Log in

View Full Version : George Bush and Felix Rodriguez - Two old friends



Conghaileach
25th July 2002, 16:05
GRANMA
July 24, 2002
George and Félix: the tale of two old friends

. They first met in 1960 . One was the owner of a oil prospecting
company and CIA member . The other, a fugitive and former agent of
dictator Fulgencio Batista's repressive apparatus . After four decades
of parallel activities, the U.S. president and his father meet up with
the CIA's most infamous Cuban-American agents

BY JEAN-GUY ALLARD (Special for Granma International)

THEY say that George, a CIA agent at the time, got to know Félix, a
former member of Batista's police force, when he was recruiting Cuban
immigrants to form a troop of killers and saboteurs for actions on
Cuban territory at the same time as the Bay of Pigs invasion.

George denies it; Félix won't talk about it. But various researchers
firmly confirm it, backed-up by declassified documents.

Despite living in Houston, Texas, George Herbert Walker Bush traveled
to Miami every week in 1960-61 to take an active part in the creation
of Operation 40, the special troop conceived by CIA deputy director
Charles Cabell. That was how George recruited Félix, but he also met
with various people of that ilk such as Luis Posada Carriles,
Frank Sturgis, E. Howard Hunt, Rafael Quintero, José Basulto, Herminio
Díaz and Bernard Barker - all subsequently linked to dirty tricks
attributed to members of the Miami mafia. And, most importantly, to the
assassination of President John F. Kennedy.

Nephew of José Antonio "Toto" Mendigutia Silvera, minister of public
works and close collaborator of Fulgencio Batista, the young Félix
Rodríguez (or more precisely Félix Ismael Fernando José Rodríguez
Mendiglutia), former Havana Military Academy student and member of
Batista's repressive apparatus, had all the characteristics for success
within the CIA's elite group.

George Bush was also watching over his business interests in Houston,
New Orleans and Miami: Zapata Petroleum was founded in 1953 in
association with the Liedtke brothers. But he was particularly
interested in Zapata Offshore, a subsidiary company later identified as
a CIA front.

The newly recruited Félix Rodríguez left for the U.S. base at the
Panama Canal, receiving training in sabotage and terrorism. Some months
later, at the end of 1960, the CIA gave him his first mission. On
February 14, 1961 he and other agents arrived in Cuba aboard a vessel
that dropped them off in the vicinity of Arcos de Canasi, on the
border of Habana and Matanzas provinces.

They landed with two tons of equipment and explosives, discovered a few
days later by Cuban state security, thanks to an agent infiltrated in
the operation.

Félix Rodríguez also came with orders for the
island's counterrevolutionaries; among other things they were to
blow up the bridge at Bacunayagua at the same time as the
planned invasion.

MR. BUSH OF THE CIA

According to former CIA agent Fletcher Prouty, it was George Bush
himself who handed over three boats to the intelligence agency's agents
in Guatemala who were preparing the operation. The vessels were named
Barbara (his wife's name), Houston (his city) and Zapata (his company).

The moment for the famous invasion arrived. It failed miserably in less
than 72 hours. Not only did the Cuban Revolution crush the invading
army but over one thousand mercenaries were captured.

Pursued by state security, Rodríguez hid in a counterrevolutionary´s
house. He contacted a Spanish embassy official, a CIA collaborator, who
helped him leave the country.

After the Bay of Pigs failure, the Miami extremists furiously accused
the Kennedy government of having "betrayed" them. But the president was
also furious. He sacked Allen Dulles, the CIA's director, its deputy
director Charles Cabell, and Dick Bissell, the head of
undercover operations.

Kennedy was assassinated in 1963. Some of those investigating the
matter considered the possible implication of various Cuban
conspirators, including Félix Rodríguez, Frank Sturgis, Herminio Díaz,
Orlando Bosch and the Guillermo Brothers, plus Ignacio Novo Sampoll.
However, the role of George Bush, Richard Nixon and various Texas
oil barons was also brought into question.

On the day of Kennedy's murder, George Bush was in Texas. He has always
maintained that he can't recollect his precise movements. Neither does
Félix Rodríguez remember his.

Nevertheless, years later a letter written by FBI head J. Edgar Hoover
- explaining that a certain Mr. George Bush of the CIA had been
informed of the reaction of Miami's Cuban-American circles after the
assassination - was declassified.

IN FORT BENNING WITH MAS AND POSADA

On his return from Cuba and on CIA orders, Félix Rodríguez passed a
course in Fort Benning alongside the most fanatical elements of
Operation 40 - including Luis Posada Carriles, later called the
hemisphere's most dangerous terrorist. Also on the course was Jorge Mas
Canosa, founder and leader of the Cuban American National Foundation
(CANF).

Rodríguez was then dispatched to Nicaragua with a group of agents that
attacked the Spanish vessel Sierra de Aranzazu in reprisal for Spain's
relations with Cuba. The terrorist attack created such a scandal that
the CIA withdrew its anti-Cuban, allegedly elite, troops.

In 1964, George Bush ran for Congress as part of the team
of presidential candidate Barry Goldwater, an advocate of nuclear
weapons. He failed to win. In 1966 however, he was elected as a
moderate.

The following year, under the name Félix Ramos Medina, Félix Rodríguez
was in Bolivia acting as a CIA linkman in the company's attempts to
find Ernesto "Che" Guevara. He was assigned to the city of Santa Cruz
de la Sierra, and later to Valle Grande. On October 9, he flew by
helicopter to La Higuera to interrogate Che. After questioning the
famous guerrilla - to no avail, despite applying all the brutal tactics
taught by his Fort Benning instructors - Félix "Ramos" Rodríguez
followed his bosses' instructions and ordered a Bolivian soldier to
kill the prisoner.

Afterwards, imitating some soldiers who were present, the CIA man let
off a round over Che's body.

These days he brags about having "killed Che." He possesses the
guerrilla's Rolex watch and a transcript of the interrogation.

Richard Nixon was in the White House from 1968-73. During that time,
George Bush headed the National Republican Committee, maintaining
strong contacts with the Cuban-Americans. "Eminent" Miami mafia member
Bebe Rebozo was a close friend of his.

On February 24, 1969, Rodríguez obtained U.S. citizenship. The CIA then
sent him to Viet Nam, where he spent his time torturing and
interrogating prisoners, employing extreme violence. He was an active
participant in the Phoenix Program, a severely repressive operation
that, according to former CIA chief William Colby, left 26,369 dead out
of the 33,350 people detained in U.S. interrogation centers.

In 1970, Bush stood as a Senate candidate. He failed to get elected.

That same year, Félix Rodríguez joined Air America, another CIA front
company, trafficking heroin from Laos to the U.S. drugs network of
former Havana godfather Santos Traficante. The purpose of the smuggling
was to influence the Laotian conflict by winning the support of
isolated communities. The operation was led by Donald Gregg, who took
his orders from Theodore Shackley.

It was on this job that George's buddy learnt the trade he was to
practice years later in Central America.

In 1971, Nixon named Bush ambassador to the United Nations.

Two years later, the Watergate scandal - breaking and entering the
Democratic Party's Washington headquarters - erupted. The suspects were
certain Cuban immigrants and CIA agents linked to the failed Bay of
Pigs invasion: Frank Sturgis, E. Howard Hunt, Eugenio Rolando Martínez
and Bernard Baker. And Félix Rodríguez.

DISINFORMING CONGRESS

August 1974 saw Nixon's successor, President Gerald Ford, appoint
George Bush as head of the CIA. Orlando Bosch was put in charge of
gathering all the Miami terrorist groups under one single umbrella, the
infamous CORU, later responsible for around 100 acts of terrorism in
over 25 countries.

Félix Rodríguez collaborated with Bush, fulfilling various "missions"
in Uruguay, Brazil, Costa Rica, Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador.

It was Bush himself who disinformed Congress on the most disastrous
CORU attempt - the explosion aboard a Cubana aircraft in mid-flight,
causing the death of 73 persons.

Nevertheless, the Venezuelan police identified Orlando Bosch and Luis
Posada Carriles as those responsible for the attack. Both were arrested
and imprisoned.

Bush also disinformed Congress over the death of Orlando Letelier,
former Chilean minister and one-time ambassador to the United States,
and that of his assistant, human rights activist Ms. Ronni Moffit. The
two were murdered in broad daylight in Washington by Pinochet agents
and Cuban-American killers, "loaned" by the Guillermo Brothers and
Ignacio Novo Sampoll, more of Félix Rodríguez's Operation 40 cronies.

It is now known that the CIA was not only aware of the assassination
plot, but Bush himself was responsible for deflecting the FBI's
investigations, by laying false trails in the press.

Taking advantage of his job, Bush composed a rather strange internal
memo asking for a copy of a report concerning a visit by Jack Ruby
(killer of Lee Harvey Oswald - Kennedy's alleged assassin) to infamous
Havana mafia leader Santos Traficante, who had immigrated to the United
States and was a CIA collaborator at the time Letelier and Moffit
were killed. In 1976, Rodríguez was awarded a medal for bravery by
Bush. Shortly afterwards, he received death threats, so the CIA
installed a security system at his home and gave him an armored car. In
1979, he linked up with an arms dealer in South America, in association
with Ted Shackley, his old boss in Saigon.

The following year, Ronald Reagan backed Bush as candidate for vice
president.

REROUTING FUNDS FOR CONTRAS

In 1982, CIA director William Casey launched Operation Black Eagle to
expand the U.S. role in Central America. Mercenaries were recruited to
form the Nicaraguan Contras; Casey was under orders from George Bush.

In Florida, George's son Jeb was entwined with the Cuban-American
mafia, the Contras and Nicaraguan immigrants. Jeb fraternized with
ultra-right Cuban-American mafioso Leonel Martínez, the drug trafficker
connected to Nicaraguan dissidents and CIA agent Eden Pastora.

That August, George Bush appointed Donald Gregg (from the Laos says) as
National Security Advisor. Gregg sent Félix Rodríguez on support
missions to the Nicaraguan Contras.

Along with José Basulto, current head of Brothers to the Rescue,
Rodríguez organized what was later to be called the largest rerouting
of social security funds in U.S. history. With the complicity of Jeb
Bush's pal Cuban-American Miguel Recarey, he used a large portion of
federal subsidies earmarked for Miami's public health services in order
to illegally organize hospital care for Nicaraguan Contra mercenaries.

October 1984: Gerald Latchinian, deputy director of Giro Aviation - a
CIA airline company run by Félix Rodríguez - was arrested and detained
for importing a consignment of cocaine worth $10 million dollars,
supposedly to finance the assassination of the Honduran president
Roberto Suazo Cordova. Latchinian later confirmed that the operation
was the work of the CIA.

IN ILOPANGO WITH POSADA

At the end of 1984 Donald Gregg introduced Colonel Oliver North, chief
of U.S. operations in Central America, to Félix Rodríguez. It is said
that Gregg had an autographed photo of Rodríguez on his desk.

Bush and Rodríguez met in January 1985. In June, the latter met with
Gregg and Colonel Steele, the man responsible for the Contras'
supplies. Rodríguez then resurfaced in El Salvador to take charge of
aerial operations at the Ilopango base. At that time he was using the
name Max Gómez.

>From that moment on, the former Operation 40 member was chief
coordinator for transporting massive amounts of cocaine from Colombia
to the United States.

As Rodriguez was their main aide, the CIA offered him his old pal arch-
terrorist Luis Posada Carriles, who masterminded the Cubana aircraft
sabotage. With CIA and CANF help, Posada Carriles had just escaped from
a Venezuelan jail dressed as a priest and was now using the name
Ramón Medina.

IN BED WITH THE ENEMY

Sometime later, former DEA (Drugs Enforcement Agency) agent Celerino
Castillo III told the House of Representative's intelligence committee
how his informers discovered warehouses of drugs, weapons and money at
the Ilopango Base. He added that it was noted that many Contra pilots
were listed as drug traffickers in DEA dossiers.

"I discovered that other agencies were sleeping with the enemy," stated
Castillo in an interview with the Dallas Morning News.

On January 18, 1985, Rodríguez met with Roberto Milán-Rodríguez, the
Medellín cartel's money-laundering specialist, who boasted of already
having laundered over 1.5 billion dollars for that organization. Milán-
Rodríguez handed over $10 million USD, destined for the
Nicaraguan Contras.

On May 8, 1985, Bush's office received a warning from Rodríguez that a
C-123 aircraft had been brought down by the Nicaraguan Armed Forces.
The pilot, Eugene Hassenfus, confessed to working for the CIA and
taking his orders from Max Gómez (Félix Rodríguez) and Ramón Medina
(Luis Posada Carriles).

In December 1985, George Bush openly and unashamedly received his
friend Félix Rodríguez - torturer, murderer, thief and drug trafficker
- at the White House. With official photographs and full protocol.
Rodríguez participated in the Christmas festivities held there.
Bush introduced him as an old friend of his and Gregg's.

A few days later in Bush's office, Rodríguez met with Colonel Sam
Watson, Gregg's personal representative in El Salvador, plus Colonel
Steele, to discuss strategy in the Contras' fight.

During 1986, Vice president Bush officially toured Honduras, offering
support to the Contras.

In May, Rodríguez met with Bush, Gregg and Oliver North in Washington.

In September he visited Bush and Donald Gregg to complain about the
quality of weapons sent by one Richard Secord. Gregg ordered that the
weapons should be bought directly from one of Rodríguez' own sources.

In October of the same year, General Singlaub complained of Rodríguez'
"daily contacts" with Bush's office, citing his fears that such contact
could endanger President Reagan and the Republican Party.

And of course, behind the operational team lurked the shadow of Otto
Reich, head of the public diplomacy office and the man in charge of
disinforming the U.S. people. When the Iran-Contra scandal broke, Reich
was immediately dispatched as ambassador to Venezuela, where he
orchestrated the release and "rehabilitation" of Posada's accomplice,
killer doctor Orlando Bosch.

In 1988, a Senate commission headed by Senator John Kerry investigated
the scandalous drugs and weapons trafficking operation involving Oliver
North, Donald Gregg, John Poindexter, Elliott Abrams, Otto Reich,
Richard

Armitage, John Negroponte, Mitch Daniels and other George Bush
accomplices in the empire's war in Nicaragua.

And we mustn't forget the secret accomplice - Félix Rodríguez. He will
also have to stand up and be counted, although he's apparently well
sorted out: on Christmas Eve, Bush wrote him a personal greeting
enigmatically informing him that he'd earned a lot of respect in the
process.

GEORGE IN WASHINGTON, FÉLIX IN MIAMI

In 1989, George Bush finally became president. Félix Rodríguez was
present at the new president's investiture, alongside his great friend
General Rafael Bustillos, head of...the El Salvadoran airforce.

Despite Rodríguez' statement that he was no longer with the CIA,
Rolling Stone weekly revealed that he continued visiting the Agency
once a month to receive instructions, and that he'd taken his bullet-
proof Cadillac there to be serviced.

In that same year, Bush released Orlando Bosch from the cells of the
Immigration and Naturalization Service, where he'd been imprisoned
since he was sprung from Venezuela - thanks to Otto Reich who, at that
time, was U.S. ambassador to Caracas and likewise a CIA agent.

In 1994, George W. Bush was elected governor of Texas. And was already
dreaming of becoming president.

In 1998, Jeb Bush was given the job of Florida governor. He had the
full backing of his "partners" in Miami; "He's one of us," crowed CANF
leader Jorge Mas Canosa.

In 2000, George W. Bush was named president of the United States,
thanks to a five to four Supreme Court vote and after an intensive
campaign by the Miami mafia.

They say that George is still active behind the scenes. Every week he
requests a tailor-made report from the CIA. He assesses his son.
Nominations to posts alone reveal to what extent. And dozens of members
of the Miami Connection can be found at all levels of the new
administration.

Félix meanwhile strolls around Miami, meeting with his network of
former agents, killers, conspirators. in the full light of day. After
all, he's a "close friend" of George's.

He lives in Miami-Dade county. His trophies are displayed in his living
room: firearms, grenades, bayonets, photos with George, the belongings
of prisoners tortured in Viet Nam and South America. Even some jewelry
from a murdered Salvadoran guerrilla; plus innumerable medals and
decorations.

They say that he was there on May 20 listening to George Jr. announcing
his plans for a "new democratic Cuba" to an audience of former Batista
torturers, mafiosi and other varieties of extremists. A plan designed
to match the profiles of his audience.

FREE TO CONTINUE COMMITTING CRIMES

During the trial of the Miami Five, it was revealed that one of the
Cuban patriots had a chance weekend sighting of Félix Rodríguez,
waiting in line behind him at a Costco supermarket checkout in Miami.
He was able to observe the blasé way this torturer, murderer, thief and
drug trafficker left the store and got in his luxury vehicle at the
shopping mall parking lot.

Félix Rodríguez - associate of arch-terrorists Posada and Bosch, Saigon
torturer, Watergate thief, killer in Bolivia, drug trafficker in Laos
and El Salvador, is free to walk the streets of Miami and continue
committing crimes.

Meanwhile, the Five patriots, victims of CIA and FBI conspiracies, are
cruelly isolated in five different jails located in the vast territory
of the United States.

Those five patriots risked their lives to counteract the plans of
individuals who, from the sidewalks of Miami to the corridors of the
White House, continue conspiring to commit new crimes against the Cuban
Revolution.

------------------------------------------------------------ ---------
A Christmas 1988 greeting from President George Bush to his torturer,
killer, thief and drug trafficking friend Félix Rodríguez. The tone is
revealing: "Dear Félix, Thank you for your note of December 18. Yes,
the truth is powerful. You have told the truth faithfully and have won
a lot of respect in the process. Good luck. May 1989 be calmer than
1988 and may it be full of great happiness for you. With admiration and
respect, George Bush."

Supermodel
27th July 2002, 23:18
What an amazing article! I still get sick when I look at the smug look on Rodriguez' face when he stood up with Che for a last picture. Sadistic bastard. There's a special place in hell for him.

I have an acqaintence who trained Cubans for the bay of Pigs invasion, but he said he never met Felix Rodriguez.

Can we get a motion started to have Rodriguez tried for crimes against humanity? He still lives in the Miami area.

Rodriguez, you're gonna pay.....God will make sure.

Angie
28th July 2002, 14:46
He'll pay. Karma has a nasty habit of running around in circles. :)

Red Anarchy
29th July 2002, 10:48
He payed. After the time when Che was killed, Rodriguez got hard attacs of asthma, and he lives with it ever since then.
Rene Barientos died in a helichopter crash in 1969.
Mario Teran went insane and he lives in a psychiatric hospital now.