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Who
Is Raúl Castro?
A tyrant only a brother could love
By Ion Mihai
Pacepa *
National
Review Online
Infosearch:
Ilie Cristescu
Bureau Chief
Eastern Europe
La
Nueva Cuba
August 10, 2006
Fidel
Castro may be on his deathbed. Or he's already gone. Unfortunately,
in the Communist countries of Latin heritage, the tyrants came in
pairs buy one, get one free. Communist Romania got Nicolae
and Elena Ceausescu. Cuba got Fidel and Raúl Castro. On Christmas
Day 1989 the Romanians rid themselves of both Ceausescus, and twelve
years later Romania joined NATO. Cuba will soon be left with one
Castro, who is heir to the throne.
So who is Raúl
Castro? While Western experts speculate that he may plan on shifting
Cuba toward collective leadership and democracy, that's nothing
but wishful thinking. To be sure, I wish they were right, but Raúl
has transformed a paradise on earth into a shambles, and there is
good reason to believe that he will turn Cuba into an even worse
tyranny.
I met Raúl
many times, both in Cuba and in Romania. He had coordinating responsibility
for the Cuban intelligence service (the Dirección General
de Inteligencia, or DGI), and in the early 1970s he entered into
a drug venture with my former service (the Departamentul de Informatii
Externe ,or DIE). Whenever he was not in Havana or Moscow, he was
in Bucharest. We worked, talked, fished, and snorkeled together.
We challenged each other at the firing range; he was an excellent
shot. Together we raced our identical Alfa Romeo cars. I saw nothing
in him suggesting he might ever want to democratize Cuba.
Raúl
was always under the influence of alcohol and self-importance.
My Cuban intelligence counterpart in those days, Sergio del Valle,
who was Raúl's closest associate going back to their early
days in the Sierra Maestra, used to call his boss "Raúl
the Terrible" in a semi-serious allusion to the first Russian
to crown himself tsar. Raúl was Cuba's uncrowned tsar
his official title was "Maximum General." Fidel gave the
speeches, hour after hour. Raúl ran Cuba's economy, her foreign
policy, her foreign trade, her justice system, her jails, her tourism
even her hotels and her beaches.
Raúl
is generally perceived as a colorless minister of defense, but he
has also been the brutal head of one of Communism's most criminal
institutions: the Cuban political police. I met him in that capacity.
He was cruel and ruthless. Fidel may have conceived the terror that
has kept Cuba in the Communist fold, but Raúl has been the
butcher. He has been instrumental in the killing and terrorizing
of thousands of Cubans, and there is no question in my mind but
that he would fight tooth and nail to preserve his powers. Otherwise,
sooner or later Raúl would have to account for his crimes,
and I do not know him to be suicidal.
Before meeting
Raúl in the flesh, I had gotten a general picture of him
from Nikita Khrushchev and General Aleksandr Sakharovsky, the creator
of Communist Romania's intelligence structure, and by this time
head of the Soviet foreign intelligence service, the PGU (Pervoye
Glavnoye Upravleniye). That was in 1959. Both Soviets had arrived
in Bucharest on October 26 for what was billed as a "six-day
vacation in Romania." Never before had Khrushchev taken such
a long vacation abroad, but neither was his visit to Romania a vacation.
He was there to discuss the on-going Cuban revolution with the current
Romanian leader, Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej, until then the only Communist
tyrant ruling a country of Latin heritage.
Khrushchev dreamed
of going down in history as the Soviet leader who had installed
Communism on the American continent, and he was prepared to go to
any lengths to see that dream come true. But Khrushchev did not
trust Fidel, believing he was a stranger to Marxism. The leaders
of Cuba's Communist party were convinced that Fidel was a dangerous
adventurer, and the Soviet party bureaucracy was also reluctant
to endorse him.
Khrushchev did
trust Raúl, though. According to Sakharovsky, who had secretly
brought Raúl to Moscow in the mid-1950s, it had been love
at first sight. Both Nikita and Raúl loved vodka. Both were
fascinated with Marxism. Both hated school, religion, and discipline.
Both considered themselves military experts. Both were obsessed
with espionage and counterespionage. And both liked to sleep with
their boots on. Sakharovsky considered the "warm relationship"
between the two men to have convinced Khrushchev to throw himself
entirely into the Cuban revolution.
At Khrushchev's
order, Sakharovsky had given Raúl an intelligence adviser:
Nikolay Leonov, the PGU's best expert on Latin America. Leonov (today
a retired KGB lieutenant general and member of the Duma) provided
Raúl with intelligence on the military forces of the then
Cuban dictator, Batista, and helped Raúl plan his guerrilla
war. In June 1957, Leonov gave him documents and photographs showing
that Washington was providing weapons and logistical support to
Batista, and he suggested that Raúl take a few dozen Americans
hostage to force Eisenhower to withdraw from the conflict. Raúl
did so. On June 26, 1958, his guerrilleros kidnapped fifty American
and Canadian military and civilian personnel working in Cuba. Fearing
for the lives of the hostages, Batista declared a cease-fire. That
enabled the Soviets to bring new weapons into Cuba.
The course of
the Cuban revolution was changed forever. The era of political kidnappings
was also introduced.
On the night
of December 31, 1958, Batista fled Cuba, and the Castro brothers
took over the country. During the following month, Raúl organized
the execution of hundreds of police and military officials of the
Batista regime. The prisoners were shot and the corpses buried in
mass graves outside of Santiago de Cuba.
A year later,
Soviet deputy premier Anastas Mikoyan landed in Havana. He was welcomed
by Fidel, Raúl, and the country's new KGB adviser, Aleksandr
Shitov. The latter's task was to help Raúl create a Cuban
KGB and a Soviet-style army. In 1962 Khrushchev took the unprecedented
step of appointing Shitov as ambassador to Cuba. Soon, Moscow started
secretly building rocket bases in Cuba.
Khrushchev,
Raúl, and Shitov not Fidel pushed the world
to the brink of nuclear war.
In April 1971
I visited Cuba as a member of a Romanian government delegation attending
a ten-year celebration of Castro's victory at the Bay of Pigs. A
couple of days after the ceremony, Raúl invited me to go
ocean fishing on his boat, together with Sergio del Valle. The other
guest was a Soviet civilian who introduced himself as Aleksandr
Alekseyev. "That's Shitov," del Valle whispered into my
ear. "He's now Allende's advisor." (The Marxist Salvador
Allende had been elected president of Chile the previous November.)
There, on that boat, it hit me more clearly than ever before that
it was Raúl, not Fidel, who was holding the reins of the
Cuban revolutionary wagon.
In 1972 I prepared
an official Ceausescu visit to Havana, and I was also at his right
hand during it. Fidel was the figurehead, Raúl the factotum.
The Cuban first lady was not Fidel's wife, but Raúl's. Elena
Ceausescu wrinkled up her nose at that, but eventually the two first
ladies hit it off splendidly. Both Elena and Vilma Espin Guilloys
were school dropouts, both pretended to be chemists, both had acquired
phony doctoral degrees, both had joined the Communist party before
it had come to power in their countries, both became members of
the Council of State, and both were presidents of their countries'
Federation of Women organizations.
During that
visit, the Castro brothers and Ceausescu laid the foundation for
a bilateral drug venture. They wanted to flood the world with drugs.
"Drugs could do a lot more damage to imperialism than nuclear
weapons could," Fidel pontificated. "Drugs will erode
capitalism from the inside," Raúl agreed. I never heard
the word "money" pronounced, but I was already administering
the money Romania was making from its own drug trafficking. All
of it was going into Ceausescu's personal bank account. By 1978,
when I left Romania for good, that account, called AT-78, held a
balance of some $400 million in spite of the substantial
dents Elena made in it when she bought furs and jewelry for herself.
In 2005, Fidel
was furious when Forbes Magazine estimated his fortune at $500 million.
This year, the magazine upped his worth to $900 million. Particularly
in view of Cuba's penury, this amount is surely more than enough
for Raúl to bribe his political cronies and buy any new allies
he needs.
In 1973 I spent
a "working vacation" in Havana. Raúl gave me a
tour of a huge factory manufacturing double-walled suitcases and
other concealment devices for secretly transporting arms and explosives
for terrorist purposes. By then Raúl's DGI was working around
the clock to expand Cuba's political influence in South America
and the Third World. In particular, they were striving to consolidate
the Sandinistas' power in Nicaragua, to foment a bloody war in El
Salvador, and to help the Soviet/Cuban-backed MPLA (Movement for
the Liberation of Angola) to rise to power in Angola. Raúl's
DGI and his military also had advisers and instructors in Palestine
Liberation Organization bases and had established close cooperation
with Libya, South Yemen, and the Polisario Front for the Liberation
of Western Sahara. In the mid-1970s my DIE was working jointly with
Raúl's DGI to support the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia
(FARC), a Marxist, anti-American insurgency organization whose task
was to spread Communism to South America.
In December
1974 Raúl came to Bucharest to request intelligence and political
support for his new National Liberation Directorate (DNL), a party/intelligence
group tasked to coordinate Cuba's guerrilla and terrorist training
camps and to prop up national liberation movements and anti-American
governments such as those of Nicaragua and Grenada. He got both.
Of course I
no longer have inside access to information about Raúl's
export of terrorism and revolution, but I note that in 2001 his
FARC took credit for 197 killings in Colombia. On April 11, 2002,
the same FARC kidnapped 13 Colombian lawmakers from a government
building in Cali and held Colombian presidential candidate Ingrid
Betancourt hostage. On February 13, 2003, FARC shot down a CIA plane
carrying out electronic intelligence-gathering in southern Colombia,
taking three CIA officers hostage. Now Raúl's FARC is seeking
to overthrow the pro-American government of Colombian President
Alvaro Uribe, whose father was assassinated by FARC in 1983. I also
note that the Communist president of Venezuela, Hugo Chavez, who
idolizes the Castro brothers, has threatened to stop exporting oil
to the U.S. and intends to start a conventional war against neighboring
Colombia, the main U.S. ally in the region.
Neither within
Cuba nor in the outside world does anyone have a clear picture of
Fidel's health physical or political. Yet perhaps there is
something else going on there that Raúl may have learned
from his KGB masters. Leonid Brezhnev died on November 10, 1982,
but the KGB chairman, Yury Andropov, managed for a few days to keep
his death secret from the public, to gain time for maneuvering himself
into the driver's seat. Once settled into the Kremlin, the cynical
Andropov hastened to portray himself to the West as a "moderate"
Communist and a sensitive, warm, Western-oriented man who allegedly
enjoyed an occasional drink of scotch, liked to read English novels,
and loved listening to American jazz and the music of Beethoven.
Andropov was none of the above.
Raúl
may try to also portray himself as a peaceloving angel. But Andropov's
age of secrecy is gone. I pray that others who know Raúl
as well as I knew Ceausescu will come forward and disrobe the Cuban
tyrant, allowing the world to see him naked, the way he truly is:
an assassin and international terrorist who made a fortune from
the illegal sale of arms, drugs, and human beings.
Lieutenant
General Ion Mihai Pacepa is the highest-ranking official ever to
have defected from the former Soviet bloc. On Christmas Day of 1989,
Ceausescu and his wife were sentenced to death at the end of a trial
where most of the accusations had come almost word-for-word out
of Pacepa's book Red Horizons.
Pacepa studied industrial chemistry, but just months before graduation
he was drafted by the Securitate, and got his engineering degree
only four years later. Between 1957 and 1960 he served as chief
of the Romanian intelligence station in West Germany, and, between
1972 and 1978, he was the deputy chief of the Romanian foreign intelligence
service.
Pacepa defected
in July 1978 by walking into the American Embassy in Bonn, where
he had been sent by Ceausescu with a message to Chancellor Helmut
Schmidt. He was secretly flown to Andrews Air Force Base near Washington
D.C. in a United States military airplane.
In September
1978, Pacepa received two death sentences from Ceausescu, who placed
a bounty of two million US dollars on his head. Yasser Arafat and
Muammar al-Qaddafi set one more million dollars reward each.
In the 1980s
Romanias political police tasked Carlos the Jackal to assassinate
Pacepa in America, in exchange for one million dollars. [2] Carlos
was unable to find Pacepa, but on February 21, 1980, he blew up
a part of Radio Free Europe's headquarters in Munich, which was
broadcasting news on Pacepa's defection.
On July 7,
1999 Romanias Supreme Court Decision No. 41/1999 canceled
Pacepas death sentences, restored his military rank and ordered
that his properties confiscated at Ceausescu's order be returned
to him. The country's government, which was still filled with Pacepa's
former subordinates, refused to comply. This ignited a series of
Western articles claiming that Romania was still not a country of
laws. In December 2004 the government of Romania quietly restored
Pacepas rank of general.
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