam War movement of the Democratic Party and began 
volunteering in political campaigns.

On Capitol Hill, she held a low-level job - mostly involving outreach to 
constituents - in the shadows of rising political stars, including former 
Senator Tom Daschle and Pete Rouse, who is a top adviser to President Obama. 
Former colleagues described her as bright, a bit naïve and lacking the savvy 
and formal education - she did not attend college - to move up the career 
ladder.

"It wasn't the most important job in the office," recalled Wendy Grieder, a 
former legislative aide. "But to Gwen it was the big time."

Peter Stavrianos, another former colleague, added, "She was not remarkably 
different than dozens and dozens of other people that you ran across in the 
1970s who were McGovernites that got into politics for reasons other than to 
make a lot of money."


Lawyers for Mr. and Ms. Myers arriving at the courthouse in Washington, D.C. on 
June 10. 

Mutual friends introduced Mr. Myers and Ms. Steingraber, who soon became 
inseparable. 
"I have yet to meet a couple who are more in love than the two of them," said 
Amanda Myers Klein, 40, Mr. Myers's daughter. "They are beautiful together."

In 1979, Mr. Myers, then 42, followed Ms. Steingraber, 41, to Pierre, S.D., 
where she got a job at the Public Utilities Commission helping farmers use 
alternative energy. He worked on a biography of Neville Chamberlain, the 
British prime minister, whom Mr. Myers admired for his policies toward the 
Nazis.

He also tried to make the best of living in the small town of 10,000 - camping, 
gardening, writing and hanging out at the truck stop talking politics with 
local farmers. Still, to people who knew him, it seemed clear that Mr. Myers 
would never fully fit in.

"They were different than what we were used to seeing in South Dakota," said 
Greg Rislov, who still works at the utilities commission. "They dressed 
different. They lived different. There was no question in my mind that Kendall, 
with his Ph.D., was looking to do more than sit in a small house in Pierre all 
his life."

Less than a year after the Myerses arrived, neighbors said, police officers 
raided their home and seized the marijuana plants in the basement. And soon, 
the election of a Republican governor cost Ms. Myers, a political appointee, 
her commission job.

Investigators said a Cuban intelligence agent visited the couple and suggested 
that they return to Washington to work as spies. 

They moved back in 1980 and married two years later. Covertly, according to 
investigators, Mr. Myers became Cuban agent 202. She became agent 123. The 
complaint against them said he would either sneak documents out of the State 
Department or memorize information and write it down at home. Investigators 
said he gained access to at least 200 sensitive or classified reports 
pertaining to Cuba between 2006 and 2007. Meanwhile his wife would pass 
information along to Cuban contacts. 

The F.B.I. warned the State Department in 2006 of a suspected mole in the 
agency. In what could turn out to be a significant coincidence, that was the 
same year that Mr. Myers drew attention for his political views.

In a speech at the university where he taught, he derided the so-called special 
relationship between the United States and Britain as a myth, and said that 
President Bush had duped Prime Minister Tony Blair into supporting the Iraq war.

The speech received extensive coverage in the British press, and prompted the 
State Department to issue a strong repudiation. 

"His was not the measured, balanced presentation you might expect of a State 
Department official," said Robin Niblett, a specialist on Europe who spoke at 
the same event. 

By the time the F.B.I. caught up with the couple, Mr. Myers had retired from 
the State Department and was working part-time as a teacher at the School for 
Advanced International Studies. But according to the complaint, when an 
undercover agent posing as a Cuban spy greeted Mr. Myers with a cigar after 
class, the thrill of espionage returned. 

He and Ms. Myers later met the agent in a hotel room, and said they did not 
want to resume full-time spying, but would be willing to work as a "reserve" 
force, the court document said. And they said they looked forward to sailing 
away to Cuba, which they referred to as "home."

"We really love your country," Mr. Myers told the agent, according to the 
complaint. "The people and team are just important in our lives. So we don't 
want to fall out of touch again."


Margot Williams, Kitty Bennett and Barclay Walsh contributed research


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