Published Thursday, September 17, 1998, in the Miami Herald

NEWS ANALYSIS

Miscues blamed on military's takeover of Cuban spy agency

By JUAN O. TAMAYO
Herald Staff Writer

A Cuban spy ring's puzzling interest in U.S. military targets -- and its ineffectiveness in carrying out its mission -- may lie in the Cuban military's takeover of a civilian spy agency following a 1989 scandal and communism's fall, intelligence experts say.

``This is not the way they used to operate, said one U.S. diplomat who has tangled with Cuban intelligence in Latin America and the Middle East. ``These guys act more like soldiers thrown into the deep end of the pool.

Paying the rent late and losing a computer containing codes, as the Miami suspects apparently did, are not exactly hallmarks of Cuba's foreign intelligence agency, the General Intelligence Directorate, better known as DGI.

Based in a drab Ministry of Interior building on the corner of 13th and I streets in Havana's central Vedado neighborhood, the DGI and its counterintelligence twin were long considered among the best in the world.

At one point in the 1980s, every single agent the CIA believed it had in Cuba turned out to be a double agent working for Havana. And DGI was not far behind, deploying or recruiting scores of agents around the world.

But DGI fell from grace after several Interior Ministry generals were implicated in the drug scandal that led to the execution of army Gen. Arnaldo Ochoa and three other army and Interior Ministry officers in 1989.

Almost at the same time, the collapse of the Soviet Bloc affected Cuba's main source of strategic information on the U.S. military, said one senior Armed Forces Ministry official who defected in 1993.
Cleaning house

President Fidel Castro fired DGI chief Gen. Luis Barreiro in 1989 and replaced him with Gen. Jesus Bermudez Cutino, then intelligence chief at the Armed Forces Ministry.

Now about 63 years old, Bermudez swiftly renamed DGI as the Intelligence Directorate, or DI, fired many of its top operatives and stuffed his ranks with military officers, the Armed Forces Ministry official said.

``Operatives with decades of experience were put on the street and replaced with soldiers who had no subtlety, one of the purged Interior Ministry colonels still living in Cuba told The Herald in 1995.

Bermudez is said to have brought back some of the old DGI hands in recent years after a series of gaffes -- including Miami Channel 23's filming of a Cuban spy meeting with one of his Miami agents in New York in 1992.

`Obsessed with Miami'

The old DGI's main target in the United States was always Cuban exile groups viewed by Havana as dominating U.S. policy toward President Fidel Castro and, at times, launching armed attacks against his government.

``They were obsessed with Miami. They wanted to know everything, what kind of cigars people smoke, what cars they drive, said Francisco Avila, a Miamian who worked 12 years for the FBI and the DGI. It was Avila who took the Channel 23 cameras to the New York meeting.

But the leaders of the 10 accused Cuban spies in Miami were tasked with spying on the Boca Chica Naval Air Station in the Florida Keys, the U.S. Southern Command in West Dade and MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa, according to FBI documents in the case.

Some also were under orders to infiltrate and disrupt Cuban exile groups such as Brothers to the Rescue, the Democracy Movement, the Alpha 66 and PUND paramilitary groups and even the Latin American Chamber of Commerce.

Failed mission

The ring seemed to have been singularly unsuccessful. Its members managed only a low-level penetration of Boca Chica and the Democracy Movement but appear to have failed to obtain any classified U.S. documents.

``These guys seem to be nothing, just walking proof of the Armed Forces Ministry's hegemony over the Cuban intelligence apparatus these days, said the U.S. diplomat.

``The military mentality still prevails in DI, said the Armed Forces Ministry defector. ``And the military has this constant obsession . . . that Cuba is a place besieged by the United States, in danger of being invaded or attacked at almost any time.

``The United States may not be at war with Cuba, but Cuba is at war with the United States, or at least it sees itself as being at war or potentially at war with the United States every day, he added.

Whatever the reason for the spy ring's military targets, FBI and Justice Department officials have yet to explain what made it so important as to become the first Cuban spy gang rolled up in Miami in some four decades.

``Maybe it's far more simple than we can imagine, said one retired FBI counterintelligence official. ``Maybe it's as simple as a matter of `a spy's gotta spy.' 

Copyright © 1998 The Miami Herald