Friday, July 19, 2013

Cuba & North Korea: Terrorist Brothers in Arms

Cuba & North Korea: Terrorist Brothers in Arms

Posted By Humberto Fontova On July 19, 2013

A North Korean ship trying to sneak missiles through the Panama Canal after leaving Havana was seized by Panamanian authorities this week. Somebody tipped off the Panamanians that the vessel was carrying illegal drugs.

Instead, while searching under sacks of Cuban sugar the Panamanians found the ship crammed with missiles and mucho military contraband. (Nuke-rattling North Korea has been under a UN arms embargo since 2006.)

Upon getting caught red-handed the ship’s North Korean captain and crew went berserk. The hysterical captain was crippled by a heart-attack then tried committing suicide by slitting his throat. The crew ran amok sabotaging the ship’s unloading cranes and battled with the Panamanian police. No fatalities were reported and the crazed North Koreans were eventually subdued, arrested and incarcerated inside an old U.S. naval base.

A proud Panamanian President Ricardo Martinelli announced the spectacular bust whereupon Republican Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen issued a press-release. “This incident should serve as a wakeup call to the [Obama] Administration, which over the past few months has been leading an apparent effort to normalize relations with Cuba, that it cannot continue to engage the Castro regime,” read the statement by the former Chairwoman of the House Committee on Foreign Relations. “This revelation confirms once again that Pyongyang must be re-designated on the State Sponsor of Terrorism list as it continues to cooperate with the Cuban regime, a designated State Sponsor of Terrorism country, in order to undermine U.S. interests.”

At first Raul Castro tried threatening the Panamanians behind the scenes with stern diplomatic notes. Then last Saturday, in the manner of Don “Da Godfather” Corleone sending Tom “consigliere” Hagen to Hollywood for a chat with director Jack Woltz, Castro sent his “Vice Foreign Minister” (court eunuch) Rogelio Sierra Díaz to Panama for a “chat” with President Martinelli, whose response was identical to Woltz’s. So Castro’s court eunuch scurried home with his tail between his legs.

But instead of the famously equine and bloody Corleone response, Castro — on the hot-seat, without leverage and without any room to maneuver — issued a half-heated mea culpa, claiming the two anti-aircraft missile systems, nine missiles, two Mig-21 fighter jets and 15 jet engines hidden on the ship. The North Koreans were going to repair the items and promptly return them to Cuba, says a straight-faced Castro.

Last month North Korea’s military chief, General Kyok Sik Kim, and a much-bemedaled entourage visited Cuba and stayed for a week-long meeting with, among others, Raul “El Guapo” Castro himself. We came “to find colleagues in the same trench: the Cuban comrades,” snapped the scowling North Korean general.

Hugh Griffiths, a spokesman for Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, reports that a few months ago they tracked a secret flight from Cuba to North Korea that, for some fascinating reason, took a path over central Africa. “Given the history of North Korea, Cuban military cooperation and now this latest seizure, we find this flight more interesting,” deadpanned Griffiths. “After this incident there should be renewed focus on North Korean-Cuban links.”

These links, by the way, didn’t start last week. On ABC’s “This Week” circa October 5, 2003, host George Stephanopoulos interviewed CIA weapons inspector David Kay regarding what his team found in Iraq. “I would contend we’ve already found things that, if they had been known last December, January, February, would have made huge headlines,” said Kay. “Clandestine labs in the biological program, North Korean missiles going to Cuba…”

An article which ran on December 11, 2004 in The Pyongyang Times hailing a North Korean visit to Cuba gushed: “The Cuban army and people will fight shoulder to shoulder with the Korean army and people in an anti-US joint front. Our armed forces exchanged views on strengthening cooperation in military fields.”

All the above notwithstanding, the men today entrusted with America’s defense have traditionally considered Castro’s KGB-mentored, terror-sponsoring regime less dangerous than the Frito Bandido. To wit: “Today, the Cuban ‘threat’ is a faint shadow, change is afoot in the Cuban leadership,” wrote then-Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee John Kerry in Dec. 2009. His piece loudly banged the drums for (further) opening U.S. travel to Cuba, thus (further) securing the Stalinist regime’s financial lifeline—thus (further) enriching and entrenching the only people in Cuba with guns, who also own Cuba’s main money-maker. Castro’s KGB-trained secret police and military, you see, enjoy majority ownership of Cuba’s tourism industry.

Labeling the Castro regime a threat was “just goofy,” snickered then-Senator Chuck Hagel in 2002, while also banging the drums to lift the “embargo” (i.e. further reward, enrich and entrench the Stalinist regime that came closest to nuking Hagel’s homeland and has succored every terrorist group from the PLO to the FARC to the Tupamaros–and is now apparently arming North Korea.)

And lest you think these nowadays vital U.S. officials have “grown in office”– or even taken much note of the North Korean-Cuban collusion—here’s a fascinating factoid: U.S. State Dept. officials and Cuba will commence migration talks this very week.

In fairness, Kerry and Hagel figure among a fine tradition of crackerjack U.S. statesmanship regarding Cuba. To wit:

“Don’t worry, Ambassador [Republican Earl Smith, who served as ambassador to Cuba from '57-59, and repeatedly raised the alarm about Castro’s communist ties]. We’ve infiltrated Castro’s guerrilla group in the Sierra Mountains. The Castro brothers and Ernesto ‘Che’ Guevara have no affiliations with any Communists whatsoever.” (Havana CIA station chief Jim Noel Nov. 1958.)

“Fidel Castro is not only not a communist –he’s a strong anti-Communist fighter. He’s ready to help us in the hemisphere’s anti-communist fight and we should share our intelligence with him.” (CIA Cuba “expert” Frank Bender, April, 1959.)

Raul Castro had been assigned a KGB handler since his visit to the Soviet Bloc in 1953, by the way. And when arrested in Mexico in 1956, Ernesto “Che” Guevara was found to have, in his very wallet, the calling card of the KGB’s top Latin American agent, Nikolai Leonov. Many Cubans knocked on many Washington doors trying to get this across. Obviously to no avail.

This “blind spot,” let’s call it, caught the eye of many knowledgeable Cubans from day one. To wit: “My brothers’ feeling of hatred for this country cannot even be imagined by you Americans,” marveled Fidel and Raul’s bewildered sister Juanita while testifying to the House Committee on Un-American Activities upon defecting in June of 1965. “His intention – his obsession – is to destroy the U.S.”

A surely unrealistic — and probably faded — obsession nowadays. But surely the Castro brothers haven’t come around to favoring our well-being nearly as fervently as our Secretaries of Defense and State seem to favor theirs.

So amigos, when it comes to our nation’s defense—we’re in good hands with this State Department.

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Article printed from FrontPage Magazine: http://frontpagemag.com

URL to article: http://frontpagemag.com/2013/humberto-fontova/cuba-north-korea-terrorist-brothers-in-arms/

 

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