The writer is author of "The Politics of Deception: JFK's Secret Decisions on Vietnam, Civil Rights and Cuba." He wrote this for the Los Angeles Times.
There
is a safe somewhere in the Central Intelligence Agency's headquarters in
Langley, Virginia, that very likely contains a sort of tribute to Fidel Castro.
It's a Cohiba, the cigar favored by the Cuban leader, dusted with one of the
world's most lethal poisons — botulin toxin.
"Merely putting one in the mouth would do the
job," John Earman, an inspector general of the CIA, wrote in 1967. By
"job" he means assassination.
Under orders from Presidents Dwight D. Eisenhower and
John F. Kennedy, the CIA devised numerous plots to kill Castro. The
revolutionary turned communist survived White House enmity for half a century.
The Cohiba was uncovered after CIA Director Richard
Helms ordered Earman to get the truth behind rumors in the press of the
assassination attempts. Earman's little-noticed 1967 report was finally made
public in 1998.
The toxic stogie was the work of Dr. Edward Gunn,
chief of medical services of the CIA's operations division. Gunn's career
defied the Hippocratic pledge: "First, do no harm."
At the dirty tricks division, according to Earman's
report, Gunn was Dr. Do Harm.
In 1961, Gunn had prepared a box of 50 poisoned
cigars, meant to land on Castro's desk in Havana. They were never delivered.
The Cohiba that remained in the agency's permanent
repository was a matter of some pride for the doctor. Although six years old, it
"was still 94 percent effective," the inspector general's report
said. It could still have caused Castro a quick and horrible death.
Gunn devised other attacks. In 1960, the CIA hired
two certified mobsters — SamGiancana of Chicago and Johnny Roselli of Las
Vegas, the report said. Both patriots refused the $150,000 CIA assassination
fee. But they balked at blasting Castro during a speech in Revolutionary
Square. They insisted on poison that would be slipped by their Havana agent
into Castro's teacup.
Gunn had trouble with the poison pill. Instead of
instantly dissolving, it was still there after a night in a water glass.
When tested, it failed to kill the guinea pigs.
Finally, Gunn managed to send a monkey to a screeching death. Although the pill
arrived in Havana, Giancana reported his agent "got cold feet."
Kennedy's failure to overthrow Castro in the 1961 Bay
of Pigs fiasco produced constant Republican attacks on his leadership. It
resulted in what the inspector general's report termed "severe"
pressure by Kennedy to eliminate Castro.
Once more, Giancana and Roselli were recruited, and
once again Gunn provided the means. This time, the poison was inserted in a
pencil with a secret compartment carved by the good doctor. Once more, Havana
agents failed.
By 1963, Desmond Fitzgerald had taken charge of the
CIA's Cuban Task Force. Fitzgerald became renowned at Langley for the laughter
his schemes produced. They never got out of the lab.
There was the midget submarine for planting
explosives in a sea mollusk near Castro's favorite skin-diving area.
And a plot to dust the interior of a skin-diving suit
with bacteria that would cover his body in Madura-foot tumors and another to
infect his underwater oxygen system with tuberculosis bacteria.
"The fruitless and, in retrospect, often
unrealistic plotting should be viewed in that light," Earman wrote.
The final attack was planned — but never carried out
— in 1963 after one of Castro's closest associates was approached by the CIA.
He was Maj. Roland Cubela Secades, a bearded student revolutionary.
According to his CIA handler, Nestor Sanchez, Cubela
hoped for American recognition as Castro's successor once his former comrade
was dispensed with. He asked for explosives and automatic weapons with
telescopic sights to do the job.
As a physician, Cubela said, he could devise other
methods, as well. Gunn helped out.
In his CIA lab, Gunn carved out the guts of a Paper
Mate ballpoint pen. Inside, he placed a syringe so fine that Castro would feel
only a slight nick as poison was injected.
Cubela was not impressed with Gunn's handiwork when
Sanchez delivered it to him in a Paris hotel room. Even so, he placed it in his
pocket. Cubela said he would devise his own poison for the syringe.
It was Nov. 22, and as Sanchez and Cubela walked
downstairs to the hotel lobby, they learned that Kennedy had been assassinated
in Dallas. According to Sanchez, Cubela was rocked by the news.
"Why do bad things happen to good people?"
Castro's would-be assassin asked his CIA handler.
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