CUBAN-BACKED FRONTS EVADE U.S. EMBARGO
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP90-00552R000404590002-9
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
1
Document Creation Date:
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date:
June 21, 2010
Sequence Number:
2
Case Number:
Publication Date:
May 23, 1986
Content Type:
OPEN SOURCE
File:
Attachment | Size |
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CIA-RDP90-00552R000404590002-9.pdf | 83.24 KB |
Body:
Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/06/21 :CIA-RDP90-005528000404590002-9
WASHINGTON TIMES
23 "lay 1986
Cuban-backed fronts ~
evade U.S. embargo
By Roger Fontaine
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
An international network of co -
porattons secret owne b Cuba
routinely eva es t e U.S. embargo
an fives the Castro re ime access
o a nee a tec no o m tca
e m ment ~~an mencan-ma e
share parts, U. tote tgence
so~urce~s sa .. '
many as 130 such fronts also
provide cover for Havana's covert
operations, including the purchase
and transportation of arms to Latin
American insurgents, the sources
told The Washington Times.
Much of the business conducted
by the Cuban companies is legiti-
mate, but their hidden ownership
gives them far more leeway than
Cuba's state trading corporation to
skirt a U.S. embargo on strategic
goods. Embargos were imposed by
the Eisenhower and Kennedy admin-
istrations in the early 1960s and sub-
sequently, in 1982, were tightened by
the Reagan administration.
The Cuban companies operate in
11 Latin American and three Afri-
can countries as well as in Canada,
Japan and much of Western Europe.
But the Cubans have concentrated
their greatest effort in Panama,
where more than 60 Cuban-backed
individuals and firms are operating,
according to the Treasury Depart-
ment. The department's Office of
Foreign Assets Control says, how-
ever, that their recent list -April 1,
1986 - is not complete.
The 60 Cuban-related companies
operating in Panama is, by far, in
excess of those in any other country,
according to the Treasury Depart-
ment list. The next largest number,
five, are in Spain.
One front, CIMEX, has operated
for years in Panama. A CIMEX sub-
sidiary, Servinaves, is said to be 49
percent owned by the chief of Pana-
ma's armed forces, Gen. Manuel
~ Antonio Noriega. ~ rvinav .c hac
used ports and airfields in Panama
for transshipments of arms to Latin
Ruerrillas, accordin? to the i_nteLli-
gence sources.
About 20 of the front companies
have been involved in arms pur-
chases on the so-called "gray mar-
ket;' which provides Havana with a
variety of untraceable weapons that
are then handed over to Latin
America's many guerrilla groups.
Intelligence sources say $I1 mil-
lionworth of arms are known to have
een u tun er Cuban au ices
tp t is manner since 1979 t
stress t at t is is a conservative es-
imate.
purchases consist largely of
small arms and ammunition, but
equipment to manufacture weapons
also has been included.
Spain is a principal. supplier of
gray market arms to Cuba, but
France and West Germany also have
dealt with Cuban front companies.
Smaller purchases have been made
in Belgium and other Western Euro-
pean countries.
~anama~ntan-based o anies
are eav~i-i`I invol ev d in the arms tra -
tc. . tote t ence sources sus ct
tat rena a aunc er ammu-
nttton was pure - ased alone with a
supp y o su machine guns last year.
In late December, the Colombian
army captured more than 50 of these
9mm machine guns that apparently
were purchased from the Interna-
tional Transport Corp., whose head-
quarters is in Panama. The auto-
matic weapons were identical to 200
others that were confiscated by
Costa Rican authorities six months
earlier, sources say.
an-owned com anies also
provide cover for the oretgn oiler-~
ations of Cuba's intelligence ser-
vices es eciall the Americas De-
nartment_ w tc is un er t e rest
control of the Cuban Communist
Party The Americas Dgpartment is
primarily responsible for covert op-
erations inthe Western Hemisphere. _
Besides arms, the front compan-
ies have placed a high priority on
obtaining Western computers and
badly needed communications tech-
nology.
Canada is a favorite place to pur-
chase U.S. equipment because of the
availability and variety of
American-made goods there. Re-
cent purchases included jamming
equipment that U.S. analysts believe
may be used against Radio Marti.
Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/06/21 :CIA-RDP90-005528000404590002-9