A CUBAN DEFECTOR'S TALE

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000100170084-4
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
December 28, 2011
Sequence Number: 
84
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
June 1, 1980
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00965R000100170084-4.pdf115.55 KB
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S1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/28: CIA-RDP90-00965R000100170084-4 A:it(;LE A~i'r.ir?I) oPl FAG _ THE WASHINGTON POST 1 June 1980 ,jack: Anderson A Cuban Defector's Vale l~ There is disturbing evidence that the Soviets, encouraged by Jimmy Carter's tepid leadership, may be preparing another Cuban missile crisis :.' for the United States. The appearance of Soviet missiles in Cuba in 1962 brought a nuclear showdown between Nikita.1 Khrushchev and -John F. Kennedy. Kennedy faced down Khrushchev, who never recovered from the loss of face. Now with Carter in the- White House, the Kremlin czars apparently think they can win a new Cuban confrontation. Last year, . American intelligence experts, after painstakingly putting together- bits and pieces of evidence, informed the White House that there was a Soviet combat brigade in Cuba. - President Carter, with his eye on public o ion polls showing that he was regarded as a weak, ineffectual leader rushed off half-cocked- and announced with chest-thumping bravado;: that the presence of 2,600, Russian troops in Cuba was "unacceptable." - The Kremlin disdainfully dismissed Carter's saber-rattling as empty rhetoric, and when the Soviet combat brigade suddenly became "ac ceptable," Soviet strategists were confirmed in- their suspicion that Carter,was no tiger, but a pussycat. The president's humiliation over the Soviet bri- gade issue was lost sight of by the American pub- lie within a matter of weeks, swallowed up in the greater crisis over the hostage seizure in Iran. Now, less than a year after the combat brigade fiasco, U.S. intelligence analysts have compiled evidence that the Soviets are secretly developing: a nuclear capability in Cuba-may, in, fact,. al- ready have introduced nuclear. weapons into their satellite outpost 90 miles from Florida: The reason the American public has not heard of this ominous development is that the men in the intelligence agencies fear the disclo- sure would touch off another international crisis-one that Carter is ill-equipped to handle. There is, of course, the possibility that the evi- dence is misleading. But the Accumulation of data from various sources points to a "worst- case" projection that the Russians are'indeed?l creating a nuclear arsenal in. Cuba-and worst case scenarios are the only safe ones to assume when dealing with the Kremlin. - One of the most disturbing developments was reported by a high-level Cuban defect- or, who until recently.- .was 'being trained by the Russians to command a SAM2 (surface-to- air-missile)- site. He told his intelligence de- briefers that. the Soviets have modified their Cuban missiles by adding three booster rocket, motors that increase their range threefold. Intelligence sources told my associate Dale I Van Atta the Cuban defector had been in- formed that the purpose of the SAM2 modifica- tion was to give it a surface-to-surface capabil. ity. In other words, it can now be used for at- 1 tack as well as defense. The defector reported that the modified SAiM2s in Cuba can reach tar- gets in Florida. What alarmed the intelligence experts even more was the defector's report that he was told the new. missiles' twin warheads were "very powerful" and required. Soviet personnel to ac tivate them. He was told the warheads are so 1 powerful, in fact, that they were to be deto- nated only at maximum range. The defector assumed from these hints that the missile warheads were nuclear. What he didn't know was that the Soviets had tested nuclear war- heads of up to 25 kilotons on SAMMl2s as long ago as 1961, and that there are. SAM2s deployed in the Soviet Union that are nuclear-armed. Intelligence sources also noted that the Rus- sians routinely describe their nuclear weapons as simply "immensely powerful" to disguise their nuclear reality from the troops who han- them. So the defector's reports add up to the dle distinct possibility that Soviet nuclear missiles are in position in Cuba at this very moment Another recent development adds to the over- all picture. In 1978, President Carter expressed concern at the appearance of 20-odd Soviet INIiG23s in Cuba. But intelligence experts deter- mined that they were i`oZ,u an defense only. , What the American public was never told was that the Russians can rewire a MiG23 to carry nu- clear weapons in approximately two days. Fur- thermore, the Soviets have constructed about 501 hardened shelters for the MiGs in Cuba-an unu- ! sual precaution for a- climate as mild as Cuba's. Analysts suggest that the strong shelters are in. tended to protect the MiG force from surveillance. and/or attack by U.S. aircraft and missiles. Perhaps the most alarming. evidence of Soviet; military preparations in Cuba is the construe- tion that has been taking place at Matanzas, not far from Havana. Initially; the activity around Matanzas was nearly dismissed as "suburban construction." Butit now appears that what the Soviets are building there is indeed an under- 'I ground bunker and/or silo for surface-to-air + missiles. With the known nuclear capability of ! Soviet SAM2s, and the threefold increase in the i missiles' range reported,by the_Cuban defector, I this adds up.to another Cuban missile crisis.. ! . Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/28: CIA-RDP90-00965R000100170084-4