J, J. II.C.LJ;!;A.:lbi.U .t'JJ;tf. ..t:' .L. lUiG- ti ;Gt:) l cJ l• 'lt t_':::)'J • REPRODUCED AT THE NATIONAL _ DATE J 11 v-/Jo _ rr " Thiil is the first of a series of Latin Listening ,.,..,., Post interviews of persons more or less directly concerned ' with the conflict between the United States and Cuba. In subsequent programs, we will present talks with people who are connected with the Cuban Refugee Organizations, people who are connected with President Batista and United States citizens with direct stakes in the outcome of the Cuban Situation. Tonight we have with us a representative of probably the most controversial organization connected with Cuba in this country . The organization is Fair Play for Cuba Committee. The person, LEE OSWALD, Se cre- tary of the New Orleans Chapter for the Fair Play for Cuba Committee. This organization has long been on the U ustice Department's black li st and is a group generally considered to be the leading pro-Castro body in the nation. As a r.eporter of Latin American affairs in this city for several years now, your columnist has kept a lookout for local representatives of this pro-Castro gr01-iP· None appeared in public vie'.v until this week wbf'n youn g LEE OSW ALD was arrested and convicted f or disturbing the peace. He was arrested pass ing out pro-Castro literature to a crowd which included several violently anti- Cas tro Cuban refugees. W hen we finally tracked Mr. OSWALD down today and asked him to participate in Latin Listening Post, he told 3- Jl; I -.-------- \ \ \ \ I I ) \ ·I \ r
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J , J.II.C.LJ;!;A.:lbi.U .t'JJ;tf. ..t:' . L . lUiG-ti;Gt:) l cJ l •'lt t_':::)'J
• REPRODUCED AT THE NATIONAL AR~~Es _ DATE J 11 v-/Jo _ rr "
Thiil is the first of a series of Latin Listening ,.,..,.,
Post interviews of persons more or less directly concerned 'with
the conflict between the United States and Cuba. In subsequent
programs, we will present talks with people who are connected
with the Cuban Refugee Organizations, people who are connected
with President Batista and United States citizens with direct
stakes in the outcome of the Cuban Situation. Tonight we have
with us a representative of probably the most controversial
organization connected with Cuba in this country . The organization
is Fair Play for Cuba Committee. The person, LEE OSWALD, Se cre-
tary of the New Orleans Chapter for the Fair Play for Cuba
Committee. This organization has long been on the Uustice
Department's black lis t and is a group generally considered to
be the leading pro-Castro body in the nation. As a r.eporter
of Latin American affairs in this city for several years now,
your columnist has kept a lookout for local representatives of
this pro-Castro gr01-iP· None appeared in public vie'.v until this
week wbf'n young LEE OSWALD was arrested and convicted f or
disturbing the peace. He was arrested pass ing out pro-Castro
literature to a crowd which included several violently anti-Castro
Cuban refugees. When we finally tracked Mr. OSWALD down today
and asked him to participate in Latin Listening Post, he told
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us frankly that he would ',· because it may ~ help · his or"an1zation
to attract more members in this area. With that in mind, and
knowing that Mr. OSWALD must have had to demonstrate a great
skill in dialectics before he was entrusted with his present
post, we now proceed on the course of random questioning of
Mr. OSWALD.
Mr. OSWALD, if I may, bow long has the .Fair Play for
Cuba Committee had an organization in New Orleans?
We have had members in this area for several months
now up until about two months ago however, we have not
organized our members into any sort of active group, until
as you say, we had decided to feel out the public, what they
think of our organization, our aims and for that purpose we
have been as you said, distributing literature on the street
for the purpose of trying to attract new members and feel out
the public.
Do you have any other activities other than distri
buting literature at the present time?
Well, I assume you mean do I have any organizational
duties myself?
Yes.
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Well, the Fair Play for Cuba C01111111ttee with its .
headqu~rters at 799 Broadway in New York, bas been investigated
by the Senate Sub-Committees who are occupied with this sort
of thing. They have investigated our organization from the
viewpoint of taxes, subversion, allegiance and in general,
where and bow and why we exist. They have found absolutely
nothing to connect us with the Communist Party of the United
States. In regards to your question about whether I, ~yself
am a COllllllunist, aa 1 said 1 d.o not belong to any other
organization.
I notice from your pamphlets, one bears the title
of "Hands Off Cuba". I am curious as to whether this applies
to the Soviet Union as well as to the United States.
This organization is not occupied at all with the
problem of the Soviet Union or the problem of International
Communism. Hands Off Cuba is the main slogan of this committee.
It means, it follows our first principle, which bas to do with
non-intervention, in other words keeping your bands off a
foreign state which is supported by the Constitution and so forth
and so on. We have our own non-intervention laws, that is,
what Hands Off Cuba means. As I say we are not occupied at all
with the problem of the Soviet Union.
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Does your group believe that the Castro Regime 1n
CUba is not actually a front for a Soviet Co\lony in the Westem
Hemisphere?
Very definitely. Castro is an independent leader
of an independent country, He has ties with the Soviet Union
with the eastern block, however !,,think it is rather obvious
as to why and when they are because of the fact that we certainly
don't have any trade with them, we are discouraging trade with
that country, with our allies and so forth, so of course he has
to turn to Russia. That does not mean however, that he is
independent upon Russia. He receives trade from many countries,
including Great Britain to a certain extent, France, certain
other powers in the Western Hemisphere. He is even trading with
several of the more independent African States so that you cannot
point at Castro and say that he is a Russian puppet. He is not.
He is an independent person. An independent leader in his
country and I believe that was pointed out very well during the
October crisis when Castro very definitely said that although
Premier Khrushchev had urged him to have on-sight inspection at
his rocket bases in Cuba, that FIDEL CASTRO refused,
our own included, require a certain amount of rationing, a
certain amount of calluses, a certain amount of sacrifice,
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Sacrificing ones own personal ideas about countries, citizen
ship, work, indicates poople who have fled Cuba have not been
able to adapt themselves to these new factors which have entered
these peoples' lives. These people are the uneducated. These
people are the people who do not remain in Cuba to be educated
by young people who are afraid of the alphabet, who are afraid
of these new things which are occurring, who are afraid that
they would lose something by collectivization. They were afraid
that they would lose something by seeing their sugar crops taken
away and in place of sugar crops, some other vegetable, some
other product, planted, because Cuba has always been a one
product country, more or less. These n.re the people who have not
been able to adapt.
Mr. OSWALD, you say their sugar crops. Most of the
Cubans I have talked to that have had anything to do with
agriculture in the last year and a half have not owned one
single acre of ground, they were cane cutters.
That i~ correct and they are the ones that are fleeing
the Castro Regim~.
That is correct sir. That is very very true and I am
very glad you brought that point up. You know, it used to be
that these people worked for United Fruit Company, the American
companies engaged in sugar refinery, oil refinery in Cuba.
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They worked a few months every year during the cane cutting
or sugar refining season. They never owned anything, and
they feel now that that little bit of right, the right to work
for five months a year has been taken away from them. They
feel that now they have to work all year round to plant new
crops, to make a new economy and so they feel that they have
been robbed, they feel that they have been robbed of the right
to do as they please because of the fact that the Government
now depends upon its people to build its economy, to industrialize
itself, so they figure they have been robbed. What they do not
realize is that they have been robbed of the right to be
exploited, robbed of the right to be cheated, robbed of the
right of New Orleanian companies to take away what was rightfully
theirs. Of course they have to share now. Everybody gets an
equal portion. This iS collectivization and this is very hard
on some people. On people prefering the dog eat dog economy.
What do you refer to as the dog eat dog economy?
Is that capitalism in your definition?
No that iS an economy where the people do not depend
on each other, they have no feelings of nationality, they have
no feelings of culture, they have no feelings of any ties
whatsoever on a high level. It is every man for himself. That
is what I refer to by dog eat dog,
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'· • Are you familiar with the existence ·of a Black
Market in Soviet Russia or in Red China, whereas the majority
of the populists get their food, their truck crops and vegetables
and such from this market. Do you know of such a market?
Well I know about the fact that there is a market
in the Soviet Union only for western apparel, and certain other
items. There is no black market in the Soviet Union for food
none whatever. By black market, I assume that you mean a
situation where food is either stolen or grown in one area
and taken to another area and sold covertly, under cover. No
such system exists in Hussia.
Mr. OSWALD, I am curious about your personal background.
If you could tell something about where you came from, your
education and your career to date, it would be interesting.
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in 1939,
I would be very happy to. I was born in New Orleans
For a short length of time during my childhood, I
'lived in Texas and New York. During my Junior High School days,
I attended Beauregard Junior High School. I attended that school
for two years. Then I went to Warren Easton High School and I
attended that school for over a year. Then my family and I
moved to Texas where we have many relatives and I continued my
schooling there. ·1 entered the United States Marine Corps in
1956. I spent three years in the United States Marine Covps,
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starting out as a Private, working my way up through the ranks
to the position of Buck Sergeant and I served honorably, having
been discharged. Then I went back to work in Texas and have
recently arrived in New Orleans with my family, with my wife
and my child.
What particular event in your life made you decide
that the Fair Play for Cuba Committee had the correct answers
about CUban-United States relations?
Well of course, I have only begun to notice Cuba since
the Cuban Revolution, that is true of everyone, I think, I
became acquainted with it about the same time as everybody else,
in 1960, In the beginning of 1960. I always felt that the
Cubans were being pushed into the Soviet block by American
policy. I still feel that way. Our policy, if it bad been
handled differently and many others much more informed than
I have said the same thing, if that situation bad been handled
differently we would not have the big problem of Castro's Cuba
now, the big international political problem. Although I feel
that it is a jest and a right development in Cuba, still we
could be on much friendlier relations with them and had the
Government of the United States, its Government Agencies,
particularly certain covert, under cover agencies like the new
defunct CIA.
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' ~·"';1· lY. : • Now defunct? · .
Well, its leadership is now defunct. ALLEN DULLES
is now defunct. I believe that without all that meddling, with
a little bit different humanitarian handling of the situation,
CUba would not be the problem it is today.
Is there any particular action of the United States
Government do you feel that pushed Castro into Soviet arms?
Well, as I say, Castro's Cuba, even after the
revolution was still a one crop economy, basing its economy
on sugar. When we slashed the Cuban sugar quota, of course
we cut their throats. They had to turn to some other country.
They had to turn to some other hemisphere in which to sell this
one product. They did so, and they have sold it to Russia and
because of that Russian sugar is now down quite a bit, whereas ours
is going up and up and up and I believe that was the big £actor,
the cutting of the sugar quota.
Do you think that the United States Government, under
President EISENHOWER ever wanted to help the Castro Regime?
Ever offered or shown any help to it?
True to our democratic policies, certain policies
were adopted, very late, but adopted, but the government helped
Fidel Castro while he was still in the mountains, that is very
true. We cut off aid to Batista just before the revolution,
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just before it. That was too late. We had already done
more harm than we could have done before. We were just rats
leaving a sinking ship, you see. That was not the thing to do.
We have however, as I say, helped him. We have now cut off all
that help.
There is one point of view which I have heard to the
effect that Castro turned left because he could not get any
aid for industrialization in Cuba from the United States. Does
the Fair Play for Cuba Committee believe that?
Not entirely, no. We feel that was a factor, certainly.
But we feel that the current of history is now running to that
extreme, in other words countries emerging from ------domination are definitely adopting socialistic, ------' marxist even on occasion what will be in the future, communist
regimes and communist inclinations. You see, this is something
which is apparently a world trend.
Does the Fair Play for Cuba Committee believe that
this trend should also be copied in the United States?
No, the Fair Play tor Cuba Committee is occupied only
with the Cuban problem. I do not thirut that they feel that way,
no.
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Thank you very much Mr. OSWALD. Tonight we have .. been talking with LEE OSWALD, the Secretary of the New Orleans
Chapter of the pro-Castro, Fair Play for Cuba Committee. In
subsequent programs, we will present the comments of other
leaders concerned with United States-Cuban conflict. Good night.
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·APPROVED fOl!llELE.~SE 1993 CIA HISTOH!CAL-icEVJEW PROGRAM
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MEMORANDUM FOR: Chief, CI /R&A
SUBJECT
REFERENCE
: Garrison Investigation: Belle Chasse Training Camp
: CI/R&A Memorandum Dated 26 October 1967
1. Listed below is the information pertaining to the Belle Chasse training camp which was requested ·in reference memorandum:
a. The training site was activated on 12 February 1961 and the first group of trainees arrived on 18 February 1961.
b. at the active
The site was located u.s. Naval Ammunition for five years.
8 miles from New Orleans Depot which had been in-
c. The site covered 3500 acres of marshland adjoining the Mississippi River. The depot consisted of ammunition magazines storage areas, warehouses, various frame and brick buildings, many miles of interlocking railroad tracks and both hard surface and improved roads and the entire site was enclosed by a chain-link fence. Since much of the terrain was inaccessible and unsuitable for training purposes, due to the marshy ground and poisonous reptiles, a limited area was used for actual training purposes. This area was located where the activity could neither be heard nor observed.
d. The Base was closed on.21 April 1961 and the training site was completely sterilized by Base and cleared Navy personnel after all demolition, ammunition, ordnance items, and field equipment was sterilized and air-lifted to a midwest depot. Materiel
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on loan from the military was restored to original condition and returned to the appropriate military component.
e. Approximately 300 Cubans were trained at the site ov~r a six week period. The only known list of trainees which was available at Headquarters has not been located to date. A search has been initiated for this. list.
f. The training consisted of weapons firing, demolition, guerrilla warfare, communications, UDT, etc. One group was trained as a strike force assault battalion and was sent to Guatemala on 22 March 1961 to join the Bay of Pigs invasion strike force.
g •. The training camp location never came to public knowledge through press media. However, the New York Times and New Orleans radio and television stations reported that a Cuban training camp was located outside of New Orlean&, according to information aminating from Miami. Inquiries were directed to high level military, and Louisiana officials, who denied knowle~ge of such a camp and the site was not identified. Subsequent to the above publicity, the representative of a leading TV station appeared at the main gate of the installation and requested permission to enter and take pictures. Naval authorities denied permission and there were no further inquiries. The actual training site was quite some distance from the main gates of the depot which was identified by an inscription cut into concrete "u.s. Naval Amnunition Depot". Whether the TV representative was trying to identify the location of the rumored training site or simply take pictures of a deactivated historical landmark for posterity, ia not known.
h. The training camp was entirely Agency controlled and the training was conducted by Agency personnel.
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2. During the initial phase of activiation, the depot was sterilized to avoid any indication of government interest and to provent disclosure of the actual physical location of the training camp to newly assigned trainees. For example, all U.S. Navy references on boxcars, buildings, etc,, were painted out or destroyed, Although the first group of trainees transferred to the Base from Florida knew they were going to an abandoned ammunition depot located near New Orleans, maximum precautions were taken to insure that the site location could not be pinpointed while the trainees were being transported from the airport to the camp. Despite all precautions, one i~cident occurred that is significant in view of the recent publication naming the Belle Chasse camp. One night a group of trainees arriving at the Moisant Airport frqm Miami were observed and identified by Orlando PIEDRA, the former Chief of the Bureau of Investigation' during ·the Batista regime. PIEDRA obtained the license numbers of the rental vehicles used for transporting the trainees to the camp. His license number was likewise obtained by our security officer at the scene. PIEDRA, who is one of the individuals included in the CI/R&A memorandum dated 15 September 1967 (page 3-item 21), and memorandum #5 (paragraph 4-J), may be the individual who provided the information contained in the recent publication. In any event, it would be surprising indeed if some of the 300 Cuban trainees involved have not discussed their training activities in ·detail over the past six years. With the clue that the camp was located at an abandoned.navy ammunition depot outside New Orleans, a long-time resident such as PIEDRA, ARCACHA Smith, FOWLER, or LABORDE, would eventually be able to narrow down the location despite the extreme security precautions that were in effect during the training period, Although only the commanding officers of the ammunition depot and the Naval Air Station were knowledgeable of the activities on the grounds, an enterprising reporter or investigator could probably surface other corroborating bits of information which would help identify the training site, For example, de~pite the fact the majority of supplies and equipment was procured thro~gh the Navy facilities, certain items were necessarily purchased on the local market, thereby producing a sudden influx
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of cash 1n an area that bad been dormant for five years. In any event. although the Garrison investigation may eventually lead to identifying the site as a government installation. there has never been any evidence or publicity identifying the Agency as the actual operators of the training ca.mp.
I. A ucc:rAtly publlth•d booklet eoncerlli.Dg lh. Gaulaon eau and entitled Plot or Polletlca? was written by Stat<~a-ltem reporters Rosemal'y Jamea and Jaelt Wardl.'lw. The !oll~nvlng appeara on p. 49:
•·Meantime, .Exeeu.tlva Aasl.stant DA Alvin V. Oaar w:u looking for a target rane• acrGfla ~d Jl!)rth ol Lalte Pon~hartraln... In the proce•U, he !oun<i tho loc:at1ona o! two tra1n1ns camp• where eoldhtra were b~ing trained ln 196Z for a second CubaD lnvaelon. He aleo c:ame acrou a thlrd training ca=p near :Sell Cbaaae, Ln., by the Naval Alr Statloa on the othel' aldtt of the Mlasl:utlppl Rlver,"
2. Although the timing of Onr'a dlacovery la not elear, it waa probably nbout Jan~ry 1967.
3. As this Juncture, acc!!>rdlngly, we need a etudy or report on CIA's usa oi the Belle Cbaa~e :~~lte. The following are the key quutiou:
a. When did we begira to use the alte?
b. Wh11re wu U located?
c:. What wa• its aue?
d. How lOf:lg dld we u11e lt?
e. Who IU)d how mally were tralaed therel
(I{ any o£ th.a tral.nen o involved ln any way l
ratnees were person" known to be rrlaon'e lnveatlBatlon, wtt need their
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2.
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ldenUUea ~ad a\l available lnformatlon about them.)
t. Wh4lt was th• pu.rpo1e of the training glveQ at Bell• Cha1ae? What •ubject• or ~tt-Yltlea wero taught?
g.. Did CIA'.e ua• o! the slte come to publlc knowledt;e thr~ush new a media!
h. Dld CIA contr"Ol the camp aPd the tralnins dlrectly?
Dono""n E. Pratt
Distribution Orig & l - Adreas es
l - Office of Security (Mr. Paul Gaynor - info~·
l - Office of the General Counsel -(info) l - A /DC! (info) l - R &A Chrono l - DP for WH-CI Correspondence on Garrison file. ~ DP for file on Training Camps, New Orleans Area
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Guerrillas Aided By Local Cubans
By BILL STUCKEY A small group of local Cubans have been
sending guns and general military supplies to guerrillas and saboteurs in Cuba for the past three months. ·
A member of the group, Y.ilo wanted to remain anonymous, said the weapons and supply Hems are first sent to· 1ecret military camps in the Florida Everglades.
From there, the weapon!'; are either smuggled into Cuba to equip the Anti-Castro uriderground, or are used by F1orJda-based raiders in ligrtning sabotage strikes on the Cuban coast, the informant said.
The latest shipment of arms, including machine guns, .left over the week end on a boat manned by "Ameri-
. can soldiers of fortune and ex-Marines," he said. The boat- was docked at a secret site in ihe New Orleans 'B.:rea during the. loading operation.
The informant insisted that his group Is an informal organization and has nothing to do \\1th the Miami·based Cuban Revolutionary Council, headed by Jose :r-.nro-Cardona.
''A lot o! us got tired of those who speak in pretty phrases and who have political ambitions in OJba," he said ... We were tired of wasting time. We looked
for men of action and found them."
* * * THE IXDICATIOXS ARE THAT THE LOCAL Cubans are llffiJiated, or are attempting to affiliate, ~1th the RevoJutionary Stl..ldent Directorate. The directorate, which
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one or the member organizations in the CUban RevolUtionary Council Until it withdrew r;everaJ months ago, is credited wlth being the largest anti-Castro group fighting in the Clban ""clandestinaje," or underground.
The in:ormant said that most of the guns and supplies f.hlpped from here were donated by U. S. citizens in New Orleans or cities in other Southern states. ·
In recent weeks. the supplieS have been coming into Ne-w" Orleans-and going fo the guerrillas-at a sharply increased rate, he said,
In addition to weapons, recent items sent to the &Uerrillas include radios, gasoline-pov..·ered electric generators and medical supplies, he said.
Some of the weapons are tested at a hidden site in this area before being forwarded to F1orida, he said.
The informant &aid the FBI and the U. S. government are aware of the local weapons·supply operation and of the F1orida raider bases. ·
I . * * * HE SAID TH.o\T l\IOST OF THE LARGE·SCALE sa}».
tag,; reoorted in Cuba recently-the d£'struction of l'l chemi-. cal plant ahd new national bank building in Hlivana,t a:........ 'burning of a fertilizer plant in Camaguey-was the r:-
.. of the F1orida·based 5aboteurs. · . . . V _
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NEW ORLEANS STATES-ITEJI 5/21/62 New Orleans, La. NEff ORLEANS OFFICE
LARRY LABORDE IS - CUBA
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used .jn Grre~e. Korea and Laos-supplying re«iers pw' .eu~rrlllas frorlt protected sanctuaries," he ss.id. • This Is necessary, he ~aid, because of the effectiveness of Castro•• counten-spionage service. As a result, the ••ciandeatinaje"' is rather loosely organized, he eid. . Beea:UJ.e or he&\.<>y Castro pressure, tht underground i'ightel"'l have requested the New Orleam; CUbans to aend them smaller weapons which are easier" to conceal, the w~~~~ .
* *· * ~JG!'\S OF IN\"ASION are popping out all oVer. The local Cuban arms·suppliers mysteriously predict
... liOmelhing really big"' within &everal week5 • . . a local pilot received a call a month ago from a U. S. civilian pilot, '"iw offered him $2000 a month to train CUban helicopter pilots at .a secret base in Mexico. The helicopters were reportedly supplied by 8 Florida air force base ... Castro propaganda ort:ans cry of upcoming "imperialist ag·
~ssion."
* * * A:S V..'TERESTIXG MILITARY _A~ALl"SIS on what It would take to overthrow Castro was given The States·ltem by Gen. Raymond F. Hufft-I.Duisiana's most decorated World War U vet, commander of units in the nation'S first s~ dal forces {commando) section in the second war, 'BD au. thority on Latin American military operations and a mill· tary prophet whose predictions regarding Kor~an war casualties "Were embarrassingly correct.
The best means or waging a Cuban war would be to use CUbans in a conventional Invasion-but only after sizeable numbers of ".special forces" guerrmas, &uch as ones D0\'1.' being trained Bt Fort Bragg, N. C., have softened up Olba for at least 90 days. The U. S.-traincd guerrillas would be parachuted in, or brought in by submarine, he said, and would co-operate with Cuban guerrillas now lighting.
However. if the pentagon decided to use U. S. troops instead of Cubans, it would take at least 40,000 airborne fighting men to carry off a conventional invasion. Again, the 90 days of erosion-by.guerrilla would be a necessity prior to the im·asion, he said.
Jl( ."JJil' "JJil' THE 11\"'\'ASIOX TALK COMES significantly on th~ eve
of fr..e 60th Pnniversary of Cuban independence. It was on May 20, 1902, that U. S. troops left Cuba aftq three .1;eau Qf post-Spanish-American war occupation duty, 'B.nd that CUban ch;lian leaders took over the island's government.
I. Carlos de la Vega, able information officer for the 1~ cal OJban Revolutionary Council branch, said a special \independence day Mass was celebrated at 9:30 a. m. yester· ·day in Our Lady of Guadalupe church. }Jterv.·ard a
lbli.ef cefemany ·-was held at the Spanish-Americin ~ar memorial at Claiborne and Canal.
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In both cases, U. S. air cover and naval proteetio.n '\\'OUld be required, he said. There could be no attempt at concealing the U. S. presence in such an operation, ·he ~- '
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Such a heavy fighting force would be necessary, he said, .. 1
because of the vastly strengthened Castro army, equipped · with much self-propelled artillery, Russian jets, Czech arms and many more tanks than last year.
And since last year's disastrous Bay ot Pigs invasion, Castro troops have had a valuable year of intensive miJitary training. The number of Russian, Czech and Red Chinese military men. or ••teclmical advisors," has also be-en substantially increased, he said. -- Ru!i=".ia \\.'Ollld not intervene, he predicts, be< :a use o[ 1\e disadvantage&• of fighting a war so far away from home · &upply bases. ' ~,.,.·,
~. r~uo-.. ~ !.e.na lt.a: c;)ro~t of'fic!ili \s'"ere brier~. re ... . £~~ the project ectivity n::-d the nationality or fu tra~~ but ·, \<-ere c 0t ~ v1tti.ng of 1-<;eru:y s-~rsh!p:
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The_ o:1l7 c:ce of the &bove -, s ppe.:~ red 1n neva 1 te=s 111 tl::at or - -te:;tified before -::he Lou1s1a!l!l __ the ~ tms that Gorooo BOVEL tesufiea~ llcm:L had been srsntcd .. .,._ .. · · 1=mfty 1'rm ~lrt. by GJ,._'t.qiCC!f 1n ~ to test1f7 before t;!le . __ , -C=iee!on. GARREOll h!>-s ~rgcd nOVEL \:ith but'glacy or the !loo::a .
. IiOVEL s:1 id V"'...S a CIA opera t1oo.. li.o\.:::ls ia -.. .: -- -can be See:l fr't:n the t:ap ot t.oo1s1cl::s 1n the ~ -. - - .
. -. <:.;y' . ··- . :::-~ :- By_BIL~-S:nJ~- _ : ;_-;:j, ,- ,;-{-:._:.,__ f!!llttiA troll! tmpo~t sabolol:;e massaoru. : _ . ... ·:;:·-7 . LocaL- CUbans and a· shadowy -American ad- ,_ 1 ._:;~ .. ~bell, , local_ delega~e to the CUban Revolu~onary ::-· t h b kina ( · -hl b t , Council, bow ever, coni1rmed that last week the 'Miama coun--- ven urer ave een wor o everl3 Y- u un- cil headquarters nixed the Covington base for undisclosed
successfully- for over a month to set up an anti- · reason.s. :-Castro guerrilla training base near ·covington. ---. · - - • • . -. ··-
The American soldier-o!-!ortune. The States-Item learned, ~no is this Patrick? is Gerald Patnck Hemming, who goes by the nomme RABELL DESCRIBES Bnl as a rangy, six-foot-seven de 6UerTe ot Jerry Patrick. He clajms to be an ex-Marine. tYpe who can shoot two heavy milchine guns from• the
PatricK nrst popped into the news' last summer when hip at the same time, cowboy ~tyle. Miami sources say he l\riami r:ewspapers found he was training anti-Castro guer• wears _an ·Australian bush hat; sports a neat beard and rillas in the l::veq;lades. He called his band the l{lter- wears .hl.s hair !on: and wa.,Y. He's been described as an continental Pcnetrarion Force. Both he and " Interpen," Erroll F1ynn type an appearance, a French ml.!sketeer type however, dropped out of sight last fall after the FB! began and as the "biggest, strongest and handsom~t'' man in chec.kin6 to see It he was violating U.S. neutrality laws. lnterpen.
Last February, Patrick showed up in New Orleans, AJthough he claims his group has little money, local apparently at the invitation ol local CUban Re,·olutionary CUbans guess that he has extensive hnancial backing. His -Council leaders · and other CUbans who :· . ~~ equipment is of tl'le latest model, and the power boat hewanted to take direct action a gainst f • • ~ ·t ., Castro. With the help ot anonymou's U.S. • ~
).; .. I • t patroru, the CUbaru began supplying Pat- , f!:' _f.- r r ick with machine guns, explosives and ~7-re ., ; ot.'ler military supphes. • \~ ·"!-·~;:<'J
Patrick made regular trips here. slip- • (...~. ~...,~ < pbz in and out of the port secretly in :.'c l.~ .. a modem, well-eqwpped PT boat. · , - ~~;;:j
Last spring, another anonyr.tous U.S. ' ,.:· . -~ .. ~ patron o!lercd the Cubans and Patrick' ~ -·/fA i'j a large tract or land-<:omplete \vith ajr ,. , .A . s trip on the north shore of Lake Pontchnr- aTVcKEV train. Patrick agr~d to set up a training base, handlin' classes ot 50 or so Cuban recruitS at a time. After completion of the training, the guerrillas would be like their Ever&lal!es counterparts, transported to Cuba secretly to work w1th the anti-Castro ' 'Clandcstinaje" (underground). ·
The men would also have been used to make lightnin.: ·ajds on the CUban coast to divert the attention ot Castro's
brings here periodically is ,"at leas t a S20,000 job.'' Patrick tells CUbans he wants to topple Castro because
the Fidelista rega.rne Imprisoned his CUban Wue on charges ot " counter-revolutionary activity." She has been sentenced to 30 years.
About 30, Patrick claim~ to have served with the Marine Corps for more than four years, including a stint 1n the Far East as a sel6eant- with the Marine Alr Win:. However, when Patrick lint began to get b~adlines there, Miaml sources said .Marine records show no trace of either a Patrick or a Hemmi..r.g.
Patrick also says he was a pa.nttoop instructor with Castro in '1.958, and stayed on with the CUban reiUJ:e until Augus t, 1960. About the time he lett CUba, he was aJso involved .in an "Invasion" intended to topple the Somoza
·regime in Nicaragua. E stimates of the size ot his o~a.nization ' r an&e front
30 to 100 men-Cubans, Americans. La.tizu, Canadians and others.- •.•
Interpen ;i3-·.conneeted with the :int~~tion~. Antt--·.:: Co-mmunist Brigade headed by Fra:•k Fiorini another Amer-"""" ican who \fought with Castro (and who was rewarded by becoming overseer o! Havana gambling operations aftel' Batista's fall). Now at" odcU with Castro, Fiorini claimed. earlier this month that 20 al his men had landed in Cuba's Matanz!is province.
• • • :. !:~ BOTH FIORL"', A.."'tD PATRICK at one time had con
nections with Sanchez ~ango, former-- minister· of foreign .relations -"and education under pre-Badsta· President Cc;rlos Frio Socarras. It's an educated guess.. that Patrick's
. big- backer might be Prio, who reputedly lett CUba with a.- btlge- fortune. · · •.. ~~"·· • · · -~_.:...:·Although the Patrick. gueii1.11a base- ·plan. fell through · hete.>·there:' is enough happening to- whet ·the· appetite of ciny inv3.sion-rumor connoiseur. r -~:
~-_La-31 April, The States-Item confirmed for the first tizr.e- that Cubans were trained here, at the old Algiers uni.:nunition: duffip. for the Bay of Pigs invasion: Their CUban.. leader, an ex-Castro officer ·named Nino Diaz, · returned "io l\oliam(·when the New Orleans force was unable to-land:
Latest reports now are that Diaz and a group ot from 80 to. 100 men renu-ned to CUba within recent weeks, and are fighting now in the Sierra 1Iaestra mountains of Oriente pro\·ince.
• • • .AT LEAST EIGHT OTHER refugees who lived in New
():-leans are now in CUba with the underground, RabeU said.- Tne only such retugee whose name he remembers. he said, is Carlos La.zaraba, a pilot.
Broadcasts !roin the three unde"rground radio trans 6
:nitt~rs iru:ide Cuba, which are occasionilly received here nn short wave, also indicate the presence of New Orle-an3 Cubans on the island. A favorite codt! message to relath·es
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heie wOuld go· sOmething like thl;::·t.UI;;;~ G3.::--;;Sa-ys. hi~ ·· --~cei-ta.inly misses that grocery star~ back'. ~a -j\·[fr~ street.;_~:~ Other-. local landmarks are aho referred. to •in the broad· casts.
And in <Miami a trem~ndous wave of optinilim has swept the large Olban colony there, accordln~ to Girardo Aha-icon o! th~ highly respected and ir..!onnative T:-u~ _About Cuba Conimittee. (Abascon, forme!' owner of a distillery in CUba befor-e- Castro, was her-e rec~ntly. He and other committee workers translated imp01tant n~,.,.-s
items from Castro news media ar.d circulate them . in
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pr-inted form throughout thl.i country.). ·~
- All this comes on the eve oe a significant Castro an- ~~ . ·rtiversary-JuJy 26. On that date nine )eai:i ago, Ca.s-.ro -first bur:;~ into Cuban headlines \-.:hen rr.ore than 100 ol his followers made a suicidJ.l assault on the 1\Iancada ba~ racks, a Batista army bas a in Santi2.go, Oriente proYince. ··
.<\T IDS TR~-\L FOR THE l\oionceda aSS.::!.Ult, Caitro delivered an eloquent addr-ess otulini.ng hls program for a "democratic and socially jus~·· Cllba-a.n addres3 admired by many of his anti-Communist followers. ,
The- upshot o_f the \.\'hole affair is that Ca31io' .i political group was named the "Mo\"imienro 26 C.e Julio."
Aba:.;con reports that Cuban press .sa.rs Castro plans -a tremendou;; demon~tration L1. Santiago on the 26th i.., ho:tor
of th~ anniversary. It might be jnteresti.n;: to k-now wl-:at kind of demonst:"atioru the anti-Castro underground are plan• -. ning the same day. ·" .
Interestingly er.ough, a newly-arrived refugee, Eduarti.g· Domil'!quez, told The States-Item he was in on pla.cJ:lln:" t.'lat 1953 Moncada assault .. He said he had lc.own Castro as a student in the University of Havana (where Domi•"'llU.U: studied 3.ccoUllt::icg).
Ah, but reliabl~ old fate stepped in and D.omi"'...q,li.eZ didn't get to go on the .i\Ioncada assault. Reason?