CUBAN SUBVERSION IN LATIN AMERICA
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP79T00827A000900110001-6
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
S
Document Page Count:
195
Document Creation Date:
December 9, 2016
Document Release Date:
May 31, 2000
Sequence Number:
1
Case Number:
Publication Date:
February 6, 1967
Content Type:
BRIEF
File:
Attachment | Size |
---|---|
CIA-RDP79T00827A000900110001-6.pdf | 9.51 MB |
Body:
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11VIII. 25X1C
IN PASSING,
WHICH 'THE' SEEM TO BE ADVOCATING A PEACEFUL TRANS-
CE OF SOVIET ?OREI4H1 POLCIY D RING THE LAST YEAR. AND A
ITION TO SOCIALISM
I MIGHT POINT OUT THE AMBIVA-
SUPPt*T GUERRI
MOVEMENTS ON THE OTHER. IN SPITE OF THEIR RECENT ECONOMIC
AND DIPLOMATIC OVERTURES TO LATIN AMERICA, MANY SOfV1XT
OFFICIALS AND OFFICIAL PUBLICATI(R4$ HAVE PUBLICLY MADE THE
FOLLOWING STATEMENTS:
A. THE SOVIET DEL ATE TO THE JANUARY MS TR I-CONTINENT
CONFERENCE,
IF R. RASHIDOV, ONE OF THE MOST I11P-
TANT LEADERS OF THE SOVIET
STING GOVERNMENTS, AS MY BE OBSERVED
IN THE FOLLOWING STATRIDWS:
EC RET
GENE) HIS COLLEAGUES
OMISE TO SUPT T ARMI D LIBERATION MOV TS AIR D
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"TUN SOVIET PEOPLE HAS ALWAYS SUPPCRTETT
PEOPLE' 8 WARS s THE ARM= STRUGGLE OF THE
OPPRESSED PEOPLES AID HAS SM E*)W ING
TANK EVERT POSH IMS SUPPORT AND ASSISTANCE. "
EXPRESS FRATERNAL SOLIDARITY WITH THE
LE WAQES) BY TEE PATH TOTE OF
EBEZUELA, P U9 COT IA, AND GUATEMALA
Tt PRE M AGAINST TEE PUPPETS (W IMPXR-
IAL.ISM.'
B. LATE THE FAT SECRETARY 01 1111 COMIUNIST PARTY OF THE
SOVIET UN ICS , LEOS ID 111113111,1111101 AT A (TABS MEETING HELD IN
CII IS JANUARY, COINCIDING WITH THE CLOSING DATE
OF THE TN I--CtNITINENT Ct FFTt , SAID:
"THE }COMMUNIST PARTY AND '1 PEOPLES OF
THE SOVIET UNION SEE THEIR INTERNATIONAL
DUTY IN SUPPM ING TEX LIBARATI0111 STRUGGLE
OF OTIM PEOPLES. THIS STTRUWLN PRESENTLY
ASSUMES VARIOUS )** E, DEPENDING ON SPECIFIC
COEDITICNS AND TABU. HOME PEOPLE HAVE TO
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DEFEND THEIR FREEDOM WITH READS 1$
4 i0D, WHEREAS IT 18 IHA?'IRTANT FOR OTHER
PEOPLE TODAY TO STRUGGLE FOR ECONOMIC
TNUEPESDE CC AND SOCIAL PROGRESS. ?.
'' E TAKE THIS INTO C OMSIDENATION
POLICY. THIS IS WNT THERE IS VARIETY IN
OUR . AID TO THESE PEOPLES: FROM POLITICAL
:=UP1 T AND SUPPLIES OF ARMS TO WWOMIC
AGRXM TS , THE CITING OF CREDITS AND
PARTICIPATION IN BUILDING INDUSTRIAL
ENTERPRISES."
n. 4E THAN ONCE IN TEE LAST DECADE PEOPLES
RO THEIR FROM AND IEBRPC-
RAVE T IED TO MOSCOW, TO THE PA$TY
' LE KIN FOR HELP AND SUPPORT. AND WE
SAY WITS A PURE CONSCIENCE: IN NO
DID MOSCOW REFUSE SUCH SUPPORT.,.
ITT OF THE SOCIALIST COUNTRIES WITH
THE PEOPLES OF ASIA, AF ICA , AND LATIN
,1 ICA IS BECOMING STROKOXIt IN THE STRUGGLE
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AGAINST IMPIlIIIALISM. TRIO WAS 0111C X AGAIN
DEM STRATED BY THE HAVANA TRI- TIN TAL
CONFERENCE. ITS DECISIONS WILL UNDOUBTEDLY
FACILITATE HEW SUCCESSES IN THE LIBERATION
STRUGGLE AND IN THE COHESION OF ALL ANTI-
IMPERIALIST FORCES. "
C. DURING THE USSR' S 21-27 MAY 1967 WEEK OF SOLIDARITY WITH
LATIN AMERICAN PATRIOTS. MAVDAj AN ORGAN OF THE CPSU CEETRAL
COMM ITTSU , COMMENTED :
.4' ARSENAL OF ZEES AND METHODS OF THE
A ITI-IMPERIALIST STRUGGLE IS Ez LY
DIVERSE. MANY THOUSANDS OF WMKING PEOPLE
ARE TAKING PART IN THE MOMENT. IN THE
STRUGGLE FOR THEIR RIGHT'S AND AGAINST RE-
ACTION AND DICTAT HIP, THE
PEASANTS, AS WELL AS THE PBOGffiS I VE INTEL-
LICTUALB ARE USING B PEACE AND VIOLENT
FORMS OF STRUGGLE. IT IS VET ACUTE IN
EVERAL COUNTRIES. T PATRIOTS ARE TAKING
AND COMING OUT AGAINST THE BLOODY
,:
DICTATORSHIPS AND UNPOPULAR REGIMES.
SECRET
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SECRET
"INTEATIGALISM IS A GREAT FMCS.
THE LATIN AMERICAN PATRIOTS FEEL RX
DAILY SST OF THE SOVIET UNION AND
THE SOCIALIST STATES. . MAT TER PEOPLES
OF LATIN ANES ICA KNEW THAT ALL TIE
SOVIET PEOPLE--230 MILLION STRONG, SIDE
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rtti
ti
cast authrity to
Ott1Cia3B, XOMAM s .
ity
a brief period lant
tivity in the p
Possive. The i
and wigwam
tQ that
i
mom
i
cat
ion to boc~ W
SAC A T
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clog
rat i - or are ah+c t sum. Fall=* the
to soirs dtstr'J tis & Probi
sit rt ad
iy and
inet-
44
is
,t g, the air
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ity
y valve
T
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QALt;Lou
s the cost" regime
to iid
itita 50,000 achl-bi
it
lpltala *f-d
silty ,SIC ad.
In medical Saboo"
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Am" Study JAStood at
Potwly tralsed 6mtor or nurse Is bottw than none
meatleft
wig= lnc
d 25X1X
lot d"PiLmats i
Ca
all* t.d aW
the local
tired
in L tIA r c*
be
line..
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k l* t
go VIww t o i t Vie
i*l
aut : ti
I Will ton-
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I C h g T
re in a very alaad state,
I dip1
a- voaat to aiaisize Its contact with the
contrast to such amore cordial relations of past
January 1960 was the turning point. +C tro
d a stinging condemnation of the Commmist
tug their rice deliveries to
or distributing propaganda within the
es. After a brief hange of
verbal bl , Castro and the Chinese, neither
eiehiag to provoke a formal split, adopted a polity
oring each other as such as possible. The
pl
has failed to report
vity and turmoil in
Diplomatic r entsticn is a good barometer of
state; of-.4inomuCuban relations. The Communist
y is Havana,
if
o8or9
F to Poking has only two or
e,- Cuba *s ambassador vas recalled to Havana
May and reportedly will not return to his post,
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ig1-.t. TbMAO
`?1
and the increase in plattiaaE
V
pits private emawm;
r olutla u7 lrn el. B no
2. The year 1966
8 C R T
y' 25
Cuba
than 4.5 wiliim metric
the previous y
Amory come
Yalisbi. for
s factor. No
C R E T
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R $ T
the i. trial, and eastrwtio
and mad evident *two 1941.
3. ftilo tb, was no
PO#'a>Ytt > not
a aver cut
in supplies rice, an isepartaat Ce stag, causw the
availability of fs tufis Cub* deer:
:ut In c
1h1u.
rise
mm
0 Cuba
area $1.3
y at the a ad of
in vrrai
a result of a rise
C a E T
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1U *ills still In ape"
Will
10
bl ty Inc
ittle
O"lowfor Only
Attie or no r
liv-
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IIAE CUBAN MILITARY SITUATION
11. Cuba has one of the largest, most modern, and best
!;rained military establishments in Latin America. The Cuban
Armed Forces comprise an Army, Navy, Air and Air Defense
Force, and a Popular Defense Militia, all under the 3urts-
tion of the Ministry of the Armed Forces (MINFAR). A
paramilitary organization called the Border Guards, operated
by the Ministry of the Interior (MININT), maintains a watch
over Cuba's coastline, ready to seize anyone attempting to
nter or leave the country illegally.
2. Raul Castro, the younger brother of Fidel, in Armed
ees Minister in addition to being Deputy Prime Minister and
Second Secretary of the Cuban Communist Party. to in currently
tending a high-level school and First Vice Minister Juan
A lmeaida , veteran of the Sierra Naestre campaign, has temporar-
ily assumed the position of "Armed Forces Minister by Regula-
tory SubstitutioWuntil Raul returns. The Cuban Armed Forces
ire staffed by officers who have demonstrated their fidelity
Castro regime rather than to Communism per Be.
3. Although the primary mission of the Armed Forces in to
defend Cuba from external attack and from internal subversion,
troops are also used in the sugar harvest and for various
truction and agricultural projects. Obligatory military
:service (SMO) for males between 16 and 26 was started in
C;CRET
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1964 with draftees serving a total of 3 years.
A shall force of 1,000 to 2,000 Soviet military advisers
cisns remains in Cuba but all. weapons and weapons
including those with short-range ground-to-ground,
end-to-air, and cruise missiles, are now under Cuban control.
The Soviet military contingent in Cuba helps to maintain and
some of the more sophisticated weapons and provides
dance and training in the use of the vast supplies of
ary equipment Cuba has received from the USSR.
5. The Cuban Army totals about 175,000 men of which 90,000
are regulars and the remaining 85,000 form a ready reserve
cable of immediate call-up. The Navy has about 7,000 men
e the Air Force bas 4 , 000 and the Air Defense Force has
3,000. These are backed up by a militia of about 100,000
en and women. There are an estima
corder Guard.
>_. Naval facilities afloat comprise 18 KOMAR guided missile
patrol craft based on the north coast near Havana, and 24
motor torpedo boats, 15 submarine chasers, and a small fleet
of lesser patrol craft distributed among the important ports
on the north and south coasts. All of the larger vessels
were provided by the Soviet Union. The four warships Cuba
acquired prior to Castro's assumption of power, three old
'?frigates" of US origin and an antiquated "cruiser" built
In 1912, are no longer considered effective fighting units
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and are used for training and target practice. Smaller pre-
1959 coastal patrol craft supplied by the US are often out
of service for lack of repair* and maintenance and most are
probably being gradually deactivated. The Soviet-supplied
eels are the backbone of the Navy.
`?` . The Cuban ground forces are equipped with more than
1,200 field artillery pieces and antitank guns supported by
over 100 130-mm, 132-4ense, and 200-mm truck-mounted rocket
launchers. Armored vehicles include about 600 T-34 and
T-54/55 medium tanks, 40 J3-2 heavy tanks, 16 PT-76 amphibious
tanks, 100 SU-l00 self-propelled assault guns, and close to
300 armored personnel carriers and scout cars. The ground
coo also have 8 FROG (Free-Rocket-Over-GVound) tactical
silo launchers with 50 FROG missiles and 20 SALISH
ground-to-ground tactical missile transporter/launchers with
d 100 SALISH missiles.
. The Air Defense Force consists of 24 surface-to-air
e sites with about 600 missiles protecting three major
itary centers (Greater Havana, Santa Clara/Cienfuegos,
Holguin/Santiago do Cuba) and an estimated 1#500 anti-
guns situated throughout the island. The antiair-
craft artillery ranges from wail calibre weapons up to
1005 guns, some of which are equipped with fire control
adar. The Air Defense Force has about 50 ZSU-57-2 twin-
mount 57-mm self propelled guns.
-3-
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S E C R E A6
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The Cuban Air Force has about 1,66 modern jet fighter
as including 23 MIG-21 aircraft with a limited all-
In aIl, there are 58 MIG-2
0 MIG-1. ,
,Weather capability,
On sown" .' - _. ,. ~.
-_.^ ??~? ~? _ 'w-A c -,)or n i r iieias t
Holguin in the east, Santa Clara in central Cuba, and San
Antonio de Ion Banos south of Havana. A fourth major air-
field, at San Julian in western Cuba, in used principally
primary pilot training. Nearly all jet fighter pilots
have received advanced training in the Soviet Union while
few have been trained in Communist China. The Air Force
more than a dozen ti._ie. +~A.,
.~ -Lnave wren noted in practice bombing
operations, most are believed to be fitted out as cargo and/or
Passenger carriers. In addition to about 150 l i ht manes
used for training, l iaiaoa:, and command and
the Air Force has over 90 helicopters,
are MI->1 HAREs and V,1_4
control activity,
jori ty of Which
An additional- missile system, the SAMLET coastal defense
iso missile system, now considered obsolete in the Soviet
on, was deployed at four sites;
as area by the
Navy until late 1966 when all sites were vacated.
the 8 SA13 ' launchers have remained in a storage
area in a non-operational, status although it sees" that 4
of the )a
m$ y be in use
ining. Cuba cs 50 ;HAMLET
E+ EET
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m ssties are ap rrently also at this storage f*cil ity. The
son for the deactivation of the four sites and the future
deployment of the system are not known at this time.
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8 E C R R T
One section of the Cuban Armed forces has
been a source of acute embarrassment to the Castro regime.
This Is the UMAP, or Military Units for Aid to Production.
The UMAP was formed in November 1985 when the Cu
decided to provide a cheap source of unskilled
labor by inducting petty criminals, perverts, malcontents,
suspected counterrevolutionaries, clergymen, and militant
church members into work battalions housed in concentration
camp-type complexes in Camaguey Province. In this fashion,
not only was labor made available where it was needed most,
those elements comprising potential stumbling blocks for
the regime was eliminated from open society. Practically
speaking, however, the system was a failure. Marsh
discipline and abusive physical punishment meted out to
UMAP members evoked protests from families and friends,
UMAP units, with no incentive to work, were not noted for
their productivity. Although U11" was technically a part
of the Army, troops were given no weapons or military training.
They were paid 7 pesos a month and were rarely even
permitted to leave their camps on pass, They performed
agricultural work, usually in the canefields, seven days
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C R E T
a week from early in the morning until the evening when
they were compelled to attend classes in Communist in-
doctrination, Such was the reaction to U*AP that both
Fidel and Raul Castro were forced to make public statements
backing the system. Finally, in April of this year, all.
UVAP members over 27 years old were given their unconditional
release and there are rumors that the remaining members will
be absorbed into the regular Army and the iAP battalions
will be disbanded.
12. The Cuban Armed Forces probably are in a relatively
high State of preparedness and, short of a major US invasion,
could successfully defend the country against external
attack. They have already proven their capability to
maintain internal order. Joint military training exercises,
including elements of the grad, sea, and air forces,
have been conducted and some units have had practical
experience in operations against raids from abroad by Cuban
exiles. Although there have been unconfirmed reports of
poor morale, there is no reason to doubt that the majority
of the regular troops are loyal to the regime. Their
principal drawback is a lack of combat experience and the
low level of education of the enlisted men.
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C R B T
CUBAN ADO oars
Personnel 6t Total 184, 0O0
ddit canal 100,000 in militia)
Army (regulars)
60,000 son
(ready reserve)
85,000 son
total
175,000 men
Navy
70000 Men
Air Force
4,000 men
Air Defense Force
88,000 mein
Militia
100, 000 men and women
Inventory of Aras and 'ti
+ernt
Fighter Aircraft Total
168
MIG-15
53
T.rMlo-i5 et trainers)
1
10
,
*10-17
35
M10-19
10
MIG-21
58
Naval Vessels Total
123
KOMAR patrol boats
Kronstadt subchasers
50-1 class subohasers
P-6 motor torpedo boats
P-4 motor torpedo boats
Patrol escorts
other patrol/se:rvice craft
6
9 (plus I enroute from U58R)I
12
12
5
63
S E C R E T
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FROG (Pr**..Rocket-Over-4round)
Missiles (estimated)
50 (max, range 29 nautical miles1
BART Coastal Defense :
missiles (estimated)
3ALIRB Surface-to-Surface
missiles (est imated)
exiles (estimated)
KOMAR boats (2 launchers each)
50 (max. range 25 to 50
nautical miles)
8
100 (max. range 80 to 70
nautical miles)
20
100 (max. range 20 nan
18
ical milesi
GUIDRL1$ Burface-to- A 3r :
Missiles (estimated) 600 (max, range 17 nautical miles;
Launchers 162
Sitee (8 launchers each) 24
Artillery
Field artillery and anti- 1,230
tank guns
ZSU-?57 2 eelf .propell ~nncrtcrcr~r:
gum 50
Other antiaircraft guns 10450
130-ma track-mounted rocket 50
launchers (32-round)
132-ma truck-mounted rocket 30
launchers (16-round)
200-ma truck-mounted rocket
launchers (4-round)
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T-34 sodium tanks
450
T-54/55 medium tanks
150
J B-2 heavy tanks
40
PT 76 amphibious tanks
is
SU-100 self-propelled assault guns
100
BT 0p armored personnel carriers
40
OT 60p armored personnel carriers
95
STR-152 armored personnel carriers
40
I amphibious scout cars
60
X-61 amphibious personnel carriers
60
arms estimated 3009000 eon;
E C R 9 T
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25X1 D
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Next 1 Page(s) In Document Exempt
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FOREIGN DISSEM
26 J
1*1 t for *btttl
t
127 alll t LOU* A ricsn 4 1e --
Inar orft
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ZT
EIGM DISSEM
fsti.m1 1 ,.rapt i
its C at-*mUtl
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NO F01i"'tEIGN PISSEM
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*ttsg tam t
NO FO EID DISSEM
t#ctpatia .
All
T h e (o1 i
,oath
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Iv
NO FOREIGN DISSEM
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ty
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7 EN000900110001-6
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NO FU 10 N DISSE
y ter le for tbors to follow to
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C R R T
1.
the conflict be
China,
Cuba, has
to
Cc auuiAt Party lea
turf
fare,
bombastic anti-US
amount of training
tiate
to vsrloW dissident
The real Chief pure in this venture appears
recruitment of adherents in sting's
world CONRUAI t leadership rather than the
y in Latin America.
2. wing's ambitious in Latin erica, whatever they
may be, have been thwarted in recent years by their complete
embility to attract many atpposoters. This,, of coarse, is
duo to competition from the long--+0tablis#e pro diet Ce
on me h
the
`hose who advocate
sently bier
p of
be other.
tivity in Latin erica ap-
to o by a Bidet margin,
h the Castrott+
t deal of
panda, but a
to exploit
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3. `h
7ii1 iam i Of
U.
e Imwillootod that
of the Caumt1
l iYi y r tb
at the c tr
1CO) .
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4w The CbUwi
distr ut d USAW
$ ?t In BOU# , BM"]Lp C1- Zc #
1 tr# bwiww', tit 3o 11y
r*IL&tl,NW 4w
Vitfl t
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0 Chi a e
old ftm
t r'WA$b 111001
A at,vwy 1 &I
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8a C R Z T
UUys
and culture
JOWS")f as mall as bmft
has seat vmwe visit to
n tics v and si
ty
1
t ca l
2. After
y th!
G:ultt l
acI
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Z C R A T
s Cam
,. A
ktiC$1
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Outh
y M 103a it argualwad
comet t* the
Chinese
p of about 2,000.
: the '
tti 19 negii91b . Tradft With Chi has
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2. h*
fall 1966
but
actIV I
p t#x
in x:
i ytbr t .ffo'ts of t f p s
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1.
to 40
wow Ch
ily
, ibe
2. S=W Mad Very Chine chi""* mat
vialted. Umgay. Tb* C
at c
Lt IOVOIN
ad
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Delortmen't of State
of ca" -a mutistry of the later
for counterintelligence and political
chief is Captain Jose Aerates Persaad z, membe
Cuban Co coact Party Central Coesreittee. ThO MR
2 , officers and enlisted versa, maintains its
of the
2.
an the tale of Pines while
office s
N) Vj-
can be foundd ittO&, ter, and villa.
over cr s 04961110t the
counter-
state, which
rerolst
Individ
ivity, and Balled "econoaie " crimes.
such crises are investigated,
of the
Officials of the in play lead
petted offenders, which fre on
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Those net executed are, lncxreerat?
stir xuteri
of Penitentiaries, but the Pr'.
t OU personnel .
.vision Var"
f butidi gs;
and arrests;
siuing Tiles and dassi,
g E communications facilities and cryptographic
25X1 C
synt c; protects foreign dignitaries in
ranking Cuban officials both at home a" *
or the ban
high
visiting other countries to pretest
iotalaisg a system of diple .tfc couriers
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C It Z T
Thanks largely to Soviet
the Z has developed in
the
rather t
a resistance sent
the Vaxsdero .*jant air
it is significant that the
refugees arriving in Mami
ical
alert and efficient
the t of the
ttaate of the MR that
he risk of sizing
7 for emigration via
ively wait for +t lime.
of the Cuban
remely resote,
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,Ctt
dis the I
for alt#*a r C at victory, while
*ay to establish a C t g ri
it not allow a Cam= .st ta3lne-
v+ lam,
-utioa al v. ct p- trough uvia
simply because they have not developed a large or-
ioaa a
Vill have to
to establish a C t
game
be detersdOOd by
ica,
of '#vi$
ty*,
in t
always
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T T
assitato
Dr suit
y to !Pa" thlM for
tt of the Latin
cited an follow
by the
pGa tions coup-
the ov+alut i in any Latin tic a8 C try
by the local ist part' since
mediate situation.
err:llas wit
I Castro
critici
local
by
discipl
pri
par-
us to resolve in-
istaa to
but rather has g
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to sum
Ith Castro.
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etry.
In tun way
but it it
and course-,
XQ
r7 t"Is, ilk
by this system.
c trnisas;
~llwx.- Theme
rY~1~aa+.0rt
to NOWM",
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7 #& progress.
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hi a a*. 1.50 , homer, arrsny inie s are
;eieete ""*Ad &M s # of beift in
training.
i ar t 1.700 but figures A" not a avail
the am 19b6 e 19"s which
totatl to r 2m.
but it Is kama that amore have left
11 its with a* r s . of their
y-,74
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LL&
AR
a mix'
ftvot*4 '#
Lea). cUe
25X1X
25X1X
gut 1s
IR 7I P of
ILL t
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Ci
by
s t " 4901 1 is um
ski have vopwts of r1s-
h f lds
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3 E C R E T
iett:
Par'iic t* acturexy,, but avow,
Zmr %
a id be noted
. Lila haffidbook
"rriii golf."
aid to
ii-
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110 Castro regime is Cubs would not
len race sizes that C
for the C ist Camp is
Fidel c
y C.
Mo t dos "iacipaily
Csatro'n twtra isa behavior but it will
a somber of the Sc oalist
gbly ds tbo Soviet* think of Cuba that the
billion in see-
Ac acid in the fuss period of
11114w for Atsbeafttaol, and
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to r Ift credits
ran C
the pied
d 4 coats a
in 1961
r 3
: 4
to
old to Cuba meted to
4700 s111 ion. The Cub" A d Y os
t#A
Prt ie d by the Us= *A=* 1961
t I
equ.i d with
7 t
sight s
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The aelsa
s *uit
T
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Ith
Azmd Forcew .
military
Particu-
kwflted
SOVIOt aft Imerm
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ANVOLUTItll WI TM f VOLU?I+f*
elution
by the 9811VIan Army in a clash e
echoes says
guerrillas an April 19,
vies on awned revolution in his
book *evalt lda, on Is, ll iroluc
to Join the guerr
bray's thesis, I=Iud' the rejection of the
raditional wetho of the Latin Anerican Commmulst Parties,
if follow Castro** tine. In fact his book wee
after conversations with the Cuban les,"r and was published
t the
for power in Latin lmorica mat begin with guerrilla
At
nuary with Cuban Goverment backing. Tbo book's
preface points out that De y had shared the life of the
guerrillas in various Latin Asrertean caumtries and calls
e Of the nest lucid interpreters of the present
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y'. capture - announced by the !tench
l in Lai Paz - appsr1
SeaRtxa, clai
and that he w
Before his
newspaper, ft
an atteapt to
tgle & ad called
. Guerrilla teilureu
In his book, Debray?s first sin to to disprove the
widely held conviction that the Cuban Revolution cannot be
mated. Be &d lts that hat had believed this until recently,
Trust he lasted
of material
the Latin American govern-
left-wind asganine
nal ist .
Cuban Communist Party
d in
r than ames# the revolutionary v* rds . Attempts
ills war had failed in Mina, y,
Republic and Peru. Tres in Nevoluaibn
thray warns that "the essay" has increased
-2u.
CL IFS
ee caused esbarramommt
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'CIA IFZ
army and rural guards enjoy a certain
prestige; communications have been improved under the guise
Corps have boom integrated in the rural areas as a
patio ce end at times real self--dental"*
view of this and of their superior military power, the
present goverassteaents' reasasources should not be underestimated,
but Debray's advice seems to be
ban a solution to the problem of seising political power,
despite his statement that the capt
legitimate sin of revolutionary movements,
paver in the only
Debray attributes the failure of such movements to the
schemes. d
military tactics and app
I conditions very
different from those in which the schemes took root",
In particular he attacks the accepted concepts of armed
sself fene, armed propaganda, a permanent guerrilla base
and the subordination of the guerrillas to the party.
Each of these, he claims, was ignored by Csastro. He press
Cuban solutions to problems faced by all Latin American
movements, despite his assserti
an earlier essay that
--
UNCIAL IFIED
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no e,mt Vital is it
all
bays to rely an their
red if- fss$*
0 failure
it1 sod As concerned
mitt t with the eapt
paenibili
Latin Asertcs end
revolstious would
guerrilla
But he also CIS ION
intro did
t IWroviend.
by DOWRY Us 0
he Vkol* peasant
ight* of the
The Peasant
of. ISO ee
t-titre and p,
i forego. Cites
c lleC to the tUUML
republic,
fetes
1 abolished to
,rile, led
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CIAMI1 r
tachnaart such as the Cuban, one, organically
of the civil p l.ation. The Colombian L ist
Party. however, has not abandoned the principle of armed
of the
o be directed
"Ills who elate. that the mans self f
by the
11 -.aequa.iateed with the history of the
like
IV*' and that 'it regards, that revolutionary
laid.
t also
ernwmt forces
and do" not convince the peasants. Me adds that even If
the peasants Mere persuaded to join the guerrillas, there
would be nothing with whteh to arm them. Alter
there are many ad vocatso of Propaganda following
ambush he -in points to the Cuban ale - "Significant
details: in two
and one not yet reached by
guerrilla mo cement, de. pray
did not hold a single
at a much later
prov%oti VReTb9as "0W"$ A l A% (bAgftC F
y also rolects armed
be revolution.
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an eve r .optinlat ie
'to the superior a
no frontiers with friendly
y cla
were enemy troops ready to be transported by air. 1 ebray
tial revolutionaries that the attempt by "Cho"
*suer Cuban lender who diaappea r d in 1065 -
*catastrophe*. Survival of a guerrilla movement suet
ablish a bum with hospital, and communications in 1957
depend on surprise and mobility. But the first clash with
he Bolivian guerrilla o In 1> h in which Deb ray was
captured h 13
peach did SUM
rrilla use
all ply ere
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cUUU
by anst r, sign" by
y #2
as Guevara artisls and tkstre ?s iagr*asimgly
prrovccativ speeches, will probably a at ow 610-
further the Latin
tit effect
*g#oi$ still
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Subversive Activities is Uruguay 1939 1987
nn embassy is .Montevideo began disseminating
pro-Cuban propaganda soon after Castro came to power. This
activity and the Cubes ambassador's support for Conamist-
inspired demonstrations leer the Uruguayan government to
declare his persona son grata is January 1961. Following
the ambassador's expulsion, Cuba began to take precautions
to preserve Montevideo as a gateway and base of operations
against neighboring countries, and virtually stopped
activities against the Uruguayan govers. i ut Itself. 25X1X
25X1X 2.
listed Cuban intelligence operations and objectives in
'Uruguay as follows: enlistment of support for the Castro
regime through monetary support of persons, political
parties, and newspapers friendly to Cuba; penetration of
exile organisations for purposes of subversion in Paraguay
and Argentina; the facilitation of travel to Cuba for
training and other poses; and the penetration of the
government, political partia s, and organimationaa , to attain
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f'ECRET
on on Uruguayan plans and operat ions .
. when Uruguay finally severed diviomatic relations
196#, Cuba lost Its base of operations is
South America. Clandestine subversive support activities
were then left to the Uruguayan ist Party, whose
leader, Rodney Arissmeadi, exercises national influence
through a front-party called ZIDEL. Arisasadi, a Castro
friend and admirer, has recently engaged is e f fort s to
bring about a detente between Castro** theory of ar sea
revolution and Bevilt advocacy of peaceful political
tactics in Latin America.
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Activities In Donis
1. On 14
a0000014
captured
.
which wan
30th. lost of the Invaders, which
killed or
Several now of fiiht
diplematio r elatirr .
Lem. 0A 25 June the D ninican
in maze than 30
subversion. A e
tC
contact was
thimers inside the boaLui
3.
lowing t
bruary 19a, pronlneet Dominican
0 the
ty. 0" somber of the
i n Uicant Increase,
:blic
it of State,
toed with sym
tom
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CBLT
dominated Dautat
meted in late
to
r of returnees
oral leaders of the Dominican Ce atat warty )
lived in Cuba she Txujillo rose to poor.
rri la lga. A sumber of the participants
4. In Deco er 190, the 14th of J Revolutionary
Movement (X134) aad the initiated a Short lived
as aided the off
litsry train"
With ark 1 and amwmi--
ith
strike, in -I 1964
extrea to in the forefront
April
to
early lam. Al
,y return&
lineal and
gave a
C 2 E T
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C Z N T
radio
&t the =s t1 7 1r1
malt
to Imo`
som* amtr*l h as
on a y 1' ', fir
r~shtg
t 1 a der of t
cat# t and c -
b 11 making
situat im.
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Ive, Activities in
1. The Cuban COSOo
representation in the Cart
with nose of iaru
1969 - 1J''
tuned active
..Owi I*aders ? and has
omoted direct contacts with Samoa. The consulate's
large staff is ma up entirely
operators.
25X1 C 2. The consuls Areeaa ft
ye been rasp ible for the quiet absorption
Iby the
t Young Socialist 1 ea a during the s r Of 1900.
given pronises of financial assistance
if leftist organizations achieved unity.
e11 igence
obtained in late 1906, hoer, suggested that Sravana does
not wish to jeopardize its official "presentation in
Zingston by support any Janaicas revolutionary group.
! 19",
portedly
to find front on to transport
c Cuba* Ships, which would them
8 S C S X T
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ifto, was expelled from I
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to Chiba. ` elasgues is believed to have offered
ips to J amalcans for study at a Cuban
4. In late 19", Curtis Johnston, the first Jamaican
several YO K" of training in Cam, returned to
. He vas also reportedly behind a study conducted
by a J-tawican extremist which concluded that the time 'as
approaching wben a Jansica-n revolution old be feasible
and could be carried out successfully.
Jamaica. His further effectt
in doubt, however,
t he has becone disenchanted with Cuba.
50 in addition to the Cuban Consulate'"s dealings with
Jamaican extremists, the" is considerable evidence that
it is being used as a "stages post" to assist subversive
movements is other Latin American countries.
C R 3 ?
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R C R % T
dipletwatiC
relations in April IM, _ uadO
After Honduras broke relations, is became the tai
vicious regular radio lrsogr*a bossed frame Ira vans
2 . lei 190 and ILO Ws
of exiled liiesraga eretil
tolled ROWAUMA
sporadic
Am* and duly.
4. in 1st
ratios
made up of brans trim
the
a
thinly
reportedly
ilea There
C R R T
had an estimated 40 sen
were scatterd reports
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839 CRIT
in 1z
of activ t.
an L
into two
lut
.onn,
.."fard line faction" of yomM militants, and the
T + i$nlpa Cutter, en up of R " Xa=lwm who
contend that er itio n are not rips for d ir*vt activity
6.
ownSeati
etabil.
Policy
in not
Undenrlf
dtff ienlt
effective.
*f#, and
trot
itieal tom.
N C X I T
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Lye Activities
1. During the years 19WG -w I962
9 - 1"T
tro regime
developed doe, ties with disco Juliao, the self-
proclaimed Coist sad leader of the ant des
northeast Brazil. duliwo, ukase wife and ehil
in Cuba, has traveled there an s+rwrral oastcas, and a
umber of his associates and ranhwand-file sabers of the
to Cuba for agricultural training which
doubtedly heavily larded with ideological indoctrination.
t1? n direct Iran northeast Brazil to Cuba ms
provided by Cans airlines on at least one occasion.
tial evidence strongly suggests that dullao had
ii assistance for his movement from tke
t. Brazilian G mist leaders privately
stated, is fact, that Juliso's Peasant Leagues received
not only money but also shipments of mall area from Cuba.
These -z it ian Co fists also said that the reason Julio
sent his family to Cuba me ttt he feared they night be
in the civil war he expected to erupt at any
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2. The
clove relit
Party of Brazil
I
Itt
S E C R E T
raseaa~tt also during 1942 cultivated
eiders of the dissident Cist
dentity of feeling with the dissident
Irari1 mists and criticized the regular communist
Party for its failure "to take a strong revolutionary line"
in accordance with the decision of the 22nd party congress
of the Co^ -ist Party of the Soviet Union. Castro approved
the iaeurraa t ouary policy of the CV9 and wriged the leaders
guerrilla activities and start the revolutionary
Brazil "as soon as possible." Castro advised
only
of the revolutionaries
to give special emphasis to aasea
Possible among apr
of rural are ms.
lutionary action
swell
side a base as
and the inhabitants
Cuban embassy in Rio do Janeiro, we a source
to Communist and pro-Communist *1suoute
iod. In Boy 1962, leaks to the Brazilian press
S E C R E T
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S E C R E T
reported discu ionS in the * illan cabinet on t
subversive activities being directed by Cubanassdor
Joaquin ieraandes Aromas. The Navy and Array titers later
icular c ern over ii+eraan ' activities.
4, In ber 190, Cuban funds and propaganda for
Julimo'a Peasant Iaagmw were disrupted when W&Xiliaa
authorities discovered several guerrilla training centers
In early 1963, the
major dissident el
possessions to ratio funds.
we the art
of ,e, however,
Raul i Puri, the son of Cuban Voreign .Minister Baal a,
Brasil on 3 June. According to reports,
ident cps into Juliao's orbit.
Juliao and attempted to baring eluts
190 the cubams a
effort and funds on activities deal
Brazilians the icchi+enre mm%W of the
sending a delegation o
d in the nowt.
stood ready to
110 Jultao began sell
blo
lse to
on. Thto
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C R i T
Where they extolled the accoelt$haeats of a at toe is
plane to the Fourth Pan America* Samoa in Sao Paul, !sold
from 20 April to h May. Thvw Cuban entativres also
attended the Latin Anotic* iduwators' Conference in Rio,
100 Brazilian architects were invited to the lister.
and Cuban President rtic invited Brazil
national Union of Architects Congress in iavraea in the fall,
Cuba.
Chang
1eeive demonstrations which they can exploit.
both hard and
ist leaders expect to benefit if President
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Cuban Subversive Activities in
y 1959 -r 1967
1. After Paraguay severed diplomatic relations with
Cuba on 5 December 1960, Paraguayan exiles in Uruguay and
Brazil began to receive Cuban
a1 assistance. Your
members of the United Front for National Liberation (FULJIA)
a Paraguayan Communist exile group in Uruguay.. now de funct ,
reportedly received $230 monthly in 1989 from the Cuban
embassy In Montevideo to finance pro--Castro activities.
2. In February 1984, reports indicated that Paraguayan
exiles in Argentina, and Brazil had received $30,000 from
Cuban representatives in Montevideo to support their attempts
overthrow the 8troeaseer regime. Meanwhile, Cuba
reportedly also financed the purchase of weapons and ammu-
nition that were cached in Argentina and Brazil by the
Paraguaya.a Communist Party (PCP), using members who had been
trained is Cuba.
3. The PCP now claims that over 200 men have received
some instruction in guerrilla warfare--about half in Cuba
and the rest at training bases in Argentina and Brazil,
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given by those
d returned fr
In addition, a
few members of the Febrerints and Liberal Party youth groups;
in exile have been sent to Cuba for training in guerrilla
tactics. Some of those trained have reportedly returned to
Paraguay but the majority have remained in exile to train
to elaborate plans, the Paraguayan insurgent
as, thus far, been a failure. The exile guerrilla
in Argentina and Brazil have been subject to constant
harassment by the authorities. The break in diplomatic
relations between Uruguay and Cuba in August 1964 deprived
of an important base from which to support the ant i-
8troessDer exiles. Moreover, the guerrilla leaders themselves
have proved ineffectual is mounting operations against the
efficient security forces of the Stroessner regime.
$EMIT
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a cadre of Nicaraguan C tints-in'-exile
Nose of these Nicaraguans vere trained
d were later infiltrated into
Nicaragua across the Monduran border.
2. light Nicaraguans were tried to June 1962, for
conducting terrorist training. They we caught while
attending a course in bomb making taught by a Cuba-trained
)r. Nicaraguan a
ubversive Activities in Itcaraip 1959 - 1997
be break in Nicaragua-Cube relations
mmunition, explosives, and Too pounds of propaganda. A
u *r that year
ediy told interrogators that the arms had come from
es also seized
Cuba. in the fall, another Nicaraguan, who had gone to Cuba
in wid-1962, Ostensibly for a surgical operation, was caught
with supplies of explosives intended for terrorist bombings.
insurgent groups
o the newly created National
Lou Front (FIN) . The aaouat of sassy sent fr
pp in 1963 cannot accurately be assessed, but
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Y into 1I coi#er$.
a also indicate that - aces and s illies had been
o the group `a pries ipa l 'training camp on the
Rio Patucs.
in August 1963, the laune
foray into northern N ca-ragua fron Tara Ur*B, which
cost the 5*511 organisation sane of its key personnel.
Following this disaster, the p appea,
5, 5inca 1163, the 'X successor
I gandinist Liberation fit
the object of Constant harassment by
security forces. C eattly, the PbLM ban Shown
no capability to larch a- successful anti-gerern*Snt action,
but it can Involved in the pre..eiect ion rioting in Jana ry
1967. The I$ is now reportedly obtaining arcs, and esy
to expected to take advantage of future dtaorde,
be moribund.
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Subversive Activities in tta__n&1a i
tag the spring of 1963, uosiguiticaDt funds appear
group by way of deuico. Ikny of
ET
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in contact, however, with Cuban agents in
ate 1962 and early 1963 and received 4200, 000 in funds,
and some propaganda material was circulated. You
the leader of the W weeaa ent , reportedly visited Cuba
a cache of arms and documents was seized in Guatemala
uidancee and communications equipment. In June
City. in October, one of the persons killed by the premature
explosion of a h+=made bomb was acknowledged by the
Guatemalan Communist party an a Cuban--trained expert in
es. Mexican Marxist journalist Victor Rico Galan,
saw You Bona in October
1963, and reportedly urged his to head his feud with the
orthodox Communists.
you refused, and on 13 January 19" Castro publicly
chastised his for following "the wrong revolutionary path"
and for being a "tool of the Trotskyist*."
with the agreement reached at the November
in Havana, of Latin American Communists, and as
t of You'ss failure to come to terms with the Communist
Cuba began to channel its aid exclusively to the
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he party, the Rebel Armed Forces (FAR).
was provided through the Cuban embassy in Mexico
tied in Mbzico last fa
easbassy Third-Secretary was
connection with clandestine
tli still Is.
with the FAR.
killed is an automobile accident and Aulio Cesar Beta
Mayors, alias Cesar M etes, a member of the PGT central
committee, was named an his replacement.
from the scene don not sees to have brat
ton' removal
guerrilla movement such nearer, though You Moss made a
Lure in this direction by announcing that be had broken
his group.
urth International and expelled threes Trotskyist*
Both guerrilla groups have been weakened by army
vigilante operations against t-. Despite
these acts, however, they are still Capable Of harassing the
ut; the FAR, at least, can count an c*atinuod Cuban
financial *81sistanceo.
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Subversive Act iv
the
se nuc leas of a sam 1 i
drawn largely
uador had tome
organiza t ion . This group
at party
,uadorean Youth ( .JK) , which was involvea in a two-day
battle with governasat forces
volut tonsry Union
The leader
as Several amber 1cuadoreans 7tavelvet1
ubverffi ve a.etivitie$, had a eceived gueerrt lta training in
pro-- C" un iat Iorser Ecuadorean l1inisteer of the Interior
who visited both Cuba and Cosaaeuztiet China, reeporteedly eat
. had received *22,000 from the Cuban
that year. *anuei Araujo sldalge, a
g and way have been paid b]
Decsaber
Cuban Government
islet Youth of Ecuador (JCX) and the USJg, aaid
a e.be rs of the JCh and Wt./ g in Cuba
studying guerrilla warfare. They were to return in
a in Ecuador.
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to return. fto trainee returned from Cuba by way o
In the spring of 1963 then* guerrilla trainees did
where he picked up $30#000 from the Cuban embassy
for promoting guerrilla activity in Bcuador. On 22 April
1983, the uadorean police arrested and deported to Cuba
Julia de Cordova, a Cuban agitator who had been living in
Ecuador under an assumed name for more than a year. Also
in April, a Cuban-trained revolutionist lost his arm when
a home-madee bomb exploded in his hand during a training
exercise.
4. following the military coup on 11 July 1#03, the
Ecuadorean Government 'e careful monitoring of anti-government
activities severely Wired Cuban efforts. Clandestine
reports continued to indicate, however, that Rafael Ecbevarria,
r of the hard-line faction of the gcuadorean Communist
was in contact with Castro and vas readying guerrilla
operations. Other sources reported that Cuban aid had been
offered to followers of former presidents Yelasco ibarra and
military _justa.
*rim governments of Yerovi and
April 1966, restrictions on Communists have
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eased considerably. Cuban activities, hover, continue
limited and of little demonstrable importance. The
petual disorganisation, lack of cohesiveness, and poor
quality of leadership among the various Ecuadorean terrorist
and revolutionary group have probably led the Cuban to
conclude that revolutionary prospects are slight at best
in Ecuador.
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19e Activities in Bolivia 1959 - IOW
Bolivia has
t of special
intervention to Bolivian affairs,
including oonspira cy with the 9oItvt n diet Party And
as t p is to split the , by Cuban mar Tares
in 1960 and Charge Garcia Tr saa in 1911 c l ig" the
In
published a series of duets linking
y with a C st conspiracy to seize
of the government. of these documents, a st*te-
nt by an arrested liv"a agitator who had been in close
cont* t with the Cube emba"y1p gave the aSSIOM of a cater
o had received f inane is l sir
evidence was later used to Justify the r*ql
for the Cuban char's recall.
2.
cultivating relations with Bolivian. cinos
a bit agora discreet. no was particularly
Ma's sensor, aSMOU A?ja,
and reportedly gave Cuban financial assistance to the peasant
union to the Cliaa Valley *?C$. ,alamg with another
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-ssy officer, 1 also instrumental in providing financial
the development of a pro-a ist, pro?astro
Youth
youth group ?-- the Bolivian erratic/( l+A*TACO) -- Which
rates organized in La Pas in Ifty 1963. In November of that
of this grotr Were caught, attempting to plant
the homes of Men* Sarrienton and the US Ambassador.
I to Cuba. Thes. individuals undoubtedly
received some instruction and tr aa.inia g, and several brought
large quantities of Cuban pro vAs into the country.
3.
inst President i gsteaassoro for political
domination of the country. At a meeting in September 1943
With leaders of Lechin;s faction of the Rand other
rues,
Cuban -ernment bell
extremist groe
aavana was prepared to supply
the required eamsae .
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early It" Cuban subversive activity
d his followers some arms and mmey to aid his
ay Bolivian students, CA ineas a and ualon
olleawers of extremist Vice President
attempts to strengthen pro-Castro
Through its eambassy, Cuba reportedly gave
rgd Roberto Lessaaale said that
a from among
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rs his two boxes to
'Co be distrilaateed among
the volatile Bolivtian tin niners who at that time were in
revolt against his governssot. OR 17 larch 19"' *s*a1*
told as esis$ar7 of tachin that the Cuban Goveraraent v*A
wining to Provide financial and material support to L hin
for hie caMa to u*$eat President Paz in the 31 My
presidential ejections. Lochia 'ewe scheduled to meet with
in early April to discs his f
return for
-. 21 August 1984, the Bolivian Government ee8de
Cuban subversive actteitieS by severing dipla tiC relatio
with U:VAUS. Cuba"s active support for Bolivian extremist
groups deteriorated steadily and, during 19",, appeared to
be 0oa s*aiBtetit.
and to determine what he ~w~a~ss '
the op C d Cuban ass is stance .
nary 1968 Tri..Ccmtttsent Conference
a training a fir
Boliv-ie
in guerrilla 'warfare. "There to firm evridenee that some
however, as
members of the guerrilla bend that hate
t tens in
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C R B T
southeast
trained
Bolivia she
Chinese Communist Paart ies .
lain that Cubaaas have
19W are drawn from this
the pro-Soviet and pro-
evidence of direct Cuban involy
insurgency is strong,
t 25X1 C 2000/06/;
captured
are currently
present in the guerrilla cap, and that radio contact is
maintained with Havana. Articles of clothing bearing
markings have been found at abandoned campsites.
September 19dd tha
h a guerrilla
pability which would be operating within a year. Olivares
revealed that
told selected party leaders in
wed guerrilla warfare training
,to cubs in January 19*6, and that be had begun teaching
guerrilla warfare classes in RolivIAn In Rpt r. In
November 1966, iliwario Iris a 1e11na, First B*CrOtArY Of the
Roberto ?credo went to Hdavaaa to disc s guerrilla
no with Cuban leaders. Later in the month, Cuba began
jams in guwrrilla warfare techn
BU-CRRT
Robert* Olivaree Garcia, a leader of the
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i c R E 1Y
. In January 1881, guerrilla
e experts Wont
into the Alto Deal,, northee et of La leas, and the t spare
northeast of Cochabaftba to propgre guerrilla rationa
to initiated in February. to nid Yebruary, a guerrilla
band was Ioraed in Santa Crun dopartaent, under the leadership
o Po"do. it was this group which was
o pranture act ion when an am ; patrol discovered
. Jules aftis i*'ay-, the trench C lest
rD*o r oluti .rye apostle, Vas
is group until his rent capture by the
Bolivian all
y use reportedly acting as a
guerrilla group coordinator and as a liaison with h pean
C R 9 T
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Cuban Subversive Activities in Colombia 1059 - 1967
1. Soon after Cast
to power
zploit the bloody tan-year struggle for
between Liberals and Conservatives in Colcabia. His support
the insurgent grr,
eeeelopaed during that
tpted Bogota to condoms Cubs in the OAS in
August 1960 and to sever diplomatic relations on
961.
2. In early 1942 Cuba was detected giving fi*ancial
assistance to the United Front for Revolutionary Acct ion 25X1 C
), an indigenous Colombian group which was to promotes
guerrilla warfare. Castro
gave the group $15,000 is June 1962 and proaiseed further aid
seai.-esnuaily. . Gloria Gaitan do Valencia., the wife of a
1'1 leader and the daughter of Jorge glieecer Galtaa whose
assaseinstion in 1946 sparked the disastrous iota rioting,
is a long-tiara friend of Fidel Castro. She visited Cuba
from 1969 to 1962 and probably brought back advice and
the Cuban Government. By late 1962, the YOW
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had picked UP a good many
Luetance to engage I
By aid-l663 the 7M. under the
of
tied with the
oaary action.
a in contact with other guerrilla leaders in an effort
euprt.
i venout (VOIC)
a twat to the Worker-it
incorporated into
ring of` 1"2. Prior to that funding r *port*
gh the Cuban embassy in 6ogo,
place
had several ara the training in Cuba late In 1962.
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S. Inuring the fall of 19
MAR began to built
spring of 1964 the
the National Liberations Front (M). This organization
o be the wain recipient of Cuban aid. Late in 1965,
an were reported to have visited Colombia is order
to evaluate the TIN and its prospects and to pass funds for
further activity. Boeever, in 1965, the FUAR, usable to
make any progress, dissolved itself.
S. In 1964,v Cuba provided a new group, the Army of
National Liberation (SLR), with 25,000 and trained a
number of its members in guerrilla warfare tactics. This
,s attack on the tows of Si aeacota in Santander Department
19x 5 brought beaispherte-wide attention to the insurgent
robiea in Colombia.
in 1o", several other guerrilla groups war* or lose
allied with the Communist Party of Colombia not up a unified
(P C) , whic
rongly supported by Cuban propaganda.
. During the first ball of 1967 there have been six
the aawe Colombian Revolutionary Armed Forces
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major guerrilla Incidents,, including an l
police lit is egicg five policy were killed,
to army Patrol in
fifteen co
were killed. Numerous small-scale incidents gave also
takes place. Despite
training' of l and lPAZC guerrillas, no evidence Mi been
uncovered of Cubs financial or arms aid since the :increase
in guerrilla activity began this year.
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'Subversive Activities
Peru 1950 - 10*7
1. )'olloviug the break in diplomatic relati with
u on 29 Doe*mb*r 160, the +t bans began to expend a good
money,, and material on training and support ins
Peruvian, revolutionaries. After receiving training is Cubit,
uvians returned clandestinely to
and Solt
They made
s Oxtessivie support
eiipts to mount
through usdor
located.
-scale guerrilla
operating Iron the jungles near the Bolivian border,
but succeeded only in arousing relatively minor campeaeimo
uprisings. Poruvi&a police broke up one such operation
March 1982 and discovered that among those arrested, one a former resident of Cuba, another had received clandestinwa*
e
activity training in Cuba, and a third, caught with radio
equipment, bad used it for cos nicat iag with Cuba.
late larch
Alcides Rivas Pared",
uv inn, was arrested by Holivla* authorities in Cochabamba,
via, as a Cuban agent. His assignment was to introduce
o u un.ist propaganda into Peru, through Puerto gsath---U
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isolated border toven
? n 14 May, Peruvian, police clashed with a
band of guerrillas vdvo were attempting to re-eater Bolivia at
uerto laldonado. C of the guerrilla casualties had been
ft (MIR) had be
red subversion. Luis de
movement of
Mary vehicle
ate gceeda,
=7- tneral, reportedly visited Cuba in 1963
the Peruvian iesinist-Communist Party (PCLP) , and the Army
sending approximate ly
a prossed financial and material
f 1
7,00o monthly to the Revolutionary Leftist Preat (FIR
Liberation Front (Y U), had received a
total of ,000 to "ad Peruvians to Cuba for training.
ions l Liberation (. C) . By August 19", yet another
In June 1, the MIR initiated guerrilla Insurgency.
stro promptly declared his support for the MIR, and
declared that be was going to add Peru to his list of countries
loved prospects for revolutionary success mere
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oy uctober, beaver, 'the
practically deotrorod the IM &0
.)Ail
ruptod.
'uv tan asued forces had
effective fightis force.
ate, were either dead,
and their organization was badly
bough` acme efforts are even now being
in reaea*nts to reorganize
at- sts lot
bave coat iaued to wend
tiers to Cuba for subversive training despite strict
oa trolp on such travel. Pro--Castro groups are still active
in s for Peruvian universities end probably provide a conduit
year, sad student dQM*S6tr6tIQSW have usually included
favorable references to the Castro regime.
other target groups. k Lyerb
distributed is Was and Arequipa last
J. Cuban propaganda media has ce' 1ttUMed to portray
Peru as one of several Latin A ricaaa countries here the
chances for revolutionary success are boot. Peru is covered
the international $ aia b--la g e broadcasts
Havana-Cubs" to ;nth America. A half-hour weekly radio
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and connuaicati
ha " not been restored.
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SECRET
Program in ecbrua-?-tbe lastu a of at 1ee48t to million
Indians tuiag is the Piruvi ht s ---:
broadcast since Say ice. its
gency,, has a stringer is Lima for th* transmission of
abE Its office rest officially c1c ed in April 1961.
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Cuban subversive Activities In Guyana 1f#" -- 1967
:aaetro has regularly supported the People's
ressive Party (PPP) and its leader, Cheddi Jagau, even
though Jagan has been charged with financial irresponsibility
by the Cubans on occasion. Although no Cuban ships have
d Guyana in over a year, when jag&* was Premier
964) money was taken to Guyana on Cuban ships and
given to the PPP when the ships docked in -rgetown. Prorr
1982 through 1964 at least 36 tyaaaase received guerrilla
"alaing in Cuba, but it is benived that this is only a
o those who actually did no since clandestine boat
further support for the PPP and is June he said that he
was planning to send a new group of people to Cuba, for
guerrilla training. Members of the Guyana Liberation
In March of 1965 Jagan went to Cuba to discuss
Army
irendy returned from Cuba were is turn training other
sea. Most of the GL& weapons were brought
o Cu
etween the two countries was very easy.
the defunct paramilitary are of the PPP, who
wever, , asey arssenr caches have been discovered
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ET
police and an a result the PPP is believed to have
B. In September of 1965 Janet Jagaa, mile of Cheddi
25X1X Jagan, she was malting arrangements
for a ni -moatb "political science" course to be held in
Cuba.
4. CReddi Jagas vest to Cuba through Mexico again in
the spring of 1966 to discuss the future activities of the
PPP and the G A, and Cuban support for them. He plans to
go to C ba again in July 1967 as the head of the PPI'e IAS0
delegation.
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ubveraa iv, Activities in Venezuela 1959 -
2 0 JUN 1967
. 'Venezuela has been at the top of Cuba's subversion
primarily because the .FAt ,
&mi l itary are of
the FL.N (National Liberation Front), which is under command
of the Communist Party of Venezuela ( ), has been so active.
nt in Venezuela between 1960 and
olutionary activities, in addition to an
amount spout on arenas supplied by Cuba.
he Venezuelan Government intercepted sore than $300,000
ed for the PCV from Cuba.
2. Terrorism was launched in 1961 aimed at overthrowln r
government of President 1 etancourt . FAII1 terrorists were
instructed to attack oil pumping and power stations, highway
bridges, and warehouses, as well as urban targets. on
I November, a three-ton arms cache is found on a beach in
cue la . Also found was a launch with an
outboard engine, presumably used to transport the weapons
from a ship to the beach. Investigations traced the cache
and the outboard engine, directly to Cuba.
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14ET
guerrillas committed themselves to field opera-
ensturely in 1962. a wt were rounded up or disperaeet
prisoners revealed that many of then had had guerrilla traiming
and sentenced to long prison termer. Interrogation of
by the armed forces; and 139 were tried for guerril
July 1966, Veneau
landing on the northeast coast of 40 son who were heavily
found on the beach.
in the possession of the Cuban Government in the summer
uniforms, and later a launch was
quent Investigation
^ revealed that they had been
ed separate reporting to the effect
that the landing did in fact tab`* place and that both money
($220,000 U.S. dollars) and arms were brought to the
dissident, highly militant, faction of the YALU led by
las Bravo. Various reports have been received that
Teodoro petkoff, , l1-known Y.neauelan guerrilla leader,
returned to Venezuela in the duly landing and that be had
recently been in Cuba.
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. In July and August 19f6 the orthodox PCY strongly
trolls support of the Bravo
threatened to break relations with Cuba. Castro respondso
by promising to provide financial support to the orthodox
PCV, but stated that he would not cease his support of the
Douglas Bravo dissident group.
. According to unconfirmed reports, seventy
son landed in an isolated area of the northeastern coast
Venezuela in November .1966. Alfredo Manolro, guerrilla
leader of the f'ALI, said that the increased combat eapabili--
and the action of the various armed groups in Venezuela
ulted in part from training received in Vietnam and
in part from the receipt of new arms from Cuba by Douglas
dissident guerrillas. It is possible that III6aneiro
may be referris
brought
bad landed previously.
aue is by the guerrillas
guerrilla leaders were arrested in Bogota.
MIR members and the other was a P member. All of
them had been sent to Bogota tosapport guerrilla activities.
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Garcia, a towline YAIA representative
euroae who returned to Venezuela in late 19", found that
a to recover from the losses suf fered at
govermment security forces during the past
two years. Recent guerrilla and terrorist successes ter
raised the norale of the estrewe
and given rise to
award reunification of the splinters
in venesue la . .ale found, however, that the Cubans
were the greatest hindrance to reunification and that
the PCV and Cuba were worsening daily.
He said that a complete break with the Cubans would be best
in the long run in order to keep the Cubans from intervening
again in Venezuelan "revolutionary"
a break would cause difficulties in t
although such
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w. . The latest guerrilla incident t
Pueian insurgentu, escorted by Cuban military
r the coastal village 01 i ac buruc iAt0 .
the mans drowned when a rubber raft capsized while
they were returning to their ship--- possibly Si Cuban iishing
boat nased
Two other Cu
and one of the
11. The Venezuelan guerrillas
e at teawt iae g to leave Ysa ezue
equipment were destined for Americo heartin`$ gth group which
operating in the ilnchiller Mountains, southeast 01
Martin and one of his lieutenants were capt
probably, eventua l ly , Cuba.
12 . Castro in apparently us
Venezuelan Insurgents.
erraa. ' Another was shot rosiMtifg arrest.
seised by Yanezuelan security lurces ;
later committed suicide in hi,a pri
place an 0
sr:ap aped,
this roil-up of sons
y, be vi.rtualiy
ability for the landing and "aid that he had
voiutioaaary duty" to continue aiding Venezuelan
guerrillas.
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Fa
tercet in the r ,u-
Nava"
is awe unstable
sea i
derabie r
? - : U f ro-
le not so elm* a
a rsvolutisae*ry si --
dle In African affaia s .
C R R
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dx and friendly
Self-Procfa
which Cuba ham been threaten" is recent years.
in Africa help him
a oid the world. wide dipl,
and arse Into a
of African c n--
tries without running the risks such an operation
would Involve in IAtia America. I w4m eer, Cuban
ity with the tar
close to 1.000 sill
1 a4visers in
ca. Included In this total are 000-700 Cubans
engaged in training permllitary and aailitaary
in Congo (Ursa ills), approximately 8o
is guerrilla vare-
t 25 Cuban
In Mai , and
70 ors of
{,
in Algeria.
ly with the African
rIll* training and
to good advantage.
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S E C I E T
Cuban dubtersivo Activities in
JUN 19.6
to Africa June 1967
Cuba first began to assist Angolan exiles after
a "Che" Guevara 'a setting in early 1965 with
uho Bata, head of the Popular MOVOMMt for the
Liberation of Angola (Xn A.), one of the two principal
Angol;asn nationalist groups, ginc* that times, the NFLA
has been Operating, with little chance of any success,
against Angola and Cabinda and has training cusps located
in Congo (Brazzaville
_ Soto recently refus
Aping to
train LA cadres in military tactics and are providing
other less important aid. Subasequently, there have been
Cuban offer of volunteers
the basis that Angolans suet liberate Augo
in such circumstances., that an oceasisaaata.l
accospanied XPLA fighting units, but such stories
African Party for IndepwAdence of Guinea and Cape
2. Recently the Cubans have stood up their assistance
Verde (PA IOC) , an insurgent movement based in Guiana and
S E C R E T
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directed a,
claims to have 5 - 7,000 guerrilla fighters. As away as
700 of then have been trained in one or another of the
Foist countries,
OCCUPY as ash as
ese Quianea. The noveaaeut now
third of the back-country in Portuguese Guinea.
Reportedly, there are at least da Cubans* led by M or
Flavio fravor eagaged in PAIOC training at the present
tine.
other am"
receiving inflated figures of the
and rebels .involved. Thus tar, the rebels
hold to a general staleasate because the Portuguese
have been able to maintain a superior force (up to 20,000
troops and s,am air power) .. Continuing Cuban support
out the costly and tedious operation of clearing
will make it even more difficult for the Portuguese
the interior;.
received periodic area shipments and
in Conakry from Cuban ships.
3. The Portuguese are begni
activities in Port aguese ineas, partly
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3 E C R I T
Cuban $ubvereive Actiritien in b andi-Dir
JUN 1967
June 1947
1. The 1abassy to Bujusburs, atrundi, report
late November 1960 t
it was convinced that ypttans,
and Chinese Co mists vex', involved in the chaotic
exile situation.
R,Vmndan villages.
^id-July 1946 and rota d to USbUra is August-
2.
bands of ftandan exiles which Gaup on the Burundi
Burundi, bit
that Cubaaa had just appeared on the scene in
another leader of the
ion Front, Faust in tllakray$ traveled to
we reported that Cubans and Arm be are backing
and carry out occasional raids against
y in aujunbura also report
r efforts had not yet become Public
knowledge. The lab"my in fairly certain that Cuba I
offered scholarships for study in Cuba; and that Charles
Seaahuna. chief of the H tdi Ministry of Foreign Affairs,.
25X1 C
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SECRET
and Pascual llaboneye, the deputy director of the National
police, wit to tvana in late Deasuber to discues and
study Cuban governawntal organisation and its adapt*bil tty
Burundi. the 25X1C11
discussi in Cuba will concentrate an A governaantal
organiz$tioa plan to shore up .president Niche. Mico*bero'e
authority. Four Cubans, the first wNdMr? of a aUXll
ntesion to train the Burundi *ilitia and to teach counter-
a techniques to the police, reportedly have now
arrived in Bu juabura.
C R X T
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Approved For Release 2000/06/14: CIA-RDP79T00827A000900110001-6 2 0 JUN 1467
Cuban Subversive Activities
1. Cuban
I in Guinea aoay have
with P id+ nt $eh In in 8
25 to
ver, that no such
sub" reign techniqu
-p
June 14367
aroati
titer
now in Pis.
lia warfare and
this is probably the
extent of Cumin subversive activity at the present time.
2, Ships arriving in C rir have brought in supplies
11 carried military hardware
as for the PAIOC caa p hospital
in Hake. A 80011 n of ineaans are reportedly in Cuba
SECRET
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ban Subversive Activities in M li
2 0 JUN 196;
At loot 25 Cuban medical and non.-ailitary personnel
1. This group is
ppar*ntlyT replaced on a
yearly basis.
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2 0 JUN 1967
Cuban Subversive Activities in Ja sire June 1967
The fall of the Mn Bella regute in dune 1965 was
the biggest setback Cuba has suffered in Africa. Following
,&I.- ...,,... V..+ . aanint d e i t nousedione as a
"reactionary and c laaterrsvoluti ry. "
ho ver, relations between the two countries have thawed
somewhat and the Cubans have b pressing to
t.hes further. At the went tiaaaas, tie are PWMaps
a . 70 members of a Cuban nedieal tear in Algsri&.
b R T T
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Cuban Nu
r0 Activities in Other Afr
care concern in OR
2 0 JUN 1967
n Countries Jura 1967
reports of four paranilitary training caps
_- ---,W ..I- [ zavj ie) about
100 kilo* tern south of the Gabon border toward Dolisto.
are said to be resinding the Congolese to claim the
Gabonese neangaurse sines located in the prafteeviil.e area
of the C o-Oaf border, in the event that dngesttc
oubiss in Gabon weaken that country's defenses.
C R X T
seaa11 ears of Nigerian
had received guerrilla warfare training in Cuba
. ire is no evidence that this training is still
2. A fern dissidents fr
and a few from
Ethiopia have, traveled to Cuba during the past two years.
20 ambers of the Ethiopian dissident group, the Eritrean
Liberation front, left for Cuba in January 1967 for
guerrilla and academic training,,
in pr
. Recent inforsaation indicates that at least
X C RE T
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ties
efforts to gain influence in the
nationalist novemenit directed against the
ugueso overseas aviece of pique.
1966? the Cubans reportedly approaa
(7**L1
ique LLb*Mt
tb an offer of asnistae.
that at least pert of the cargo of the Cuban freighter
is destined for the
African P
rebels.
directed
the ne3or
portion of
as intended for ZA ceet
the XMWL JCL
is located In 1ncaata.
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C A I T
td
Dat ti aid
20 zanxibarla to cum tear ati tary and a icultural training
repectirly. Tbw* are
-ftlasse
e i. t and lachol
Youth gr*UV,
3 1 C R I T
t e A fro -Sbiraai Party
to Zamibar.
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C R E T
Activities
inn* 1967
t is Congo (KIMObasa) apparently
tb the training of Congolese 41100 deates .
oliaal
ton, or both. A diary and papers
taken from the bodies of two Cuba killed to action In
Congo in loss referred to participation to ambasi and
l attacks in the eastern C o. Cs thvol+eOnnt reached
its zenith dxr the height of the 1964-63 rebellion.
tollio*iag a serios of rebel defeats, aka
itery personnel were pulled out bOXIMISM in $ov er
reled to Cuba late that year or in
bly for guerrilla varfar* training or
over 100 left '-ow- Itis*S is late
ot.
Since that time Cuba
exiled Congolese rebels led by
from Arcs action and appear to
on betiding a C
R I T
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.vi .le) nes are targeted aga3net
y have hUPW of bringing dog the *Auto
regime. According to unconfirmed reports, however
o has no overtures to sae Cuban officials and an
ecoaoatc aid agreement may have been d ed is Angus
during his visit to 'aasaville. OA the other land,
r ?ouro have cemented that Mobutu van chagrined by
the state of affa in araxX&VII10 and vowed that he
like that" to happen in Kinshasa.
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C R Z T
Subversive Activities in
Jun. 1907
1. Cuban nil itaarf personnel be" been in Congo
(graaaaiavtlle) for alseast two ysu"? giving paranil tart''
political party (J MR). At the
present tine there area an est iaaa teed 000-7W Cubsims engaged
in this training and serving as advisers to the a ongol0e
by part of the arsy.
and Navy. Others are functioning As agricultural
and 28 Cuban aical doctors have reportedly replaced
eeneh teats that left after last sum me
Noire, and at Djoue.
2.
are lotted near
ltieastely dir~eected against Angola, including the
portediy, c ns are, also maintaining two
as with
C hg T
ioual civil not*"* corps
tiny
asst of the tuba
in order to coordinate, clandestine
countries, They are
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by Cub" and
They are a
which put in at
l.ie) and various elements, of the elation.
oil
bee- bat regime last
he Cubans saved the
summer, fights and other ie is have, races in which
several persons have reportedly been killed. A natural
atacouiesa exists between the CUbMW and the a> oleeaee areaey,
Which in supposed to be replaced by a Cub&a*4traiesed ,Tees 1
ailitta and has already loot to t
protecting the Pr West.
bored Ike, it negro
Antilles origin.
blur Soviet freighters
3. There is notable friction between the Cubmw in
function of
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CENTRAL COMMITTEE OF THE CUBAN COMMUNIST PARTY
First Secretary - Fidel Castro Ruz
Second Secretary - Raul Castro Ruz
Organization Secretary - Armando Hart Davalos
Fidel Castro Ruz
Capt. Jose ABRANTES Fernandez
Maj. Guillermo GARCIA Fria
Lazaro PENA Gonzalez
Raul Castro Ruz
Mai. Rogelio ACEVEDO Gonzalez
Maj. Julio A. GARCIA Olivera
Capt. Antonio PEREZ Herrero
Osvaldo Dorticos Torrado
Maj. Armando ACOSTA Cordaro
Maj. Pedro M. GARCIA Pelaez
Maj. Faustino PEREZ Hernandez
Juan Almeida Basques
Mai, Juan V,. ACUNA Nunez
Raul GARCIA Pelaez
Maj. Walfredo PEREZ Rodriguez
Ramiro Valdes Menendez
Severo AGUIRRE Cristo
Elena GIL Izquierdo
Maj. Manuel PINEIRO Losada
Armando Hart Davalos
Maj. Juan ALMEIDA Basques
Fabio GROBART
Maj. Lizardo PROENZA Sanchez
Guillermo Garica Fria
Maj. Jose M. ALVAREZ Bravo
Maj. Orestes GUERRA Gonzalez
Jose RAMIREZ Cruz
Sergio del Valle Jimenez
Capt. Emilio ARAGONES Navarro
Maj. Raul GUERRA Bermejo
Capt Eliseo REYES Rodriguez
Capt. Jose ARTEAGA Hernandez
Secundino GUERRA Hidalgo
Capt. Jorge RISQUET Valdes
Maj. Flovio BRAVO Pardo
Armando HART Davalos
Raul ROA Garcia
Ramon CALCINES Gordillo
Maj. Joel IGLESIAS Leyva
Bias ROCA Calderio
Mai. Julio E. T. CAMACHO Aguilera
Mai. Omar H. I SER Mojena
Carlos Rafael RODRIGUEZ
Maj. Lino CARRERAS Rodriguez
Maj. Rienerio JIMENEZ Lage
Maj. Orlando RODRIGUEZ Puerto
Mai, Ernesto CASILLAS Palenzuela
Mai, Rolando KINDELAN Bles
Basilio RODRIGUEZ Rodriguez
Maj. Belermino CASTILLA Mas
Jose LLANUSA Gabel
Ursinio ROJAS Santiesteban
Mai, Fidel CASTRO Ruz
Mai, Antonio E. LUSSON Batle
Maj. Antonio SANCHEZ Diaz
Mai. Raul CASTRO Ruz
Manuel LUZARDO Garcia
Celia SANCHEZ Manduley
Mai, Angel Joel CHAVECO Hernandez
Maj. Jose R. MACHADO Ventura
Maj. Aldo SANTAMARIA Cuadrado
Maj. Faure CHOMON Mediavilla
Isidoro MALMIERCA Paoli
Haydee SANTAMARIA Cuadrado de Hart
Capt. Osmani CIENFUEGOS Gorriaran
Juan MARINELLO Videurreta
Maj. Rene de los SANTOS Ponce
Fidel Castro Ruz
Mai. Leopoldo CINTRAS Fria
Miguel MARTIN Perez
Clereentina SERRA Robledo
Raul Castro Ruz
Mai. Abelardo COLOME lbarra
Jose MATAR Frayne
Maj. Jose R. SILVA Berroa
Osvaldo Dorticos Torrado
Maj. Raul CURBELO Morales
Capt. Joaquin MENDEZ Cominches
Lionel SOTO Prieto
Carlos Rafael Rodriguez
Mai. Sergio DEL VALLE Jimenez
Maj. Raul MENDENDEZ Tomassevich
Maj. Eddy SUNOL Ricardo
Bias Roca Calderio
Maj. Manuel DIAZ Gonzalez
Arnaldo MILIAN Castro
Lt. Julio TARRAU Castillo
Faure Chomon Mediavillo
Joel DOMENECH Benitez
Mai. Carlos MIR Marrero
Maj. Diocles TORRALBAS Gonzalez
Osvaldo DORTICOS Torrado
Maj. Pedro MIRET Prieto
Felipe TORRES Trujillo
Mai. Victor E. DREKE Cruz
Maj. Jesus MONTANE Oropesa
Maj. Ramiro VALDES Menendez
Vilma ESPIN Guilloys de Castro
Jose NARANJO Morales
Capt. Anibal VELAZ Suarez
Maj. Manuel E. FAJARDO Sotomayor
Maj. Arnaldo OCHOA Sanchez
Maj. Roberto VIERA Estrada
Marcelo FERNANDEZ Font
Maj. Mario OLIVA Perez
Alfredo YABUR Maluf
Maj. Oscar FERNANDEZ Moll
Maj. Filiberto OLIVERA Maya
Maj. Luis A. ZAYAS Ochoa
Mai. Harold FERRER Martinez
Maj. Ramon PARDO Guerra
Mai? Calixto GARCIA Martinez
FOREIGN AFFAIRS COMMITTEE
Osmani Cienfueges Gorriaran - Chairman
Raul Roo Garcia - Foreign Minister
Manuel Pineiro Losada - Chief of Foreign Intelligence
Jose Mater Frayne - Ambassador to Hungary
Haydee Santameria Cuadrado - Secretary General of the Organizing
Committee of the Latin American Solidarity Organization
Pelegrin Torras - Committee Secretary
Wilfredo Rodriguez
Orlando Fundora
Francisco Valdes
Eugenio Balari
Bias Roca Calderio - Chairman
Alfredo Yabur Maluf - Minister of Justice and Urban Reform
Jose Naranjo Morales - Minister of the Food Industry
Raul Castro Ruz - Chairman
Ramiro Valdes Menendez - Minister of the Interior
Sergio del Valle Jimenez- Vice Minister of the Revolutionary Armed Forces
Armando Hart Davalos - Chairman
Jose Llanusa Gabel - Minister of Education
Lionel Soto Prieto - Director of Schools of Revolutionary Instruction
Mario Rodriguez Martinez
ECONOMIC COMMITTEE
Osvaldo Dorticos Torrado - Chairman
Faure Chomon Mediavilla - Minister of Transportation
Carlos Rafael Rodriguez - Minister without Portfolio
Joel Domenech Benitez - Minister of Basic Industry
Raul Curbelo Morales - Vice President of the National Institute of Agrarian
Reform
LABOR COMMITTEE
Lazaro Pena Gonzalez - Chairman
Miguel Martin Perez - Secretary General of the Cuban Workers Organization
Ursinio Rojas Santiesteban - Finance Secretary of the Cuban Workers
Organization
Justo Guerra -
Conrado Becquer -
Basilio Rodriguez Rodriguez - Ambassador to North Korea
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GUATEMALA: Areas of Guerrilla Activity
13 Nov. 50/100 (Yon Sosa)
FAR 250/300 (Cesar Montes)
?. ? t;nimaitenango
= ' Aaiatenango Antigua
Jatemala City
10N
Cuilapa
CONFIDENTIAL
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VENEZUELA: Areas of Guerrilla Activity
2r caibo .~- ' ~ ~'
~ B`a~ simetp~ f .-~.?~:.
PuertoA'`a~u
Y4
Maturin
Buildup
MARTIN 150
FALN 250/275
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CUBA: SAM Sites and Major Military Airfields
? SAM Site
4 Major Military Airfields
? Major Military Installations
SAM Range
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BOLIVIA: Area of Guerrilla Activity
Approved For Release 2000/06/14: CIA-RDP79T00827A000900110001-6 CONFIDENTIAL
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COLOMB",A: Areas of Guerrilla Activity
f Sincelej
Monteria
"I "Bucaramanga '-A' uc ?
,Vasquez (ELN)
Pasto?
ELN-200/220
FARC-250/300
?
Mocoa
/erva
arulanda San Fell e
Florencia
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