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Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP89G01321R000700360012-4
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
7
Document Creation Date: 
December 23, 2016
Document Release Date: 
August 28, 2012
Sequence Number: 
12
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
March 25, 1988
Content Type: 
MISC
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PDF icon CIA-RDP89G01321R000700360012-4.pdf529.33 KB
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STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/28 CIA-RDP89GO1321 R000700360012-4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/28 CIA-RDP89GO1321 R000700360012-4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/28: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000700360012-4 STAT The Washington Post G -s The New York Times The Washington Times The Wall Street Journal The Christian Science Monitor New York Daily News USA Today The Chicago Tribune Date JACK ANDERSON and DALE VAN ATTA CIA, Cubans in Looking-Glass War .rr A quiet war of tit-for-tat has been waged for nine months between the Central Intelligence Agency and the Cuban intelligence service, ever since Fidel Castro learned that one of his top spies had defected to the United States. Last June 6, the most important Cuban agent ever to cross over to the CIA took a car from the Cuban Embassy in Czechoslovakia and drove to Vienna, where he surrendered to U.S. diplomats. He was Maj. Florentino Aspillaga Lombard, 40, who had worked in Cuban intelligence since he was 15. Our intelligence sources say Castro "went bonkers" when he heard that Aspillaga had defected. But CIA officials also had a reason to go bonkers. As we reported recently, Aspillaga brought with him the news that the CIA had been badly outfoxed by Cuba for more two decades. According to the defector, nearly every spy recruited by the CIA in Cuba since the Bay of Pigs invasion had been a double agent working for Castro. With Aspillaga in U.S. hands, Castro decided to one-up the CIA before it could use the defector's information. On July 13, a Cuban newspaper printed the names and pictures of U.S. officials it claimed were CIA agents operating out of our diplomatic office there, a U.S. interest section in the Swiss Embassy in Havana. U.S. officials, angry over the slap at their diplomats, retaliated on July 16 by expelling two Cuban officials from their diplomatic office here, a Cuban interest section. Castro wasn't finished. He knew that Aspillaga knew about the double agents and the false information those agents had fed the CIA over the years. So he published stories of a half-dozen "heroic" Cuban double agents whom he had planted in the CIA. The most serious aspect of this underground spy war is that Aspillaga can reveal the names of 350 Cuban agents abroad. Castro knows that and has called some of those agents back home rather than risk their exposure. But to pull them all back would paralyze Cuban intelligence operations for years. The CIA has picked up important information from Aspillaga about the hierarchy of the General Directorate of Intelligence (DGI). He says it is still under the control of the Ministry of the Interior. Department ML of the DGI, headed by Col. Ramon Oroza, is the most important, employing about 70 percent of DGI case officers and gathering political intelligence abroad. Department MZ, headed by Lt. Col. Enrique Miguel Cicard, is one of the most secret because it is responsible for recruiting spies in foreign countries. Department MG recruits agents in Cuba, attempting to "turn" foreign diplomats, businessmen and ships' captains visiting Havana. Department MQ is the counterintelligence division, with the job of stopping the CIA from penetrating the DGI. Department MLL provides the technical gadgetry for the agents. Page I. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/28: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000700360012-4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/28: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000700360012-4 STAT The New York Times The Washington Times The Wall Street Journal The Christian Science Monitor New York Daily News USA Today The Chicago Tribune Date ?' JACK ANDERSON and-DALE VAN ATfA Cuban Defector Impeaches CIA Spies T he Central Intelligence Agency has been keeping under wraps an embarrassing Cuban spy who defected to the United States last June. The reason is simple. The spy, Maj. Florentino Aspillaga Lombard, has told the CIA during intensive debriefings that nearly every spy the CIA has recruited in Cuba since the early 1960s has been a double agent, loyal to dictator Fidel Castro. Aspillaga headed the Cuban General Directorate of Intelligence (DGI) staff in their Czechoslovakian embassy. He left his office in an embassy car on June 6, drove across the border to Austria and turned himself over to U.S. diplomats in Vienna. The U.S. government often trots defectors around like prizes, but it was weeks before word of Aspillaga's defection leaked out. And when he was finally produced in public, it was not to a battery of journalists, but to the tame questioning of an official arm of the U.S. government: Radio Marti, the station that Voice of America beams to Cuba. What he had to say in those programs was fascinating, but fluff. The best part was unspoken. He charged that the Castro regime is corrupt. He claimed Castro has a $4.2 million Swiss bank account, that his four children live in luxury in Moscow, and that Castro has lavish homes in Cuba's 14 provinces, yachts, and so on. In a time of housing shortages, Aspillaga said "hundreds of houses" were confiscated for use by Castro's security guards and aides in Havana. The most important scoop from Aspillaga was not for public consumption. In top-secret debriefings, he has described in embarrassing detail the Cuban penetration of the CIA's anti-Castro operations. Aspillaga has spilled enough names and dates that CIA sources know he is telling the truth.when he says that most of their agents were loyal to Castro from the beginning or were later turned by the DGL He maintains this has been the case since the Bay of Pigs fiasco in 1961. Fabricated information from those double agents was eaten up by the CIA and passed on to Presidents Reagan, Carter and Ford, according to our CIA sources. The CIA now must reevaluate its view of Castro to separate truth from fiction. By contrast, another Cuban spy who defected nine days before Aspillaga had the red carpet rolled out. Gen. Rafael del Pino was allowed to speak at length in public about Cuba's involvement in Angola, revealing that 10,000 Cubans had either died or disappeared in that country. Del Pino said Cuba had sent 40,000 troops to -Angola to reduce unemployment, to punish insubordinate and inferior officers, and to pay back debts to the Soviets. Aspillaga's spicy stories about corruption and high living in the Castro regime are golden propaganda, too, but if the CIA makes a big deal out of his revelations, that will give credibility to Aspillaga's more important news that the CIA was lead around by the nose by Castro for at least two decades. Page 23. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/28: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000700360012-4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/28: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000700360012-4 .. -mviun POST The New York Times The Washington Times The Wall Street Journal The Christian Science Monitor New York Daily News USA Today The Chicago Tribune STAT 'RICH VA New s - 4ead- e --c Date /Q RA Pleased to Oblige Florentino Aspillaga, 40, fled the Cuban intelligence service last year after a quarter-century of service, mak- ing his way from his post in Czechoslo- vakia into Austria. Doubt came to Aspillaga during service in Angola a decade earlier. He told The Washing- ton Post: 'I saw how our people were dying. I wondered, Are we defending Cuba? What are we defending?' " Once in the United States, he talked to the CIA - and the press. Aspillaga told a by-now-familiar tale about - the relationship between Fidel Castro and Manuel Noriega, the Panamanian hombre the Reagan ad- ministration has struggled so pitifully to depose. Apparently Noriega is no Communist. Instead, his "ideology" is making money. Cuba and the Soviet Union have cash, but need U.S. tech- nology, such as computers. Noriega can help. Panama's laws make it easy for Cubans (1) to organize dummy companies with no apparent ties to their nation, (2) to order equip- ment, (3) to trans-ship it to Cuba or the Soviet Union, and then (4) to fold the companies. In much the same way arms from the United States and other Western countries flow through Pana- ma to Leninist guerrillas across Latin America. Among other Aspillaga revelations: ? Many Cubans recruited by the CIA remain loyal to their country and wocfc as double agents. Aspillaga spent about about a dozen years as boss of such agents. ? Cuban spies work for the Soviets in the United States. According to Aspillaga, most diplomats assigned ei- ther to the Cuban interests section in Washington or to the Cuban UN mis- sion are not diplomats but spies. Aspillaga covers territory that has become abjectly familiar. Castro and Noriega - and the victorious Sandi- nistas, and the Democratic Congress - have created for the Reagan admin- istration a horror that will-haunt future Presidents. The Reagan administration is dying of a thousand cuts - some inflicted with relative honor by avowed enemies; some by supposed friends. Now, at this late hour, it can do little except stand idly by. Acquiring the technology the Sovi- ets so desperately seek remains a valu- able by-product of American impo- tence. Castro and Noriega are pleased to oblige. Page 3 7? Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/28: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000700360012-4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/28: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000700360012-4 Defie* is "solid catch,' agencies say Envoy describes Castropxo' He-dd Scoff WPNev . - r-- nl; ' - `, U.S.Inteffig `f It go Lombal'd: `.'6d a "solid catch" with. eX knowledge about Cuba -t teN- gence operations in the 'United States and around the world. ? officials familiar with U.S. intelli- gence information said Tuesday. "He is a real solid catch." said one of the sources familiar with recent CIA, FBI and State Depart- The Miami Herald ment assessments of the 40-year- Wednesday. September 23. 1987 old Azpillaga, who defected June 6 by driving across the border into Austria from Czechoslovakia, where he was based. "We've been told that his infor- mation is first class," said a congressional official who had been briefed recently by CIA counterintelligence officers. In an interview broadcast late Monday by the U.S. government's Radio Marti, Azpillaga asserted that President Fidel Castro, ignor- ing the pleas of his Foreign Ministry, has packed the Cuban mission in Washington with Intel- ligence agents while shutting out career diplomats. Azpillaga said Castro has made the Cuban Interests Section a centerpiece of his vast spy recruit- ment network in the United States - a move that has made the Foreign Ministry "jealous." -When Vice President Carlos Rafael Rodriguez suggested plac- ing a diplomat at the mission, Castro warned subordinates to "stop pestering him with this," Azpillaga said. "This brought cer- tain friction." Azpillaga described for Radio Marti a spy recruitment effort in the United States that has spread to university campuses and Cuban exile groups, trying to win the favor of U.S. journalists, scholars and others. Azpillaga has not been made available to the U.S. press, and neither the White House nor the State Department made any com- ment about the defector or his allegations. A spokesman for the Cuban Interests Section denounced Azpil- laga's charges as "totally false" and said the mission's activities // / , we -2) Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/28: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000700360012-4 Declassified in Part -Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/28: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000700360012-4 00 ~+?CJ-yr:p~7 yU17% vhf .-.Go ~ ~Q l008 10 w co 0. a %.? t/Jr~iow 0 CC y~ Q 03?s~, in,'~"a, BvCa~~i`~ N ?^' .d V ^l h ?4 OOvi -4 d a? t ni .Y .4 e- M - 6w 1: m oo c~a.3C7~ ~.~e-0i `' - g w .0 -5 o ^ 3 A e. a) ?i ce. c ayi y?. Min -S a ... V1 0 C: 20 -0 0 12 h..~afa~a~a~ a~yw ye ~~-?O.SE 0W30.2~. gf~ a>cv3.S~ co ~b > ti cyv~ 3 wi as :25g Ow , 20 x`'o~ Aac` [ =U-0.5 3 0' catl co a 'Dn W S ~ CL -5 b U ?m qgw ~~ & r. S C 5 d V8~ 4 a) sue.. y 4 a~wcv3.?`~N.5C1cv NOQ ~a~ ycS ~ x Q' 4 y p ` S ? . ~ 4. ~ H O y ? ap ' & z. Q 3 ? v as 3~ 9 o.~~ a> ,Soo~j H y to 00 to 08-. cc '0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/28: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000700360012-4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/28: CIA-RDP89GO1321 ROOO7OO36OO12-4 `solid catch' for U.S. Nino Pimentel: Cuban efforts 'obvious.' Ex-newsman: Cuba tried to recruit me By JAY DUCASSI Herald Stall Writer Cuban authorities never ap- proached Nirso Pimentel directly with a request that he work for the Castro government. but their Intent to recruit him was "obvi- ous." the former Miami TV news director said Tuesday. Pimentel. 52, now a spokesman for Metro-Dade's Transit Agency. found himself a celebrity of sorts Tuesday when a Radio Marti broadcast said he was one of the targets Cuban intelligence has sought to recruit. "f realized what their Intentions were." Pimentel said Tuesday. As news director of WLTV- Channel 23, Pimentel flew to Cuba in 1978 to cover the dialogue that Fidel Castro sought to establish with Miami's Cuban exiles. During the flight from Jamaica to Havana. Pimentel said. he was approached by a Cuban official named Virgilio Lora. . "He started talking about the beauties of Cuba. and I thought to myself. 'I don't want to talk to this guy,' " Pimentel remembered. Lora was "very interested" in details about Channel 23. at the time Miami's only Spanish-lan- guage TV station, Pimentel said. Pimentel said he thought any direct effort to recruit nim would come after he had accepted "gifts and favors" from the government. So. he said. he never accepted anything. Then, sometime in 1985. Lora dropped in for a surprise visit - at Pimentel's Southwest Dade home. At the time, Pimentel was working as a radio reporter. Pimentel said he declined an invitation to have dinner with Lora. and the consular officer left. In July. the State Department ordered Lora and another Cuban diplomat to leave the country. Pimentel said there was never any direct approach by Cuban officials to give him money in exchange for Information or for doing stories favorable to the Castro government. "I would never have allowed It." he said. "But everything was very obvious." DIPLOMAT/from IA are "totally legal." "We are not involved In any activity w4tddf at.our~aormal diplomatic Prxction&" the spokesman said?"adding that Azpillaga "Is trying to sell himself hiRQRrlW:,it Paying kf wo a Information about covert Cebu operations In the United Stat" and else en. 1. Theo said thabiil- lags had been a major In the Cuban counterintelligence ser` vice and served as chief of intelligence services In Czecho- slovakia, with a base at the Cuban Embassy in the capital, Prague. Other administration and congressional. officials said that at one time in Havana, Azpilla. ga had been head or a member of the so-called American tar- gets unit of the Cuban General Intelligence Directorate (DGI). The unit directs efforts to spy on the U.S. Interests Section In Havana. European spymaster? The congressional official briefed by U.S. intelligence officials said Azpillaga also might have run Cuban agents based In Western Europe from Czechoslovakia. The official said the Czecho- slovak city of Bratislava. just 35 miles from Vienna. the Austrian capital. is considered to be a base for officers who direct agents operating in Western Europe and, sometimes, the United States. From Bratislava, the source said. Soviet bloc case. officers visit Austria to meet with agents. pass instructions to them and receive information from them. A source close to the Cuban government said Azpillaga had been based in Bratislava but only as a low-level consular official who "took care of the consular needs" of Cuban stu- dents in the area. With a population of 281.000. Bratislava is an important oil. chemical and textile center in Czechoslovakia where young Cubans often are trained in industrial activities. U.S. offi- cials said. The officials said that Azpil- laga also served in Prague. In his earlier interviews with Radio Marti. Azpillaga said he had run Cuban agents in several countries and that he. was prepared to identify for U.S. officials the names of 350 Cuban agents in a number of countries, including the United States. The Cuban also said that he had' participated In at least 55 counterintelligence operations against the CIA. working with double agents, had worked as chief of Cuban radio counterin- telligence and had served in Angola for a year. On Radio Marti Monday. Azpillaga said that Cuban Intel- Ilgence officers did mecb. os their recruiting through such organization as Arelto, a mag- azine sympathetic to, Castro iL artists to. Cuba. (The center is not'related to Mlanti's Institute for Cuban Studies.) The claims were hotly denied by Andrea Gomez, the editor of Areito. "I do not know the reasons why this person who says he is a major in Cuban intelligence is saying these things," he said. "Everything we have done throughout these years is legal. I'm sure if it had not been legal. the U.S. Intelligence service would have acted a long time ago. "This is for political con- sumption in Miami. No one else would believe this except peo- ple in Miami. Two months ago he would have been regarded as a criminal by most people in the Cuban community and the ad- ministration. Now everything he says is believed as the absolute truth." Shortly after Azpillaga began airing his allegations through Radio Marti, U.S. Intelligence sources told reporters in Wash- ingtdn that Azpillaga had told them that a number of Cuban government officials the CIA believed were working for the United States were in reality Cuban agents who had fed misleading information to the CIA. 'More like a cop' But one former U.S. counter- intelligence expert warned that Azpillaga could be misleading U.S. officials. The expert, who once held a high level U.S. intelligence position, said he did not believe Azpillaga's activi- ties denoted a high-ranking Cuban intelligence officer. but more likely a security specialist in charge of ensuring the safety of Cuban diplomats and other Cuban personnel in Czecho- slovakia. "He sounds more like a cop to me than a major counterintelli- gence agent," the expert said. The expert compared Azpilla- ga to Anatoly Golitsyn, a fa- mous Soviet defector who showed up at the home of the CIA station chief in Helsinki, Finland, on Dec. 22. 1961. Golitsyn was later accused of having been a disinformation agent of the KGB because he made often unsubstantiated al- legations that the CIA and other Western intelligence services were riddled with Soviet moles. Staff writers Lourdes Meluzo in Miami and R.A. Zaldivar in Washington contributed to this report. WlkIcw.. ocg erlesnt f1- Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/28: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000700360012-4