Bush made in a recent speech in an awkward light: "The United States
makes no distinction between those who commit acts of terror and
those who support and harbor them, because they're equally as guilty
of murder."
"America's Double Standard on Terrorism"
by Saul Landau
Cuban expatriate Luis Posada Carriles, an old U.S. terrorist chicken,
has come home to roost in Bush's nest, exposing the president'santi-
terrorist policies as a hoax. Posada, 77, unabashedly embodies
violence as Gandhi stood for nonviolence. His resume contains a long
list of terrorist "accomplishments," including the bombing of a Cuban
commercial airliner over Barbados in which all 73 people aboard died.
Yet this year he returned surreptitiously to the United States, where
he had not resided regularly since the mid 1960s. After reports of
his presence began to embarrass Homeland Security, he turned himself
in and requested political asylum. Because U.S. judges and the
government have refused to extradite him to Venezuela to face charges
to the crimes he admits to having committed, he's likely to be
allowed to live freely and legally in this country within a few
months.
His return to the U.S. in the midst of the President's war against
terrorism embarrasses the Bush administration. Posada has forced it
to decide on terrorist criteria: "acceptable" acts of terrorism
carried out against Cuba versus unacceptable ones undertaken against
the United States and its allies.
It is indeed a double standard. And it puts these comments Mr. Bush
made in a recent speech in an awkward light: "The United States makes
no distinction between those who commit acts of terror and those who
support and harbor them, because they're equally as guilty of
murder."
Posada has confided to journalists and others that for four decades
he had worked on and off with the CIA to assassinate Cuban President
Fidel Castro. In 1976, Posada teamed up with Orlando Bosch, another
obsessed Castro-hater, and hired two Venezuelan killers to detonate a
bomb on board a commercial Cubana flight over Barbados. Seventy-three
passengers and crew members died. This was a blatant terrorist act.
The hired weasels ratted on Posada to the police, landing him in a
Venezuelan prison.
After a decade of inconclusive judicial proceedings, Posada's Miami
buddies bribed the prison officials and Posada "escaped" to Central
America, where he worked for Lt. Col. Oliver North in supplying the
Contras in their CIA-backed attempt to overthrow the Nicaraguan
government.
In 1990 in Guatemala, an unknown gunman shot Posada in the face. He
recovered, but didn't regain full use of his voice. Even that didn't
stop him. In 1997, he recruited a Salvadoran to bomb hotels in Cuba.
One bomb killed an Italian tourist. Cuban cops grabbed the
Salvadoran, who named Posada as his employer.
Posada even boasted about his violence against Cuban tourism to two
New York Times reporters in July 1998. How did he feel about killing
the innocent civilian, they asked? "I sleep like a baby," he replied.
In 1999, beginning to feel age and frustration as the ever elusive
Castro still rode high, Posada planned another hit. With three
seasoned assassins, he traveled to Panama with explosives that he
planned to detonate under the platform where Castro would be
speaking. Again, someone informed the police. He and his cronies got
caught, tried and convicted – but not of conspiring to assassinate.
Rather, with Miami money pulling Panamanian judicial strings, a judge
found them guilty of threatening public security and falsifying
documents. In 2004, more Miami money bought off Panamanian President
Mireya Moscoso, who pardoned Posada during her last week in office.
Despite Posada's terrorist past, the Bush Administration has refused
to extradite him to Venezuela to face trial for the airline bombing.
Following his arrival this year, Posada hid in Miami for several
weeks. Neither President Bush nor Florida Governor Jeb Bush tried
toarrest him. Only after Posada called a press conference did
humiliated Homeland Security agents arrest him – which they did
gently.
Even in custody, Posada continued to weaken Bush, who owes huge debts
to Cuban-Americans. They would scream "treason" if he delivered
Posada to Venezuela, a friend of Cuba. What a dilemma. On September
27, a U.S. immigration judge denied Venezuela's request to extradite.
The U.S. government lawyer offered no opposition to the judge's
ruling, although it carried heavy implications.
Posada, a notorious terrorist who Hugo Chavez's government
labeled "the Osama bin Laden of Latin America," is getting a free
ride -thanks to President Bush's policies.
Saul Landau is a fellow of the Institute for Policy Studies,an
independent center for progressive research and education in
Washington, D.C. He is the author of the latest book"The Business of
America: How Consumers Have Replaced Citizens and How We Can Reverse
the Trend" (2004 Routledge).
http://www.commondreams.org
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