News Focus
News Focus
icon url

Amaunet

02/27/04 2:09 PM

#64 RE: Amaunet #62

Iran-Contra’s Reich Controls Cuban Policy


'Cold warrior' at heart of Cuba crackdown
Critics blast Bush appointee's grip on policy

By Mike Shields, Journal-World City Editor

Friday, February 27, 2004

U.S. policy toward Cuba is dominated by one man, a scandal-plagued Cold War relic who has no business being President Bush's chief adviser on Latin America.

That's what U.S. Sen. Pat Roberts, the Kansas Republican who heads the Senate Intelligence Committee, has to say about Otto Reich.

"He's known as a hard-liner, not only with regards to Cuba, but Colombia, Venezuela and other areas in the hemisphere," Roberts told the Journal-World. "I just don't think Mr. Reich is the man for the job. Mr. Reich, I think, is still back in the Cuban Missile Crisis era."

Roberts is a Bush administration ally, though he differs with the president in favoring relaxed relations with Cuba. Bush critics have worse things to say about Reich. But critics and friends alike agree the fierce anti-Castroite who left Cuba at age 15 has been key in the administration's crackdown on Cuba and Americans who travel there.

"Otto Reich," Roberts said when asked why the federal government -- after decades of mostly looking the other way -- has begun prosecuting Americans who travel to Cuba.

Travel crackdown

"I think it is fair to say that Otto Reich is driving this policy of basically trying to end all relations, all contacts, everything between the United States and Cuba," said Ann Louise Bardach, an investigative reporter who spent 10 years researching a book about U.S.-Cuban relations.

The White House press office did not cooperate with the Journal-World's requests to reach Reich for an interview.

Kansas Sen. Pat Roberts says Reich, who has ties to the Iran-Contra scandal, is not the right man for the job.

The administration's stepped-up enforcement of the travel ban has created a wave of fines against about 2,000 Americans, including everyone from an Indiana missionary who distributed Bibles in Cuba, to Bob Augelli, a Lawrence man whose travels resulted in an art exhibition on the island.

Reich has been an administration lightning rod. His appointment was controversial not only with Roberts and fellow senators but across Latin America.

Recess appointment

When Bush named him assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere affairs, the choice was so unpopular Bush did it while the Senate was in recess, an acknowledgment that Reich's appointment would not be confirmed. He served about a year at the State Department before Bush named him to a newly created post on the National Security Council and made him his chief Latin American envoy and adviser.

Reich's elevation drew immediate rebuke from across Latin America.

Oscar Arias, the former Costa Rican president awarded the 1987 Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts to end war in Central America, wrote an open letter characterizing Reich as a "hawkish" propagandist whose history of involvement in the Iran-Contra scandal during the Reagan years made him untrustworthy in the eyes of Latin American leaders.

"Virtually every country in Central and South America and Mexico has complained officially or unofficially" about Reich, Bardach said. "The guy is very, very far right, and Latin America has had a very decided shift. All of Latin America is lurching to the left, and who do you have handling Latin America for the administration? Otto Reich. You've got to say to yourself: What is this administration thinking of except a few votes in Dade and Broward counties?"


Cuban family feud

Bardach was referring to the south Florida counties that decided the 2000 presidential election. The counties are the major stronghold of the Cuban exile community in the United States and are predominantly anti-Castro.

Bardach said Reich was appointed with the backing of Cuban-American Congressman Lincoln Diaz-Balart, whose district includes Dade and parts of Broward counties, and his brother, Congressman Mario Diaz-Balart, who represents another Miami district heavy with Cuban-Americans.

The father of the Diaz-Balarts was interior minister for Fulgencio Batista, the Cuban dictator overthrown by Fidel Castro's revolution. The Diaz-Balarts' aunt was Fidel Castro's first wife and the mother of Castro's oldest son. When she and Castro separated, there was a bitter custody battle over the boy, according to Bardach, who has interviewed both Castro and the senior Diaz-Balart.

"On one level this is very much a blood feud," Bardach said of the animosity between the Castro regime and the Cuban-American exiles. "The Diaz-Balarts fought very hard to put Otto Reich in this position."

Bardach said her research convinced her that Lincoln Diaz-Balart aimed to succeed Castro as Cuba's leader once the dictator was toppled. The congressman did not respond to the Journal-World's requests for an interview.


Reich's background

Reich is one of several Cuban-Americans appointed to key positions in the Bush administration.

He first gained national attention in 1983 working at the State Department, reporting directly to Oliver North. Reich was in charge of the propaganda effort aimed at winning support for Reagan's policies supporting the Contras in Nicaragua. His office was shut down after the U.S. Comptroller General concluded it had "engaged in prohibited, covert propaganda activities," using tax dollars for illegal public relations and lobbying.

But there were bigger fish in what came to be called the Iran-Contra scandal, and Reich was named ambassador to Venezuela, a post he held from 1986 to 1989.

Six weeks after Reich presented his credentials as ambassador, according to Bardach's book "Cuba Confidential: Love and Vengeance in Miami and Havana," convicted anti-Castro terrorist Orlando Bosch was freed from a Venezuelan prison. Bosch had been jailed for his alleged role in the bombing of a Cuban airliner that left 73 people dead. His surprise release was criticized by a former Venezuelan president familiar with details of the case, who asserted Bosch's file "had been tampered with."


Campaign issues

Bardach said her review of State Department documents showed Reich had cabled his superiors that Bosch had been "absolved" and asked about Bosch's eligibility to return to the United States, where in 1968 he had been convicted of firing a bazooka at a Polish freighter in Miami Harbor. Bosch returned and was arrested for parole violation. The FBI considered him a dangerous terrorist. But he was a freedom-fighting hero in the eyes of Miami's Cuban exile community.

The campaign for Bosch's pardon and release became a central focus of the 1988 campaign of Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, a Cuban-American elected that year to Congress. She lauded Bosch as a hero and patriot. Her campaign manager was Jeb Bush, son of the then president and brother of the current president. Jeb Bush is now Florida's governor.

Bardach reported in her book that the first President Bush overrode his own Justice Department's recommendation and interceded to grant Bosch U.S. residency.

Other views

Though Roberts and Bardach each attribute much of the Bush administration's hard line toward Cuba to Reich, not all critics of the administration's stance accept that.

"Otto Reich might not be my choice" for the job he holds, said former Kansas Congressman and U.S. Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman. "But he was appointed by the president of the United States, who shares his view. The policy comes from the chief executive."

Anna Carbonell, who works on Cuba issues for Lincoln Diaz-Balart, called Reich an "upstanding individual" who was only doing what Bush had asked.

"He's been tasked to carry out the president's initiatives on Cuba," Carbonnell said. "Ambassador Reich is carrying out what the president time and time again has said is his policy."

Jim Morrell, a White House spokesman, downplayed Reich's role in setting Cuba policy.

"I think that obviously there are a number of people that work on this issue," Morrell said. "But in terms of influence ... I kind of reject the premise of the question, in the sense that I think the president's policies have been very consistent on this from day one of the administration and back towards the campaign."



Staff writer Joel Mathis contributed to this report.

http://www.ljworld.com/section/citynews/story/162559

Copyright © 2003
Visit us at http://www.ljworld.com





icon url

Amaunet

02/28/04 9:47 AM

#68 RE: Amaunet #62

Here’s another naval blockade in the same vicinity.

"We going to send some boats ... to block the ships coming from Miami to Port-au-Prince," Philippe told reporters in the country's second-biggest city, Cap Haitien, which the rebels overran last weekend to control a large swath of the north.

"All the boats should come and stay in Cap Haitien so starting next week Port-au-Prince will not receive any guns or anything," said Philippe.

The Department of Homeland Security is authorized to board and search any U.S.-registered vessels that are suspected of possibly being used to travel to Cuban waters. Guards could also be placed on suspect vessels and their crews removed.




Rebels Close in on Haiti Capital, Chaos in Streets

Updated 11:34 PM ET February 27, 2004

By Jim Loney and Alistair Scrutton

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (Reuters) - Rebels overran a key crossroads town and crept closer to the Haitian capital on Friday as supporters of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide terrorized the civilian population of Port-au-Prince.

Bands of armed Aristide loyalists roamed in trucks and cars through the chaotic capital. A body was seen at a roadside near the Cite Soleil slum, apparently hacked with machetes, and two more were found near the airport, one with hands bound.

Crowds of armed men, many wearing masks, blocked dozens of intersections, igniting piles of tires and harassing motorists. Gunfire rang through the sprawling city.

The stage was set for a showdown between the ragtag band of former soldiers and gang members trying to unseat Aristide, and the diminutive former priest and one-time populist hero of Haitian democracy backed by an ill-trained, 4,000-member police force and armed supporters from the slums.

Aristide, whom political opponents have long accused of corruption and political thuggery, again vowed he would not be pushed from office and appealed for help from foreign nations.

In Washington, U.S. defense officials said they were considering sending a three-ship group carrying U.S. Marines to Haiti to help deal with the crisis in the Caribbean country of 8 million, the poorest nation in the Americas.

President Bush, asked if Aristide should resign, pointed to comments from Secretary of State Colin Powell Thursday that Aristide should "examine his position carefully," indicating U.S. support for him was wavering.

PRO-ARISTIDE GANG VIOLENCE

The U.S. Embassy in Port-au-Prince issued a statement late Friday saying pro-government groups had begun to "burn, pillage and kill" and calling on Aristide to put a halt to it.

"The armed gangs that are spreading terror and attacking civilians ... are acting in the name of Jean-Bertrand Aristide," said the statement, which also called on the rebels to halt their advance on the capital.

U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan was "increasingly concerned" at the deteriorating situation in Haiti and called for a peaceful solution, his spokesman said in a statement.

He warned leaders would be held "accountable for any breaches of international human rights and humanitarian law."

Rebel leader Guy Philippe, a former police chief accused of plotting coups who returned from exile in the Dominican Republic to join the three-week-old revolt, said his men planned to cut off Port-au-Prince from the ocean.

"We going to send some boats ... to block the ships coming from Miami to Port-au-Prince," Philippe told reporters in the country's second-biggest city, Cap Haitien, which the rebels overran last weekend to control a large swath of the north.

"All the boats should come and stay in Cap Haitien so starting next week Port-au-Prince will not receive any guns or anything," said Philippe.

Philippe has said his men have surrounded Port-au-Prince and were awaiting orders to attack.

A group of rebels called the "Assaillants" (Attackers) from Haiti's Central Plateau took control of the town of Mirebalais overnight, freeing prisoners from the local jail.

Mirebalais is about 30 miles northeast of Port-au-Prince and sits at a junction with access to the capital, the rebel stronghold in the north, the coastal town of Saint Marc and the border with the Dominican Republic, where some of the rebel leaders lived in recent years.

Haitian National Police dispatched officers to Les Cayes, Haiti's third-largest city, where they reclaimed a police station taken over by rebels, witnesses in the city said.

PROTECTING THE PALACE

French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin told a Haitian government delegation in Paris Aristide should quit as part of efforts to end the rebellion, which erupted on Feb. 5 in the northwestern city of Gonaives.

The revolt has killed at least 65 people.

Aristide, who has predicted a blood bath if the rebels enter the capital, told CNN by telephone from Port-au-Prince Washington should take a stand for democracy in Haiti. "I think President Bush sent troops to Afghanistan ... Here we want to defend democracy. We have a common ground," Aristide said.

Dozens of Aristide supporters stood in the streets around the National Palace.

Looters hit the main port while Aristide supporters stripped a warehouse belonging to businessman Smarck Michel, a former prime minister who turned against Aristide, witnesses said.

A negotiated end to the crisis seemed far away.

This week, Aristide's political foes -- who have distanced themselves from the armed revolt but share its aim of seeing Aristide gone -- rejected power sharing and reiterated demands the president leave the palace.

(Additional reporting by Laurent Hamida in Cap Haitien and Amy Bracken and Joseph Guyler Delva in Port-au-Prince)

http://dailynews.att.net/cgi-bin/news?e=pri&dt=040227&cat=news&st=newshaitidc

Reference:
http://www.upi.com/view.cfm?StoryID=20040226-060404-3522r