Last
Updated:
05/20/2008
Cuban
American Associates of Convicted Terrorist Luis Posada-Carriles
Arrested in Florida
Interview
with Wayne Smith, senior fellow at the Center for International
Policy
conducted by Between the Lines' Denise Manzari
12/05/05
On
the night of Nov. 18, on a tip from a government informant, Santiago
Alvarez and Osvaldo Mitat were arrested in Miami on weapons charges.
Alvarez, a wealthy real estate owner was found by federal agents
to have in his Broward county apartment complex, a secret cache
of weapons including hand grenades, unregistered silencers, automatic
weapons with obliterated registration numbers and explosives.
ATF agents found more than a thousand rounds of ammunition, more
explosives and automatic weapons in a vault in the building management
office.
Both
Alvarez and Mitat are long-time allies of Luis Posada-Carriles,
the Cuban exile militant accused by the Cuban and Venezuelan governments
to have masterminded, along with Orlando Bosch, the bombing of
a Cubana airlines flight from Barbados in 1976. That act of terrorism
killed all 73 people on board, including members of the Cuban
youth fencing team. Posada is also accused of planning a series
of hotel bombings in Havana between 1997-98. Both Santiago Alvarez
64, and Osvaldo Mitat, 63, were among the five passengers aboard
the fishing boat Santrina, which Fidel Castro has maintained smuggled
Posada into the United States through Mexico in March. Posada
is currently incarcerated on immigration charges.
On
Nov. 28 at the federal courthouse, Judge Andrea Simonton refused
to release the pair saying that possession of such weapons is
a "crime of violence." However, she did not feel they
were a flight risk due to their close Miami ties. Outside the
courtroom, Cuban American National Foundation president Francisco
"Pepe" Hernandez accused the Bush administration of
betrayal, saying the White House is forgetting the promises they
made to the exile community and are instead catering to Castro's
demands.
In
late October, U.S. Customs intercepted a FedEx package sent to
Alvarez' Hialeah office from Fernando Valdez in Guatemala. It
contained a book titled, "Cuba Mia" and hidden inside
was a fake Guatemalan passport.
Wayne
Smith is a senior fellow at the Center for International Policy
in Washington, D.C. Between The Lines' Denise Manzari spoke with
Smith about the implications of these recent arrests.