THE TOTAL DISASTER THAT WAS THE BAY OF PIGS

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP83-01022R000100180021-2
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RIFPUB
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K
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1
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December 9, 2016
Document Release Date: 
August 3, 1998
Sequence Number: 
21
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Publication Date: 
April 14, 1963
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NSPR
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JUN.vrtJ Iii'. The ToLea1ThatIAWSo1 By BEM P"tICE and THEODORE A. EDIGER Aaoel.fm peas staf wrier. For the waiting, watchful Cu- ban troops of Prime Minister Fi- del Castro, the sudden appearance of the United States warship In the glare of the Cayo Guano light was the final tipoff. Cayo Guano is at the head of the Bay of Pigs and southeast of Havana. Obviously, the long awaited in- vasion was abort to begin. Cuban alert order in Morse code: 'Tlace yourself on a work status. Urgent " And so the invasion of Cuba at the Bay of Pigs by 1,500 armed opponents of Fidel Castro on April 17, 1961-two years ago next Wednesday-was doomed. The now known facts Indicate that it was a failure from the outset. Assertions of U. S.- Betrayal Bitter survivors of that Ill- fated expedition, claiming be- trayal by the United States. as- sert: A- United States Navy aircraft carrier operating under the code name "Santiago" was within 20 miles of the invasion beach with Jets and propeller driven fighters aboard painted with the blue identifying stripe of the anti- Castro brigade. While some of these airplanes wereairborne during the critical M emb an __ 11 of Castes's militia in action in the Treasure Lagoon zone southeast of Havana an the day of the Bay of Pigs invasion. The photograp h came from Cuban government sources.--AP Photo. assault phase, none attacked. Qualified sources in Washington identify. -this carrier Co the USS Boxer. The Them was ample, though vn- used, gunfire support available among the United States war- ships, within sight of the landing beach. These ships- a cruiser, at least one frigate and several de- stroyers-bad escorted the in- vaders' convoy from Nicaragua to Cuba. Until the landing craft actu- ally started ashore there had been no final selection of a beach- head"area--and no reconnaissance either. Began in May, 1960 Neither the invaders' mission nor. Immediate - objectives had been defined. They just hoped the United States would straighten things out once they got ashore. The whole business began In earnest in May, 1960. It set in motion a train of events the end of which is not yet in sight-and it was costly. . It cost the lives of 81 of the In- vaders, not including four Ameri- can - flyers who piloted two B-26 light bombers, and resulted in the wounding of 60. It cost $45 million to execute, the then chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Lyman Iem- nitser, reportedly told a Senate committee. It cast upwards of $53 million to ransom the Invasion survivors from Cuban Prisons. It has cost $75 million to date to support 200,000 Cuban refuge-s whose homeland is now closed to them because the Invasion failed. It cost thejgentral Intelligence A enc (CIA) which treater- au nded e operation, a consid- erable portion of Its reputation for competence. Our Image Tarnished And It tarnished tin Image of the United States as a Nation of high moral persuasion lr the con- duct of international affairs, coming as It did 'within a year., of the U-2 spy plane affair with the Soviet Union. Just When the Invasion scheme was hatched first is not yet clear, but It apparently began germ]{ nating sometime early in 196(1. shortly after Mr. Castro begs,{~ expropriating United States owned properties in Cuba. By August 24, 1960, Mr. Castro was charging that the CIA was organizing adherents of the for- , mer Cuban dictator. Fulgencio' Batista, In Guatemala for an in- vasion of Cuba. And Mr. Castro was at least'. partially right, for the organ Lion had begun In may ia~-id there were some Batista followers in the group. ' After a series of diplomatic ]in- mutations in which the move- ments of United States Ambassal dor to Cuba Philip Bonsai were restricted to a small a:a of Ha- vana and all but 11 United States Embassy employes ordered to leave, former President Elsent bower severed relations with Cuba on January.4, 1961. The Rumors Roll Out Now reports of military actly4 Wes began flowing out of, the gossipy refugee colony I. Mier with the persistence of truth. . These reports-later confirm -said anti-Castro refugees werel training In Guatemala; Para+ troopers and pilots at the 5,000= foot-long airstrip at Retalhuleuiee Infantry at Trax; la Finqulta an Gerrapatinartso. During January, 1961, un marked planes began makln ~i nt h ill hW f to OP s. a., u~ they were carrying volunteers tp Guatemala. And it was In January that foul members of the Alabama National Guard, all former pilots. of the World War II light bomber, the B-26, were recruited. - These men were paid $2,250 a month each, plus $200 monthly for expenses, so their survivors reported. In all, apparently. about 21 pilots were hired to train Cubans. Gov. Orval Faubus of Arkansas disclosed just this year that most came out of his State's Air Na- tional Guard. when he left office January 20. 1961, no firmplan for 'the em- ployment of the - refugee Cuban force bad been determined-. Castro Knew It. Was Coming nits fact goes to the heart of the milion, what the invaders were supposed to accomplish and how. Guerillas would need neither air cover nor tanks, trucks nor Jeeps. Regular troops for a stand- up battle with Mr Castro would. The Man Who Hired Pilots Throughout the training pe- riod, Mr. CaassWtpoo s radios were The Alabama flyers were hired trumpeting ehalTos of an Im- by a man who identified himself pending Invasion, Mr. Castor even as Al.. E. Carlson of the Double had motion pictures of the refu- Check Corp., of 1045 Curtis park- gm in trebling- way, Miami Springs, Fla. By now it was. Apra, 1961, and Double Click was formed May the preliminaries began. 12, 1959, by Mr. Carlson with a On April 2, bombs exploded in capital of $500 to engage in a the Cuban Army'rs magazine pnb- wide variety of business activities. Dishing plant and In a pt After the invasion Mr. Carlson eminent-owned soft-drink Plant. said be was simply acting has an - April 5: Fire destroyed a sugar employment agency for an ern- warehouse.. - identified Latin - American con- April -7: Dr. Jose Miro Car- cern. dons, head of the Cuban Revo- .While the United States pilots lutionary Council'- in Miami, pre- were taking their Cuban coon- dieted a Cuban uprising. - - terparts in tow, the Infantry was April 8: A?large water main was being trained under the over-all blown no and sections of Havana tage operations none was directed toward military objectives-roads, bridges, fuel and ammunition dumps, airfields' or motorized equipment. On April 15, three rocket-firing B-26s struck at three Cuban air bases, two just outside Havana and the third at Santiago de Cuba. The planes were to have knocked out Castro's air force, consisting of United States-made T-33 Jet trainers. British Seafuries and B-26 bombers. They failed, but there was no followup Jr astrike on April st- and no news either. Now it was April 17. All day Havana Radio played soothing music, interspersed with soap operas and a lecture on -how young lovers should behave. From time to time, however, the programs were Interrupted by ur- gent orders for all militia to re- port to their duty stations. Radio Silent on Invasion Throughout April 18 Havana Radio was exasperatingly silent on the subject of the invasion though the previous night it had appealed for blood donors. direction of a man Identified by were left waterless for 48 hours. Diplomats and correspondents the refugees as a Fllipind who April 10: Mr. Castro abruptly from Iron Curtain countries re- went by the name of Col. Vallejo. clamped a. radio, blackout on all ported on April 19 that Cubs, had There were American officers, invasion scare talk. - been attacked - by planes and too, men known by the cover April 12: A bomb exploded in troop-carrying ships. - names of ',Frank," "Jimmie" and the lfavana railway station, in- Late that same day. Havana Ra- ?Charles." luring no one. 'dlo said Mr. Castro had reported From May. 1960, to November. April 13: Fire destroyed a' pa- an invasion attempt an : was now the anti-Castro Cubans were given per warehouse and. a department mopping up survivors. This was sue-training. In No- store. - : - followed, by the grim announce- vember the training was shifted April' 13: Mr. Castro concen- ment, that two Americans and to straight World War II Infantry trated 45,000 heavily armed troops seven Cubans had been executed r ShAltK r~.~Ei2 ypl7sadlt Shc nd^^, ~ ZI[ a, rdeld Ir.Suce v manta Mr. Eisenhower said that when, and (2) In all the sabo- of harboring the slightest anti- as14 I?aW11 Old! sentiments. in Havana nine 200.000'were rounded staffed Into any place with round It.. . What had happened? On iprll 10-11, tl. brigade had sailed, fr-~ Puerto Cabanas - on GreatCorn Island,- Nicaragua, -a tiny,; rt to which they' had been f from Guatemala could not assert truthltlgy that-the lavaston bad not b staged from her roll. . -Dag berto Darlas- 40 once weattiiy Cuban businescren and . a' ?ufree expert, was chief - officer of Ii Rio Escondido; one of the shIp6' n the Invasion' forcg. :In an interview in M1amI, Mr. Darlas said:;? "Wi left . Puerto. Cabezas on April )i2; Five Liberty-type trans- portrTeraels,..the Rio Eseeandido, Atlm (ar)be, Houston and Lake,. banes. The Lake Charles was tbe'Operation 40' (code name far the command ship) ship. It remained behind and was to land latetfor map-UP operations. -Two Small Boats "Aboard the transports were two small boats, the Blagar with 14 machine guns and the Barbara J. with nine. Thane were small converted coasters. "Seven landing craft were pres- ent for the invasion-three LCU's (landing craft, utility) and four LCVP's (landing craft, vehicle- personnel). Also 30 outhoard mo- tor communication launches, six aboard each (liberty) ship. Also five tanks. "The landing craft with the- tanks aboard were escorted to a point new the Cuban coast by an American-type ship. I only saw Its silhouette. That was the eve- ning of April 16. "We. could are the lights of Cayo Guano. There, at what was called our convoy Point, an Ameri- can cruiser was visible in the tower light. "Why that spot in front of the tower was selected for the cruiser, I don' know. Nor do I know why the general site was selected for the invasion. "It was not until about four In the mhening that a landing place was fot;od. It was difficult for there was a violent sea. . Enem1 Prepared "But by the time the small landing beach was decided upon, the enemy had time to get ready for us. I don't know why the spot =wasn't selected beforehand. "The Houston went in first. It wasr"bceived by artillery fire di- rected from the Bay of Pigs air- fieid:}..if'bere was a cross fire which was marvelous... . (The Houston with the com- municptions gear aboard was damaged and beached.) Whcn dlsembariaton be- gan l was under an aerial battle between our planes and Fidel's. 'Then Sesfuries hit the wooden bridgq' of the Rio Escondido. Our ship 'blew up and sank in five minutes . . . we swam to the Biggar. On April 18 we received a ra- dlograln from the American air- craft carrier 'Santiago telling us that at 2:30 p.m. that day we would: get air support from six p-51 planes (World War II fight- ers).... "At' 2:30 we saw two planes crosr,,A minute later two others we had been the victims of a. great betrayal.. "We had 16 plane... It took three hours to fly from them Puerto Cabezas. They would fight for about three 'quarters of an hour and than fly back. for sup- Plies. Then they would come .. It was moat gnrelling. I hback:ad' friend, Joaquin Varela, who went 46 hours without sleep.. ... Paratroopers Take Airstrip "On April 19 when the Cuban pilots were played out, four Amer- icans stepped In to relieve some of them. The Americans in two B-263 were the ones from Ala- bama who were shot down. They As for the paratroopers, there were 185 of them, Mr. Darlas said. and they captured the Bay of Pigs airstrip, but couldn't bold It be-, cause of strafing from Mr. Cas- tro's aircraft Were the Cuban invaders ever promised air cover? Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, brother to the President. said in a magazine interview this year-. that at no time had the United States over promised military air. support. Thhee key work Is "military," that Is, uniformed pilots In United States marked planes. Dr. Enrique Linea, one of those captured and ransomed, said: "We were told there would be air cover. Not officially. But It might as well have been 'official. We all knew the United States had a hand in the matter. We were transported to the training, area In United States Planes. We were trained by Americans. Our, weapons and planes were Ameri- can. What else could our con- clusion be? We are not morons. No one wanted to commit sui- cide.' Straight-Ahead Attack The invading troops were landed on Giron Beach, which Is approached by land via a single road, flanked on both sides by impassable - marshes and man- grove swamps. There was only one way to attack and that was straight ahead Into Mr. Castro's 45,000 men. By the morning of the 19th, the men were giving up the hope- less fight. They were out of am-- munition and W. Castro's planes dominated the air. Of the 16 planes in anti-Castro operation, eight were shot down and the remainder arrived back in Nicaragua full of holes. Mr. Llaca reported that the In- vaders managed only to progress from the beachhead to a road Junction designated as "Central Australia." This was 10 to 12 -miles inland. That was that. It was a total disaster. . On April 24, White House Press secretary Plerm Salinger read Washington newsmen a state- ment, in which President Kennedy accepted "... full responsibility for the events of the past few days.' ' On June 28, 1961. Mr. Kennedy told a news conference he was considering changes in the Intel- ligence setup, Some revisions were later made though how ex- tensive they were Is unknown. Since the invasion. the top echelon 0f the CIA at the time has retired: Allen Dulles. direc- tor; Au Force Gen. C. P. Cabell deputy direc r, an car M. Bissell, jr., deputy [ or pans. ~ I ately -717-was a gradual process spread 4IF~. s re- over a ear. ere was o n .. ms we ~ tYW"e t a err departure had an - the o ers in owed. "From that moment we knew the war was lost for us and that thing do with f Pn s rsas r. M g