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107 lines
5.8 KiB
Plaintext
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Wrong Number BBS FILE NAME: BUSHBOMB.TXT
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[Reproduced with permission from _The Spotlight_, June 22, 1992
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The Spotlight
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300 Independence Avenue, SE
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Washington, DC 20003
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Free use of this material is permitted provided that _The Spotlight_
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is credited, including publisher's address]
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BUSH LINKED TO TERROR BOMBING;
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WILL U.N. ASK FOR EXTRADITION?:
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Shocking Evidence Revealed
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The evidence pointing to President Bush's role in the terrorist bombing of
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a Cuban airliner grows stronger with new revelations. Will the UN Security
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Council demand his extradition to Cuba or the World Court, as Bush and the
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UN have done in the case of Libyan suspects in a similar crime?
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By Warren Hough
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Exclusive to The Spotlight
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Washington, DC, 6/12/92 -- Long-suppressed records have turned up
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"shattering" new evidence of the role played by President George Bush in
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the midair bombing of a Cuban airliner and in its subsequent cover-up,
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Latin American officials conducting a "preliminary review" of the tragic
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incident have told the UN Security Council.
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The secret files reportedly confirm that in mid-1976, while serving as
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CIA chief, Bush was in "overall command" of a botched sabotage operation
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that ended in the crash of a Cuban passenger jet, killing all 73 aboard,
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The SPOTLIGHT has learned from diplomatic sources close to the
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investigation.
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A CIA agent identified as Luis Posada was arrested by Venezuelan
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authorities shortly after the Cuban plane exploded in midair during its
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takeoff from a Caribbean stopover, these sources say. Posada, a member of
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a sizable CIA contingent conducting covert operations from Venezuelan bases
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at the time, was charged with having smuggled an explosive device aboard
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the flight, and held for trial.
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Bush, anxious to disclaim all responsibility for such an atrocious
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terrorist outrage, ordered a "no-holds-barred" cover-up of the crime, the
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record suggests.
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"In order to take the heat off Posada, the CIA targeted another
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suspect, Dr. Orlando Bosch, a militant Cuban exile activist who advocated
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`armed action' against the Castro dictatorship," recounted Felipe Rivero,
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the popular Miami broadcaster who is The SPOTLIGHT's correspondent in the
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region."
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Venezuela's secret police, known after its Spanish initials as DISIP,
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maintained close relations with the CIA and followed its lead. Bosch was
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imprisoned and charged with complicity in the bombing in Venezuela.
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BUSH ORCHESTRATION
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The next move in the cover-up reportedly orchestrated by Bush was to
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"recover" Posada, these sources day. In a well-organized and lavishly
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financed jailbreak, the alleged aerial bomber was spirited from Venezuela
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to Panama, where the CIA issued him a new set of identity documents under
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the name of Ramon Medina, a Guatemalan businessman.
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In the concluding move of the cover-up, Posada, now known as "Medina,"
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was handed over to Felix Rodriguez, a senior CIA field agent with whom Bush
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had a personal working relationship, the record shows. Rodriguez gave
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Posada a series of covert jobs with CIA teams stationed in Central America,
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largely in order to protect him and "keep him happy," these sources
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related.
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"I, for my part, spent 11 years in various maximum security Venezuelan
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prisons," Bosch told a SPOTLIGHT reporter during a recent telephone
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interview. "During those years, I was put on trial four times for that
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airplane bombing. My case was heard by military, civilian and appellate
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courts. I was found innocent each time. But after each acquittal, the CIA
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came up with new `suggestions' about my guilt."
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PALE AND FRAIL
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Finally the Venezuelan government told Washington it could no longer
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hold Bosch. Pale and in frail health, the falsely accused "terrorist" was
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flown back to Miami. "Here I could hope for no acquittal," recounted
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Bosch. "At the airport, immigration officials threw me into chains. I was
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held in solitary confinement for 29 months."
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Finally granted a provisional release after leading Cuban-American
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Republicans pressed his cause without letup, Bosch now lives in seclusion
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near Miami. "My status is that of a `deportable' alien," he told The
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SPOTLIGHT. "If I engage in any political activity, or even if I talk too
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much, I can be tossed back into jail. I am in no position to comment on
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controversial questions -- not even in my own cause."
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Living under the assumed name and a small CIA paycheck in Central
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America also proved difficult for Posada, SPOTLIGHT correspondent Rivero
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reports. "A couple of years ago, two men walked up to Posada in a
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Guatemalan restaurant and shot him five times," Rivero related. "He
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survived the shooting by a sheer miracle. Badly injured -- he lives
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largely on liquefied food and walks with a crutch, I hear -- he has
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vanished into the `protective custody' of the CIA."
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The reason for Posada's attempted assassination is known, however. He
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"drank a bit and began to talk too much," U.N. sources said. "The CIA
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needed an airtight cover-up of that airline bombing. When Posada turned
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talkative, his usefulness to Bush was at an end -- and, but for an iron
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physique and that miraculous survival, he would have been, too."
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Now the U.N. Security Council, having assumed jurisdiction over such
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international terrorist crimes when it clamped harsh sanctions on Libya
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last April, faces a tougher challenge: How to deal with a case of aerial
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mass murder in which the principal suspect happens to be THE INCUMBENT
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PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES.
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