Deposition
of Edward G. Lansdale, Friday, May 16, 1975
NLF
MR Case No. 93-16. Document No. #8.
Questioned
by Rockefeller Commission counsel David Belin.
Declassified
8/4/94
Ford
Presidential Library
27
pages.
.........“In regards to anti-Castro Cuban harassment raids
against Cuba, Lansdale said that they would have been against the President’s
policy after the October, 1962, and that of those individuals he knew who was
working on such operations, a CIA officer he referred to as “Mr. Harvey” would
have been the person most likely to have initiated such raids.”
Lansdale: “I remember most clearly from ’62 was the
fact that it was definitely against the top executive policy to carry out
harassing raids in Cuba, and I had exacted a promise and had given instructions
in writing to CIA to cease and desist on that, not carry them out…..There might
have been individuals there who would be inclined to know better than an
outsider, and they might attempt something, but it’s just a feeling I had. I
have not been able to pin it down specifically.”
Q: With reference to any particular individuals?
Lansdale: “It might have been Harvey. It might have
been such a person.”
Q: You mean Harvey might have done something you
feel without direction from above?
Lansdale: “Possibly so. That is why I gave him
directions in writing. It was just a gut feeling I had dealing with him. With
his Deputy, with his bosses there, I had no such feeling and I just singled out
an individual I thought, just be doubly sure, I should do that.”
Wiki on Lansdale:
….Lansdale left Vietnam in 1957
and officially went to work for the Secretary of Defence in Washington.
However, he was also employed as a senior officer in the Central Intelligence Agency.
Posts held included: Deputy Assistant Secretary for Special Operations
(1957-59), Staff Member of the President's Committee on Military Assistance
(1959-61).
In March 1960, President Dwight Eisenhower of
the United States approved a CIA plan to
overthrow Fidel
Castro. The plan involved a budget of $13 million to train "a
paramilitary force outside Cuba for guerrilla action."
When President John F. Kennedy took
office, Lansdale was appointed as Assistant Secretary of Defence for Special
Operations. He argued that the CIA should work closely with exiles in Cuba, particularly
those with middle-class professions, who had opposed Fulgencio Batista and
had then become disillusioned with Fidel Castro because
of his betrayal of the democratic process. Lansdale was also opposed to
the Bay of
Pigs operation because he knew that it would not trigger a popular
uprising against Castro. Kennedy respected the advice of Lansdale and selected
him to become project leader of Operation Mongoose.
Over 400 CIA officers were employed full-time on
this project. Sidney
Gottlieb of the CIA Technical Services Division was asked to come up
with proposals that would undermine Castro's popularity with the Cuban people.
Plans included a scheme to spray a television studio in which he was about to
appear with an hallucinogenic drug and contaminating his shoes with thallium
which they believed would cause the hair in his beard to fall out.
These schemes were rejected and instead Richard Bissell decided
to arrange the assassination of Fidel Castro. In
September 1960, Bissell and Allen W. Dulles, the
director of the Central
Intelligence Agency (CIA), initiated talks with two leading figures of
the Mafia, Johnny
Roselliand Sam
Giancana. Later, other crime bosses such as Carlos Marcello, Santos Trafficante and Meyer Lansky became
involved in this plot against Castro.
Robert Maheu, a
veteran of CIA counter-espionage activities, was instructed to offer the Mafia$150,000 to
kill Fidel
Castro. The advantage of employing the Mafia for this work is that it
provided CIA with a credible cover story. The Mafia were known to be angry with
Castro for closing down their profitable brothels and casinos in Cuba. If the
assassins were killed or captured the media would accept that the Mafia were
working on their own.
The Federal Bureau of
Investigation had to be brought into this plan as part of the deal
involved protection against investigations against the Mafia in the United
States. Castro was later to complain that there were twenty ClA-sponsered
attempts on his life. Eventually Johnny Roselli and
his friends became convinced that the Cuban revolution could not be reversed by
simply removing its leader. However, they continued to play along with this CIA
plot in order to prevent them being prosecuted for criminal offences committed
in the United States.
Lansdale later claimed that John F. Kennedy asked
him to draft a contingency plan to overthrow Fidel Castro. But
he added that the idea had not been viable because it depended on recruiting
Cuban exiles to generate an uprising in Cuba, something
that he said was impossible.
In 1963 Kennedy asked Lansdale to concentrate on the
situation in Vietnam.
However, it was not long before Lansdale was in conflict with General Maxwell Taylor, who
was the military representative to the president. Taylor took the view that the
war could be won by military power. He argued in the summer of 1963 that 40,000
US troops could clean up the Vietminhthreat
in Vietnam and another 120,000 would be sufficient to cope with any possible
North Vietnamese or Chinese intervention.
Lansdale disagreed with this viewpoint.
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