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Cuba condemns the shameful decision to release
terrorist Luis Posada Carriles and points to the
United States government as the only one
responsible for this cruel and despicable
action, which seeks to buy the terrorist’s
silence regarding his crimes in the service of
the CIA, particularly during the time when Bush
Sr. was that agency’s general director.
With this decision, the U.S. government has
ignored the clamor that has arisen throughout
the world, including in the United States,
against the impunity and political manipulation
involved in this action.
This decision is an insult to the people of Cuba
and other nations who lost 73 of their sons and
daughters in the abominable 1976 attack that
brought down a Cubana de Aviación civilian
airliner off the coast of Barbados.
This decision is an insult to the people of the
United States themselves, and a categorical
refutation of the so-called "war on terrorism"
declared by the government of President George
W. Bush.
The U.S. government had only to certify Luis
Posada Carriles as a terrorist to prevent his
release and, in line with Section 412 of the
U.S. Patriot Act, to acknowledge that his
release would "threaten the national security of
the United States or the safety of the community
or any person."
The U.S. government could also have implemented
the regulations enabling Immigration and Customs
Enforcement to detain a foreigner who is not
admissible to U.S. territory and subject to
deportation.
For that, it would have sufficed for U.S.
authorities to have determined that Posada
Carriles is a threat to the community, or that
releasing him would involve a flight risk on his
part.
Why did the U.S. government allow the terrorist
to enter U.S. territory with impunity, despite
the warnings sounded by President Fidel Castro?
Why did the U.S. government protect him during
the months he remained illegally in its
territory?
Why, having all the elements to do otherwise,
did it limit itself this past January 11 to
charging him with lesser crimes, essentially
immigration-related, and not with what he
actually is: a murderer?
Why is he being released, when Judge Kathleen
Cardone herself, in her April 6 ruling ordering
the release of the terrorist, admitted that he
was accused of "...having been involved in, or
associated with, some of the most infamous
events" of the 20th century? Some of the events
include "the Bay of Pigs invasion, the
Iran-Contra affair, the 1976 bombing of Cubana
Flight 455, the tourist bombings of 1997 in
Havana, and even — according to some conspiracy
theorists — the assassination of President John
F. Kennedy."
Why is the U.S. Homeland Security Department’s
Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency not
using the mechanisms it has at its disposal for
maintaining the terrorist in prison, with the
irrefutable argument, already used by the U.S.
Attorney General’s office on a date as recent as
this past March 19, that if he were released,
there is a risk that he could flee?
Why has the U.S. government ignored the
extradition application submitted, in line with
all relevant requirements, by the Bolivarian
Republic of Venezuela?
How is it possible that today, the most
notorious terrorist who has ever existed in this
hemisphere is being released while five Cuban
men remain in cruel imprisonment for the sole
crime of fighting terrorism?
For Cuba, the answer is clear. The terrorist’s
release has been organized by the White House as
compensation so that Posada Carriles will not
divulge what he knows, so that he won’t talk
about the countless secrets he holds in relation
to his long career as an agent of the U.S.
special services, in which he acted as part of
Operation Condor, and in the dirty war against
Cuba, Nicaragua and other nations in the world.
The full responsibility for the terrorist’s
release and the consequences deriving from it,
fall directly on the United States government,
and most particularly on the president of that
country.
Even now, after his release, the U.S. government
has all the information and legal mechanisms to
re-arrest him. All that is lacking is the
political will to seriously combat terrorism,
and to recall that, according to President Bush,
"if you harbor a terrorist, if you support a
terrorist, if you feed a terrorist, you will be
as guilty as the terrorists."
Havana, April 19, 2007
Translated by Granma International
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