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Council On Hemispheric Affairs |
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Monitoring Political, Economic and Diplomatic Issues Affecting the Western Hemisphere |
Friday,
August 12 2005
COMMENTARY FROM COHA
Justice for the Cuban Five
On
August 9, the Atlanta-based 11th Circuit Appellate Court threw out
the convictions of the Cuban Five, a stunning acknowledgement of injustice
committed in the administration’s troubled fight against terrorism.
The Five were charged with conspiracy to commit espionage by attempting
to infiltrate Miami-based anti-Castro networks in an effort to stem
blatant terrorist attacks against Cuba. The Appellate Court cited the
politically-charged location of the original trial, fiercely anti-Castro
Miami-Dade County-where the facts of the case were no match for the
nationality and pro-Castro affiliations of the five defendants, ruling
out the possibility of a fair trial. On the other hand, in sharp contrast
to the treatment suffered by the Cuban Five, the U.S. is using a raft
of pretexts to build a case against extraditing the infamous anti-Castro
terrorist Luis Posada Carriles, for the 1976 bombing of a Cuban commercial
airliner that killed all 73 aboard. By harboring an ideological contract
killer who shares Washington’s anti-Castro mentality while engaging
in venomous tactics against those who support Havana, the White House
is losing much of the moral credibility of its self-proclaimed war
on terrorism. At the very least, the Cuban Five deserve a fair trial;
better yet, deportation back to Cuba is called for, because otherwise,
they are guilty of nothing more than immigrating illegally to the U.S.,
as are ten million other migrants that go unpunished for their “crime.”
In the late 1990s, the Cuban Five infiltrated radical anti-Castro groups
in Miami in an attempt to curb a rash of terrorist attacks against Cuba.
The Five were arrested after FBI officials accepted an invitation to visit
Cuba under the pretext of acquiring useful intelligence to halt anti-Cuba
acts of terrorism originating in the Miami-based Cuban exile community.
Instead, the U.S. used the information it acquired to arrest the five Cuban
operatives working in Miami. While the government charged the Cubans with
conspiracy to commit espionage, the accused responded that they were merely
trying to protect their homeland from a terrorist threat that was being
tolerated, if not abetted, by U.S. authorities. The Cuban Five, who willingly
confessed their roles, were convicted and sentenced to prison terms ranging
from 15 years to life.
Putting aside the overblown and sensationalized nature of the charges against
the Cubans as well as the unduly harsh sentences, the men were accorded
arrantly prejudiced treatment under which there was no possibility for
a fair trial, such was the partisan nature of the populace and the judicial
system at the trial’s Miami-Dade County venue. The county is the
stronghold of the extremist wing of the Cuban exile community, but the
trial judge refused to grant a change of location. A UN Working Group reviewing
the case noted that, “the trial did not take place in the climate
of objectivity and impartiality which is required in order to conclude
on the observance of the standards of a fair trial.” The UN report
also charges that after their arrest, the Cuban Five were wrongfully held
for 17 months in solitary confinement, and that their lawyers were deprived
of the opportunity to examine all of the available evidence before the
government invoked the Classified
Information Protection Act.
Melodramatically accused of being Cuban spies and of posing an intolerable
danger to the U.S., the Cuban Five (all of whom were amateurs) were guilty
only of attempting, perhaps misguidedly, to protect a country that they
loved but which Washington despises, with their antics less akin to an
M15 mission than a Ghostbuster operation. Though irremediably tainted,
the original decision would have been a trifle more respectable if in the
parallel case of anti-Castro terrorist Luis Posada Carriles, the White
House had not decided to use a series of subterfuges to shield him from
prosecution. The decision to protect Carriles, but unfairly try the Cuban
Five in the U.S., illustrates that Washington is willing to manipulate
its anti-terrorism laws in the service of its political ideology, forgoing
true justice.
This
analysis was prepared by COHA Research Associate Anita Joseph.
August
12, 2005
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COHA
Commentary 05.18