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Cuba a State Sponsor
of Terrorism?
By Wayne S. Smith

The State Department's just-issued report on
state sponsors of terrorism offers nothing new. In the case of Cuba,
it simply repeats the same tired old charges without offering any
specific evidence. It states, for example, that "Cuba continued to
actively oppose the U.S.-led coalition prosecuting the global war on
terrorism."
How oppose? Cuba offered to sign agreements with the U.S. for joint
actions against terrorism. The U.S. ignored the offer. If the State
Department means that Cuba is opposed to the war in Iraq, that is
true. But so are half of the American people and the majority of
other governments in the world. To oppose the war in Iraq begun by
the US government on the basis of outright misrepresentations does
not suggest that one is a terrorist or sponsor of terrorism!
Displaying real chutzpah, the report goes on to say that: "The Cuban
Government claims, despite the absence of evidence, that it is a
principal victim of terrorism sponsored by Cuban-Americans in the
United States."
Lack of evidence?! There was abundant evidence that Orlando Bosch
and Luis Posada Carriles masterminded the bombing of the Cubana
airliner back in 1976 resulting in the loss of 73 innocent lives,
including a young Cuban fencing team. Orlando Bosch now lives a free
man in Miami, having been pardoned by President George H.W. Bush
against the advice of his Justice Department, and Luis Posada
Carriles has just come back to Miami to ask for asylum, after having
been pardoned from prison by the outgoing President of Panama. (He
and three other Cuban exiles were in prison there as the result of
charges related to the accusation that they were in Panama to
assassinate President Fidel Castro, there for an international
meeting.)
There is also evidence, some of it in the form of a 1998 interview
that Posada Carriles gave to Annie Bardach in The New York Times,
that he was directing a bombing campaign against tourist hotels in
Havana, a campaign that in 1997 resulted in the death of an Italian
tourist and the wounding of several innocent people.
And this is but the tip of the iceberg. There is voluminous evidence
of Cuban exile terrorist acts against Cuba. Most of the perpetrators
are living openly and freely in Miami, their actions seemingly
condoned by the US Government. Indeed, if one looks closely at the
matter of exile terrorism against Cuba, the US Government itself may
be seen as a "state sponsor of terrorism." And if it allows Luis
Posada Carriles to remain in the US, there will be new evidence to
that effect.
The report then charges that in 2004, "Cuba continued to provide
limited support to designated Foreign Terrorist Organizations, as
well as a safe haven for terrorists."
In fact, however, the report only mentions Basque members of ETA who
continue to reside in Cuba and members of the Colombian groups FARC
and ELN, to whom Cuba, according to the report, provides sanctuary
and some degree of support. If there were other terrorist
organizations enjoying sanctuary and support in Cuba, we can be sure
the State Department would have mentioned them. Hence, we must
assume that ETA, FARC and the ELN represent the Department's entire
case.
And even here, the evidence is unconvincing. The report mentions a
request from the Aznar government in November of 2003 not to give
them sanctuary, but when I discussed the matter with the Spanish
embassies in Washington and Havana last year, I was told that the
Spanish government had no concerns about ETA members residing in
Cuba. They are there as the result of earlier agreements. Spain has
no evidence that any are involved in terrorist activities and
regards the question of their presence in Cuba as a matter strictly
between the Spanish and Cuban governments which is being handled
satisfactorily.
In the same way, while there are members of the FARC and ELN in
Havana, conversations with the Colombian embassies in Washington and
Havana last year indicated that they are there with the acquiescence
of the Colombian government, which continues to see Cuba's efforts
to broker a peace process in Colombia as "helpful and constructive."
Finally, the report complains that many of the more than seventy
fugitives from US justice who have taken refuge in Cuba are accused
of committing violent acts in the US that targeted innocents in
order to advance political causes.
But as Robert Muse, a lawyer, pointed out at a conference hosted by
the Center for International Policy in October of last year and
entitled "Cuba Should Not be on the Terrorist List," legal authority
to designate a terrorist sponsoring country is found in Section 6(j)
of the 1979 Export Administration Act, which authorizes the
Secretary of State to determine that a country has "repeatedly
provided support for international terrorism."
As noted by Muse, the fact that certain fugitives from US justice
are permitted to reside in Cuba does not necessarily constitute
"repeated support for international terrorism." Not unless two
further elements can be demonstrated: (a) that the fugitives in
question had committed "terrorist" acts and, (b) that those acts
were "international" in character.
Muse said he had been unable to identify a single US fugitive in
Cuba who meets that criteria. Thus, Cuba's inclusion on the list of
terrorist sponsoring nations is invalid insofar as it rests on the
charge that there are American fugitives in Cuba.
Further, it should be noted that it is US refusal to abide by the
old 1904 extradition treaty that has put it in suspension. Since
1959, the US has refused to extradite a single Cuban fugitive. In
response, Cuba now refuses to extradite most American fugitives.
Finally, even if the old extradition treaty were operative, many of
the fugitives the US is most interested in extraditing would not be
extraditable since Article VI excludes those whose offenses are of a
political nature.
In sum, if what we see in the State Department's latest accusations
that Cuba is a state sponsor of terrorism is its entire case, then
clearly it has no case. As demonstrated at the CIP conference last
year, Cuba is NOT a state sponsor of terrorism.
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