Spanish intelligence chiefs became aware that something was wrong when
efforts to track more than 100 suspected Cuban spies were stymied because
microphones hidden in several offices and apartments around Madrid
suddenly stopped working.
Certain suspects were also successfully evading surveillance squads and
no longer discussing sensitive subjects in the usual places, a hint that
Cuba was somehow learning a lot about Spain's spy-catchers.
``We were confronted with the first penetration of our . . .
intelligence service since the East Germans tried it during the Cold
War,'' said a Spanish intelligence officer who asked not to be
identified.
The accused officials of Spain's military intelligence agency, the
Center of Defense Information and Studies (CDIS), will not be publicly
identified until they appear before a special security court later this
week, but the identity of the businessman is known.
He is Jose Fernandez, an executive of several hotel and travel
companies. He was denounced by a business partner, Fernando Molina, who
lost money investing in Cuba, according to published reports. Scandal surfaced
According to court records and intelligence sources, Cuba's main overseas
spy agency, the Ministry of the Interior's Directorate of Intelligence
(DI) managed to infiltrate the CDIS through an officer identified so far
only by his first name, Luis.
Spokesmen for CDIS confirm that he held military rank and a position in
the agency's spy-catching counterintelligence section, code-named IB-4,
when he was recruited by the Cubans several years ago.
Another CDIS employee described as a civilian technical specialist was
also spying for Cuba, according to official sources who maintain that he
has signed a confession and has been suspended from the service.
Three other CDIS officials are being charged with helping Fernandez
carry out his intelligence work for the Cubans, according to court
records. Base was moved
CDIS officials believe Luis was approached by female Cuban agents in
Madrid in 1991, before he was sent to Havana briefly as part of a special
contingent when the Spanish Embassy became jammed with dissidents seeking
political asylum.
It was then that CDIS believes their officer was ``doubled.'' His
reports were filled with recommendations for giving in to Cuban government
demands for the return of the dissidents, and warnings of an imminent raid
on the embassy by elite Cuban troops that never took place.
Spanish officials said Luis has since spied on Spain's military
integration with NATO, the private lives of leading officials, and special
operations units and electronic warfare capabilities, including a type of
aircraft acquired from the United States that could be used against Cuba.
According to CDIS sources, Luis came under suspicion after a series of
visits to Miami, where he regularly contacted some companies believed to
be used as fronts by Cuban intelligence. The Miami connection
The accused spy, Jose Fernandez, helped to set up some DI fronts
operating as travel agencies and other commercial enterprises in Florida,
Madrid, London, Canada, Japan, Italy and Germany, according to recent
Spanish media reports.
Court documents in the case identified one of the companies as Grupo
Oasis, a tourism firm registered in Panama that lists its business address
in Cancun, Mexico, and runs several beach resorts in Cuba.
Oasis has been linked to Spain's biggest corruption scandal, involving
banker Mario Conde, currently jailed on embezzlement and fraud charges.
Sources said Fernandez helped Conde funnel some $2 million to Cuba.
Cuban Tourism Minister Osmani Cienfuegos made a discreet weeklong visit
last summer to the Spanish resort of Marbella, where he was the guest of
the mayor, Jesus Gil, a real estate developer recently convicted on
charges of embezzlement. Marbella city officials allege that Gil's
deputies regularly carry large quantities of cash to Cuba in
briefcases.
The spy scandal is the worst intelligence conflict between Madrid and
Havana since Cuban agents tried to abduct a defecting Cuban diplomat from
the streets of Madrid in 1986. That incident drew a diplomatic protest
from the Socialist government of Felipe Gonzales.
CDIS officials insist that the Cuban spy ring caused no substantial
or long-term damage to Spain and expressed confidence that the moles were
caught ``at a relatively green state'' before gaining promotion to higher
positions.
Cuban intelligence defectors also report that the cash-strapped
Cuban economy is inhibiting its intelligence services.
``The Castro brothers now demand strict accounting of all money spent.
This is demoralizing field operatives,'' one said.Spy ring for Cuba uncovered
Copyright © 1999 The Miami Herald