[R-G] Agent Kolar, Bush’s new hope for destabilizing Cuba
Anthony Fenton
fentona at shaw.ca
Sat Apr 26 14:20:49 MDT 2008
Agent Kolar, Bush’s new hope for destabilizing Cuba
BY JEAN-GUY ALLARD —Granma International staff writer—
http://www.granma.cu/ingles/2008/abril/vier25/kolar.html
• CAUGHT up in a series of scandals that erased what little
credibility it had on the Cuba issue, the Bush administration, which
until now trusted that its Cuban-American mercenaries would succeed in
destabilizing the country, has placed its hopes in the none-too-clean
hands of an astute Czech, a fitting student of its spy services.
Selected and recruited by the CIA in the late 1980s, Petr "Peter"
Kolar, ambassador of the Czech Republic in Washington, moved in less
than three years from a building maintenance employee and mail clerk
to chief researcher at the Institute of Strategic Studies attached to
the Ministry of Defense in Prague.
This was thanks to a little push forward by his friend Vaclav Havel,
also connected to the U.S. intelligence pipelines.
Kolar began his dizzying ascent after the collapse of the socialist
state in the former Czechoslovakia, when his masters sent him,
overnight, to Washington to begin a training program for his new
tasks, according to his official biography. This training program was
at the Woodrow Wilson International Center (WWIC), an institution
funded and run by the U.S. government.
What his biography doesn’t say is that the WWIC, attached to the
University of Princeton, is as closely tied to the CIA as white on
rice. So much so, in fact, that the notorious former CIA director,
Allen W. Dulles, bequeathed his personal archives to that institute.
James Billington, director of the WWIC from 1973 to 1988, began his
career as Dulles’ assistant and ended as advisor to Ronald Reagan.
According Dulles’ declassified documents, a large number of professors
from that center also worked as "high level" advisors for U.S. spy
agencies.
Lee Hamilton, its current director, has an even darker résumé. A
former congressman from the state of Indiana, he was a member of the
presidential advisory council for domestic security, secretary of the
National Security Study Group for the Department of Defense and…
secretary of the CIA advisory council on economic intelligence. Even
more serious: he was on the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks,
also known as the 9/11 Commission.
What could agent Kolar have studied in Washington, then?
What is certain is that back in Prague, the Havel connection sent him
quickly on the way to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, where he would
rise from one intrigue to the next at rocket speed until becoming a
deputy minister.
Now Washington could reap what it had sowed.
ARRIVES WITH MAFIA FIASCO
On December 2, 2005, Doctor Kolar (he was by now called doctor),
presented his credentials to George W. Bush. He knew what the
priorities were. He waited until after the New Year’s holiday, and on
January 17, 2006, he was in Miami, where he met with some of the most
recalcitrant mafia elements.
By May, he was ready to come out as the star of the anti-Cuban show.
In a rather crude move, the conspirators chose the offices of the
Center for a Free Cuba, of the notorious CIA agent Frank Calzón, to
call a press conference. Kolar had invited a number of diplomats from
other former Eastern European socialist countries, in order to launch
what he called "an initiative to support the internal opposition in
Cuba."
Those accompanying him included Congressman Lincoln Díaz-Balart, son
of a government minister under the Fulgencio Batista dictatorship;
Caleb McCarry, head of the Bush Plan to annex Cuba; Orlando Gutiérrez
Boronat, a terrorist recruited from the Cuban Democratic Directorate;
the heavily-subsidized Sylvia Iriondo, of MAR por Cuba; Angel de Fana,
of the group Plantados hasta la Libertad y la Democracia, a
counterrevolutionary organization of ex-convicts; and Mauricio Claver
Carone, director of the U.S.-Cuba Democracy Political Action
Committee, which is dedicated to bribing congress members.
Kolar did not suspect at that moment that before the year was over his
troop of conspirators would be dispersed by a hurricane: a report in
December from the Government Accountability Office (GAO) revealing
that USAID officials assigned to Cuba concealed the final destination
of $65.4 million in grants from this federal agency that went to their
friends in Miami and Washington.
The suspects indicated by the GAO report included two of Kolar’s best
supporters: Frank Calzón and Orlando Gutierrez-Boronat, who received
millions in subsidies.
The blow was too heavy. Days later, Adolfo Franco, administrator of
Latin American funds for the US Agency for International Development,
immediately resigned his post… and joined the team of Republican
presidential candidate John McCain, who just so happens to be a
director of the International Republican Institute (IRI), one of the
great beneficiaries of Franco’s generosity.
The scandal in USAID continued over the following months, with more
resignations and a police investigation that recently "blew up" Felipe
Sixto, Calzón’s right-hand man, and the mastermind of a profitable
embezzlement scheme, who has been hiding for a few months as "special"
advisor to the president.
Another activity organized by Kolar’s "advisors" a short while ago at
the Coral Gables Biltmore Hotel brought to light the new plan for
creating subversion in Cuba as imagined by the masterminds in Langley.
Acknowledging Washington’s isolation in its dirty war against the
island, Cuban-American Senator Mel Martinez, who was heading up the
unusual meeting, emphasized a need for involving "other countries" in
their anti-Cuba operation. This was meant to remind Cubans who "have
been trained to hate" the U.S. government that the latter "is not
their only ally." José Cárdenas, the "interim" director replacing
Franco at USAID, said that USAID would soon begin "following the model
established by the Eastern European bloc in the 1990s," thus
confirming it as the first to benefit.
The mafioso meeting ended with an eloquent piece of nonsense from U.S.
Secretary of Commerce Carlos M. Gutiérrez. According to this former
multi-million dollar corporate executive, attention must be given to
Cuba "as it has been with Tibet and Darfur," thus admitting U.S.
intervention in both of those crises.
Meanwhile, the Czech ambassador was sanctioning such absurd
instructions, his perspicacious associate Calzón did not waste any
time on a useless show. He was waiting at the fittingly-named Dulles
Airport in Washington for the next flight to Prague.
He knew that from now on, the Cárdenas substitute would favor the
Czech capital for distributing the millions from USAID.
Behind Calzón would follow all of his fellow mercenaries, looking to
secure new sources of funding, beginning with Robert Ménard, in a line
that also featured Boronat and Iriondo.
Vaclav Havel, for his part, has just inaugurated another organization
for "advocating democracy," on April 16 in Brussels, and behind it is
the hairy hand of the godfathers of subversion in Cuba… suffice it to
say that the coordinator for the "new" program is Czech Kristina
Prunerova, of People in Need, a group created in Prague by the CIA and
heavily subsidized by the National Endowment for Democracy, another
agency attached to U.S. intelligence.
In Miami, various factions that have been feeding for decades from the
federal government’s anti-Cuba crusades are now reeling in face of the
Kolar Plan, wondering how to link up with that subversive structure
that benefits European NGOs and satellites of USAID, NED and other
channels.
The GAO audit on USAID’s anti-Cuba activities made headlines with the
fancy purchases by the hired "democracy activists" from Miami:
cashmere sweaters, Godiva chocolates, Nintendo games and Sony
Playstations, supposedly all meant for alleged dissidents.
This is the rotten fruit of the lucubration of Cuban-American congress
members Ileana Ros-Lehtinen and Lincoln and Mario Díaz-Balart, Senator
Martínez and the ringleaders of the Cuban Liberty Council. Will the
USAID’s millions continue to be reaped in Miami? •
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