Beating Around the Bush
by Tom Crumpacker
The Bush Administration has done an excellent job of confusing the public
about its plans regarding Luis Posada Carriles, former CIA operative
accused of blowing up a civilian Cubana airliner in 1976, killing 73
innocent civilians. He resurfaced in the US a couple of months ago and is
now being held in El Paso Texas on a minor illegal entry charge brought
against him by Homeland Security. Reporters from several newspapers and
magazines have talked to unnamed Administration officials and quote them as
saying that the US has decided Posada will not be deported or extradited to
Venezuela because it has a policy not to do so to a country which "acts on
behalf of Cuba."
Indeed, Homeland has stated it does have such a policy and Venezuela is
such a country. If such a policy exists, this is the first time Homeland
has implemented it or made it public. In any event, Homeland's policy, has
no relevance to extradition treaties, and there is no official statement by
the State Department that it has such a policy or that it would prevent
extradition to Venezuela.
If the US honors its laws, the Constitution, and treaty obligations (as its
President in January took an oath to do), it has to extradite Posada to
Venezuela. Venezuela has an 83-year-old extradition treaty with the US
which has always been honored by both countries. For years Venezuela has
had a standing request under this treaty to extradite Posada for trial in
the Cubana bombing. He apparently has visited Miami occasionally in the past.
Venezuela renewed its demand two weeks ago. The crime started in Caracas,
where, allegedly, Posada and his partner, Orlando Bosch, made the bomb.
Their two agents then got on the Cubana flight with the bomb in Trinidad
and, at the Barbados stop, they put it in the plane's restroom and got off
the plane. The plane exploded after take-off. The agents caught a flight
back to Caracas which stopped in Trinidad where they were apprehended. One
of them, Posada's employee, later confessed that Posada made the bomb and
he helped under Posada's direction.
An immigration case is something entirely different from extradition. In
immigration proceedings (handled by Homeland Security under supervision of
its Director and the President), the question is the right to immigrate and
where an immigrant should be sent to live (usually his home country) when
he is removed for illegal entry or deported for certain conduct in the US.
Extradition (handled by the State Department under supervision of the
Secretary of State and the President) concerns the question where an
alleged criminal should be tried for his crime, regardless of his
immigration status. Venezuela is the only place where Posada could legally
be tried for this crime, because of his Venezuelan citizenship and the fact
that the crime was committed there. In fact he was in the process of being
tried there when in 1985 he was allowed to escape and go to Nicaragua to
work under Col. Oliver North in the Contra supply operation.
Posada also has Cuban citizenship because he was born there. Once Cubans
set foot in the US, whether the entry is illegal or legal, they have the
right to stay here and work and apply for US permanent residency after a
year. This is under the Cuban Adjustment Act and the so-called "wet foot,
dry foot" policy. They do not need to file asylum cases, and usually don't.
Homeland has charged Posada only with not reporting immediately to them on
entry. This would normally not be worth filing, in any event it's a simple
matter which could be determined within a few minutes and requires only a
small fine. However it's been set for a hearing on June 13 and Posada's
Miami lawyers are talking about filing motions to move the case to Miami,
filing asylum petitions, and other technical maneuvers. One could surmise
that the Homeland's case will go on for many months. Reportedly Posada is
very ill and may not be around much longer.
Our CIA and State Department were at least very aware of the plans for the
Cubana bombing, and neither gave Cuba nor prospective passengers any
warning of the coming attack. Posada had been trained in the 1960s by the
CIA in explosives. Posada was on the CIA payroll for many years up until
about four months before the Cubana bombing (so the CIA says). He went back
on when he was sent to Nicaragua. Recently released CIA and State
Department reports indicate that a few months beforehand they were made
aware that Posada and Bosch were planning to bomb a Cuban civilian
airliner, and just a few weeks beforehand they knew that Posada and Bosch
were going to bomb the Cubana flight traveling from Panama to Havana. The
CIA also had beforehand reports about the planning meetings in Caracas and
Santo Domingo involving Posada and Bosch. These reports were not made
available to the Venezuelan officials who were prosecuting them in the
eighties. It would be interesting to learn if the CIA director informed
President Ford of the impending attack.
George Bush Sr. was the CIA director at the time of the bombing. He was
Vice Present at the time when Posada was allowed to escape during his trial
in Venezuela and report to Oliver North in Nicaragua. He was President when
he pardoned Bosch allowing him to stay in the US against the recommendation
of his own Justice Department.
There's no valid reason why Posada should not be extradited to Venezuela
now. There's no necessity to wait while lawyers mess around with Homeland's
insignificant illegal entry claim or any asylum claim. The case should be
promptly submitted to the extradition judge.
It seems like the Bush administration is using these immigration cases,
with Posada's cooperation, to try to delay decision on the extradition
request in hope of avoiding evidence of the CIA's involvement in the
bombing from becoming public in a Venezuelan proceeding. Part of its plan
seems to be to make reporters and the public think the US can't extradite
until the immigration proceedings are ended, and they have some policy
preventing extradition. Neither of which is so.
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