[R-G] CIA patented the crimes of Posada and Bosch in Bonao
Anthony Fenton
fentona at shaw.ca
Sun Jul 1 16:31:22 MDT 2007
CIA patented the crimes of Posada and Bosch in Bonao
by Jean-Guy Allard
June 21, 2007
Reprinted from Granma Internacional
ON June 11, 1976, by formally sponsoring the meeting where the CORU
was founded, in Bonao, the Dominican Republic, the CIA patented the
long series of bloody crimes for which that terrorist organization
later claimed responsibility.
Despite all the efforts later made to wash its hands of those crimes,
the U.S. spy agency appears everywhere, given that the highly secret
meeting included all the elements that characterize it.
The creation of the Coordinating Committee of United Revolutionary
Organizations (CORU) was always attributed to Orlando Bosch, but
while it is true that the Miami-based arch-terrorist has taken the
reins of that so-called independent organization, the responsibility
for its convening falls on the CIA, headed at the time by none other
than George Bush Sr.
The location chosen by the agency was the equivalent of one of its
typical safe houses. The 20 participants, mostly from the United
States, were summoned to a place that was carefully chosen and met
all the requirements: a luxurious lodge, set up for the top
executives of the Canadian company Falconbridge in a remote location
of the Central Range Mountains: the town of Bonao, in Monseñor Nouel
province.
There, the U.S. spy authorities had – as a top executive of the
company – an agent who was more CIA than its very headquarters in
Langley, Virginia.
He was Alexander Vlonsky, a Romanian immigrant who became a U.S.
citizen, known at the time under the name of Sacha Volman, who
infiltrated the Dominican Revolutionary Party so successfully that,
at the time of the U.S. invasion and occupation in 1966, he was an
adviser to President Juan Bosch.
VOLMAN, THE CIA'S MAN OF CONFIDENCE
Born in 1924, in Besarabia, Romania, this son of a landowner
ferociously hostile to the Soviet presence in that territory at the
end of World War II, became active in anti-communist groups, and
later was recruited as a collaborator, first with the British Royal
Air Force, and then by U.S. military intelligence.
They say about this individual that he was short in stature, with
black hair and eyes, and that he could speak eight languages,
sometimes with such a strong Romanian accent that he was barely
understandable.
After a visit to the United States, he appeared in Costa Rica in the
1950s as an executive with the Institute of Political Education and
the International Institute of Labor Relations, two organizations
later clearly identified with the CIA by former U.S. spies.
There, he met the political leader Juan Bosch, an exile from the
Dominican Republic's Trujillo dictatorship. Bosch subsequently
invited him to join in his party's campaigns and move to the
Dominican Republic. After Bosch became president, Volman became his
advisor, offering his supposed advantage of having numerous
"contacts" in the United States.
The mysterious individual became a successful member of "good
society" in the Dominican Republic, marrying Dominique Bludhorn of
the United States, heiress of the U.S. magnate Richard Bludhorn.
When the U.S. invasion of June 15, 1965 occurred — 44,000 U.S.
soldiers took over the country to "prevent another Cuba" — agent
Volman continued to stick to Bosch, and did so until his final defeat
in the 1966 elections.
In 1970, after acting as advisor to other important Dominican
leaders, Volman became, under CIA instructions, the special advisor
on labor relations for the Dominican affiliate of the complacent
Canadian company Falconbridge, a transnational corporation that
sought to protect, with its modest contributions to espionage, the
nickel mines it was exploiting in Bonao in central Dominican Republic.
He was the key CIA agent whose mission on June 11, 1976 was to host
and coordinate those meetings at the Falconbridge mining company's
exclusive lodge in the mountains.
WHERE DID THE BONAO PLOT COME FROM?
General Manuel Contreras (ret), former head of the Chilean national
intelligence agency (DINA), recounted in a report while in prison how
he traveled to the United States in August 1975 and had various
"working meetings" with General Vernon Walters, deputy director of
the CIA and George Bush's right-hand man.
In the course of these meetings, Walters said he was "very
interested" in Contreras visiting the political police (DISIP)
headquarters in Caracas, where the seven highest officials were
Cubans working for the CIA. One of them was Luis Posada Carriles, who
was heading that agency's general security division.
According to Contreras, these Cuban CIA agents in the DISIP,
including Ricardo "El Mono" Navarrete, participated 10 months later
in the Bonao meeting.
Logically, the other participants in the meeting, sponsored by agent
Volman, also had links of collaboration with the agency.
In addition to Orlando Bosch, the psychopathic terrorist with the
organization Poder Cubano, the mastermind of a veritable bombardment
of devastating attacks within the United States itself, and who came
out of the meeting as CORU coordinator, the meeting also included
Frank Castro, director of Gulf and Western, a fake company created by
the CIA in Miami.
Recruited and trained in Fort Jackson after the failed Bay of Pigs
invasion, Eulalio Francisco Castro Paz (alias Frank Castro) was
already a buddy of Rafael "Chi Chi" Quintero, a notorious, recently-
deceased CIA agent, and of CIA agent Felix Rodríguez Mendigutía, who
ordered Che Guevara's execution in Bolivia. In Bonao, Frank Castro
represented his own terrorist organization, the so-called Cuban
National Liberation Front (FNLC).
Others there included another notorious CIA agent, Armando López
Estrada. This former henchman under the Fulgencio Batista
dictatorship had been recruited by the CIA after the Bay of Pigs and
was already known for his participation in many different activities
promoted by the agency.
Another controversial Cuban American is Felipe Rivero Díaz, a
likewise Bay of Pigs "veteran," who led the Movimiento Nacionalista
Cubano, a terrorist group featuring murderers like brothers Guillermo
and Ignacio Novo Sampoll, Dionisio "Pool of Blood" Suárez Esquivel,
Virgilio Paz, Alvin Ross and Eduardo Arocena.
The Novo brothers, "Pool of Blood" and Paz all participated — in one
way or another — in the assassination of Orlando Letelier, by
supporting U.S. CIA-DINA agent Michael Townley.
In Bonao, Rivero was accompanied by Guillermo Novo, whose long career
as a terrorist would land him in a Panamanian prison in 2000, along
with Posada, after an assassination attempt against the Cuban
president. And by "Pool of Blood," who later participated in
Letelier's assassination.
Townley also traveled to Bonao and participated in the conspiracy.
The CIA's man in the Chilean DINA had been in contact with the Cuban
Americans since the now-notorious trip by Orlando Bosch and his hired
killers to Santiago de Chile in 1974.
In an article titled "The CIA's Dope-Smuggling 'Freedom Fighters,'
published in December 1998, Professor Jerry Meldon of Tufts
University, a journalist and researcher, notes how the Bonao meeting
also included leaders of Alpha 66, created in 1962 by the CIA, and a
former president of the Bay of Pigs "veterans" association, Roberto
Carballo Diaz.
Two further individuals with the CIA "stain" who participated in the
Bonao meeting were Gaspar Jiménez Escobedo and Aldo Vera Serafín. On
August 3, 1975, Jiménez was involved with Vera in an attempt to
kidnap Emilio Aragonés, Cuba's ambassador in Argentina. That same
year, Jiménez was part of a failed plot to assassinate President
Fidel Castro during his first visit to Jamaica.
Another CIA man was Vera Serafín, who accompanied Michael Townley
when the latter traveled to Chile to join the special services of the
Augusto Pinochet dictatorship.
In acknowledgements he made before his own assassination this year in
Puerto Rico, Vera himself affirmed that three mysterious "unknown
men" were also present at the Bonao meeting. Everything points to the
suspicion that they were Langley agents assigned to the case.
Crystal clear. In Bonao, the CIA patented what would later become a
devastating chain of terrorist attacks propagated by individuals who
have benefited, for more than 30 years, from that agency's complete
protection.
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