The Old Man and the CIA: A Kennedy Plot to Kill Castro?
New
evidence of a CIA scheme to use Ernest Hemingway's Cuban farm.
By David Corn and Gus Russo
MARCH 8,
2001
https://www.thenation.com/article/archive/old-man-and-cia-kennedy-plot-kill-castro/
Did John
and Robert Kennedy plot murder? For decades, a clear answer to that dicey
question has evaded historians, while Kennedy loyalists have fought hard to
prevent such a stain from befouling the memory of the brothers. But a
thirty-nine-year-old Pentagon memorandum–found three years ago by a college
professor and heretofore unpublicized–suggests that Jack and Bobby discussed
and apparently sanctioned the development of a possible assassination attempt
against Fidel Castro during a 1962 meeting in the Oval Office. And–in a
weirder-than-fiction twist–the scheme they considered involved Ernest
Hemingway’s farm outside Havana.
It’s no
secret now that President Kennedy and his brother the Attorney General wanted
Fidel Castro out of the way. After Castro thwarted the Kennedy-approved and
CIA-orchestrated invasion at the Bay of Pigs in April 1961, the Kennedys
continued to seek means of toppling the Cuban leader. In early 1962, according
to a CIA memo, Bobby Kennedy told a group of CIA and Pentagon officials that a
solution to the Cuban problem carried “the top priority in the United States
government–all else is secondary.” Soon after, the CIA, which had begun
planning murder plots against Castro during the Eisenhower Administration, was
again devising a variety of assassination plans–efforts that would involve an
exploding seashell, poison pills, a toxin-contaminated diving suit and Mafia
associates. Ever since this clandestine activity started becoming public in the
1970s, former CIA officers have maintained that John and Robert Kennedy were
fully aware of and supportive of the agency’s lethal intentions, that the CIA
conspirators were not rogues but loyal civil servants following orders. Kennedy
defenders countered that no piece of paper shows that the pair specifically
endorsed or authorized hit jobs.
In his Robert Kennedy and His Times, historian and former Kennedy Administration official Arthur Schlesinger Jr. passionately declared, “The available evidence clearly leads to the conclusion that the Kennedys did not know about the Castro assassination plots before the Bay of Pigs or about the pursuit of those plots by the CIA after the Bay of Pigs. No one who knew John and Robert Kennedy well believed they would conceivably countenance a program of assassination…. I, too, find the idea incredible that these two men, so filled with love of life and so conscious of the ironies of history, could thus deny all the values and purposes that animated their existence.” (In 1998, at Schlesinger’s urging, the New York Times published an “editor’s note” saying that while some “historians and officials with knowledge of intelligence matters…have asserted” that JFK ordered the CIA to assassinate Castro, “others, also close to the President, dispute their account.”) In his recent biography of Robert Kennedy, Evan Thomas, the assistant managing editor of Newsweek, wrote, “RFK’s own views on assassination in this period have remained difficult to ascertain…. Kennedy’s closest aides flatly denied that he ever ordered an assassination or discussed the possibility.
The
Pentagon document–once classified Top Secret–was released by the Assassination
Records Review Board in late 1997, and its significance was first noticed by
Larry Haapanen, a professor at Lewis and Clark State College. The memo records
a meeting of senior national security officials in the Oval Office on March 16,
1962. It was written shortly after the afternoon gathering by Brig. Gen. Edward
Lansdale, whom President Kennedy had placed in charge of Operation Mongoose, a
new interagency project cooked up in November 1961 with the ultimate goal of
overthrowing Castro. Present for the conversation were McGeorge Bundy, National
Security Adviser; John McCone, Director of Central Intelligence; Gen. Maxwell
Taylor, military adviser to the President; Gen. Lyman Lemnitzer, Chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff; Roswell Gilpatric, deputy secretary of the Defense
Department; U. Alexis Johnson, a deputy under secretary at the State
Department; and Lansdale. The subject at hand was setting presidential
guidelines for Operation Mongoose. Lansdale reported on efforts to train
anti-Castro Cuban agents in guerrilla warfare. President Kennedy told the group
he would not yet approve any direct US military intervention in Cuba. Next, the
conversation turned to another matter. This is how Lansdale captured it in his “memorandum
for the record”:
The
Attorney General then mentioned Mary Hemingway [Ernest Hemingway’s widow],
commenting on reports that Castro was drinking heavily in disgruntlement over
the way things were going, and the opportunities offered by the “shrine” to
Hemingway. I commented that this was a conversation that Ed Murrow [the former
news broadcaster then heading the US Information Agency] had had with Mary
Hemingway, that we had similar reports from other sources, and that this was
worth assessing firmly and pursuing vigorously. If there are grounds for
action, CIA had some invaluable assets which might well be committed for such
an effort. McCone asked if his operational people were aware of this; I told
him that we had discussed this, that they agreed the subject was worth vigorous
development, and that we were in agreement that the matter was so delicate
and sensitive that it shouldn’t be surfaced to the Special Group [an elite
interagency group that reviewed covert actions] until we were ready to go, and
then not in detail. I pointed out that this all pertained to fractioning
the regime. If it happened, it could develop like a brush-fire, much as in
Hungary, and we must be prepared to help it win our goal of Cuba freed of a
Communist government. [Emphasis added.]
In the
memo, Lansdale mentioned no further details about an operation that could take
advantage of the Hemingway “shrine,” a reference to the farm Hemingway had
owned in Cuba, which was then being converted into a museum. He was writing in
his own sort of covert-op-speak. In another memo, he used a term similar to
“fractioning the regime” to refer to anti-Castro actions that included the
assassination of Castro. (An August 13, 1962, Lansdale memo employed the phrase
“splitting the regime” to describe activities “including liquidation of
leaders.”) With Operation Mongoose ultimately aimed at prompting a popular
uprising in Cuba, the Kennedy men could well have been hoping that an
assassination would spark such a “brush-fire.”
Lansdale’s
description of the Hemingway plan as “so delicate and sensitive” that its
specifics should be hidden from the Special Group is another tip-off that the
operation involved assassination. “That’s the giveaway,” says Peter Kornbluh, a
senior analyst at the National Security Archive and a specialist on US
documents regarding Cuba. “This is the closest thing to a smoking gun that has
been declassified. Only assassination would be taboo for open discussion at the
Special Group, which routinely planned sabotage, violence and chaos to
undermine Castro.”
Loch
Johnson, an intelligence expert who worked on the Senate Church Committee
(which first disclosed the CIA assassination plots in 1975), says the Lansdale
document is “a fascinating memo. It looks like another one of the plots against
Castro.” Several CIA alumni support this interpretation. Ted Shackley, who
served as Miami chief of station during Operation Mongoose, remarks, “It
certainly has the earmarks of an assassination plot.” Samuel Halpern, who was
the number-two to the officer who ran the CIA end of Operation Mongoose, calls
the document “as close as we’re likely to get” to conclusive proof. And a
former CIA director says, “The language of the memo speaks for itself. The only
thing Robert Kennedy can be referring to is the assassination of Castro. This
paragraph should never have been written.”
It is
not clear what specific operation Robert Kennedy was referring to at the March
16 meeting. Neither Halpern nor Shackley recalls receiving orders for a mission
involving the Hemingway farm. Those Mongoose records that have been
declassified do not refer to an assassination attempt at the Hemingway home.
And none of the meeting’s participants are alive. Kennedy’s Defense Secretary,
Robert McNamara, who was scheduled to attend this session but did not, says of
this conversation and the Hemingway-shrine operation, “I don’t know anything
about it. The whole Mongoose thing was insane.”
The
March 16, 1962, meeting occurred at a time when Operation Mongoose was revving
up. Lansdale was busy concocting plans for infiltrating Cuba with commando and
sabotage teams. The CIA’s Miami station was hurriedly recruiting agents in
Cuba. At another Mongoose session five days later, Robert Kennedy, who was the
de facto supervisor of the covert campaign against Castro, raised the prospect
of kidnapping top-level Cuban leaders. (The previous year Robert Kennedy had
been informed that the CIA had attempted to kill Castro before the Bay of Pigs
invasion.) In April 1962 the CIA’s murder plots against Castro were
reactivated. That month, Shackley and Bill Harvey, the CIA official in charge
of operations against Cuba, delivered a U-Haul filled with arms to a mob-linked
hoodlum named John Rosselli, who was supposed to transfer the weapons to Cuban
exiles interested in murdering Castro. (The available historical record shows
no other Mongoose meetings attended by President Kennedy.)
According
to Lansdale’s memo, the discussion of this particular operation had been
triggered by comments made by Mary Hemingway, who had had a brief encounter
with Castro eight months earlier. On July 2, 1961, Ernest Hemingway killed
himself with a shotgun in Ketchum, Idaho. Shortly after that, Mary Hemingway,
his fourth wife, decided to travel to Cuba to visit Finca Vigia, the farm
Hemingway owned outside Havana, and retrieve manuscripts, paintings and other
belongings. Before she left Ketchum, a Cuban government official phoned and
said that Cuba wanted to establish a museum at Finca Vigia. Because there was a
US ban on travel to Cuba, Mary enlisted the assistance of William Walton, a
journalist and artist close to President Kennedy. Walton asked the President
for help, and within hours Mary was cleared for the trip. Valerie Danby-Smith,
who had been Hemingway’s secretary (and who would later marry his youngest son
and assume the Hemingway name), accompanied the widow.
When the
two women arrived at the end of July, according to Valerie Hemingway, Castro
sent them a big basket of fruit and word that if they required assistance they
should contact him, for he was a Hemingway fan. And several nights later,
Castro came calling. In her autobiography, Mary Hemingway, who died in 1986,
noted that Castro “arrived in his jeep, accompanied only by one nondescript
car.” He had brought just a few aides with him, no battalion of bodyguards.
“There was not much security, and that impressed Mary,” Valerie Hemingway
recalls. Mary lined up the servants to greet the Cuban chief. Castro came into
the house. Mary served him coffee. They discussed the transfer of Finca Vigia
to the Cuban government; Castro reminisced about having fished with Ernest.
“Much of the conversation was banter,” Valerie Hemingway says. Castro inspected
the mounted animal heads and asked to see where Hemingway had written his
stories. Mary guided him to the three-story tower she had built as a writing
studio for Ernest several yards from the main house. (“Ernest hated the tower
and always wrote in his bedroom,” Valerie Hemingway notes.)
At the
tower, Castro, without waiting for his aides, bounded up the stairs to the
office on the top floor, and Mary followed. “Mary was also impressed with
that,” Valerie Hemingway says. “She thought that any other national leader
would have ordered an aide to go up ahead of him. Make sure it was safe. It was
an ideal place to do in Castro. She would remark on that many times over the
years.”
In the
weeks afterward, Mary and Valerie sorted out the mess at Finca Vigia; Hemingway
had started coming there in 1938, but he had not been back since the late
1950s. They reviewed thousands of pages of unpublished work, burned his
personal papers (in accordance with his wishes), labeled the animal heads (who
shot it, when and where), put the house in order for display and packed up
possessions Mary wished to keep. Since they could only take hand luggage with
them on the return flight to Miami, they arranged for a shrimp boat heading to Tampa
for repairs to transport crates holding Hemingway’s papers, paintings by Paul
Klee, Juan Gris and André Masson, and other keepsakes.
From
September 1961 to January 1962, Mary Hemingway, still in shock over her
husband’s suicide (she considered it a gun accident), stayed in Idaho. Sometime
around February, she returned to her flat in New York City. And she shared with
her friends stories about her trip to Cuba, her meeting with Castro and how she
had managed to spirit Hemingway’s papers and the paintings out of Cuba. In the
second week of March, stories appeared in the New York Times and
the New York Post about her time in Cuba, though neither mentioned
Castro’s light security detail and his cavalier climb to the top of the tower.
One of her friends, Clifton Daniel, the assistant managing editor at the Times and
husband of Margaret Truman, contacted US Information Agency chief Edward R.
Murrow and suggested that he speak with Mary Hemingway. As Murrow replied to
Daniel in a March 20, 1962, letter, “Mary Hemingway did call. We had an
interesting and useful conversation and I passed her remarks on to one or two
interested parties down here.” (The USIA was a participant in Operation
Mongoose. Daniels and Murrow are deceased.)
“The
tower could be the key to it,” Valerie Hemingway says. “It was what impressed
Mary Hemingway the most about Castro.” Valerie Hemingway insists that Mary
Hemingway would not have consciously aided or abetted a scheme against Castro.
In her autobiography, Mary recalled attending a dinner at the White House in
April 1962, where she “irked” President Kennedy by calling his confrontational
position toward Cuba “stupid, unrealistic and, worse, ineffective.”
Assassinating
Castro at the Hemingway site does seem far-fetched. But in the secret war
against Castro, the US government entertained many bizarre ideas, including
dusting his shoes with a chemical that would cause his beard to fall out. One
scheme called for the use of pyrotechnics to light up the Cuban sky in order to
convince the Cuban people that the Second Coming was at hand; presumably, they
would then rise up to overthrow Castro. (“Elimination by illumination,” as one
official dubbed it.) Yet at the time of the March 16 meeting, the CIA was
probably not in a position to mount a hit against Castro, despite Lansdale’s
overly optimistic assessment that the agency possessed “invaluable assets which
might well be committed for” the Hemingway-shrine endeavor. “We didn’t have any
assets that could do anything with this information then,” says John Sherwood,
a former CIA case officer who worked on the Cuba task force. “We had a few
agents in Cuba who could send us secret-writing intelligence reports. That was
it.” But, Sherwood adds, that did not stop US intelligence from hatching ideas:
“All kinds of things bubbled up then. If Mary Hemingway goes to her cottage in
Cuba and comes back and says something about a slight security detail or
anything else, people would have been interested. No one knew anything. Any
information about Castro was exciting. We never penetrated his entourage. We
never knew where he was.”
The
March 16 memo may not persuade Kennedy believers. In a letter to Professor
Haapanen, written on April 17, 1998, Arthur Schlesinger Jr. notes, “That is an
interesting document you have unearthed…. I don’t think, however, that it
establishes that JFK and RFK authorized or were aware of the CIA assassination
plots. [Director of Central Intelligence] John McCone, who participated in the
discussion, has always denied any knowledge of the plots, so unless he is
lying, he did not interpret the reference to the Hemingway shrine as part of an
assassination project.” Schlesinger assumes McCone told the truth, but McCone’s
denial has not stood up well over the years. At a CIA seminar in 1991, Walt
Elder, McCone’s executive assistant, said that McCone had instructed Richard
Helms, then the agency’s chief of covert operations, to keep him uninformed
about the murder schemes. Moreover, Schlesinger suggests no other reasonable
reading of the discussion regarding the Hemingway farm. In a recent letter to
the authors, Schlesinger wrote, “Heaven knows what Lansdale was talking about,
but he was much given to crackpot ideas.” Yet this Who-knows? response does not
acknowledge that, according to the memo, it was Robert Kennedy, not Lansdale,
who first mentioned the Hemingway-shrine “opportunities.” (As Samuel Halpern
recalls, “Lansdale took solid notes–very accurate.”) Schlesinger does comment:
“I understand how others might place a different interpretation on the
document” from his.
There
may be a definitive answer to the question, Did the Kennedys dabble in murder?
Fifteen hundred linear feet and fifty boxes of Robert F. Kennedy’s classified
and confidential papers are stored at the John F. Kennedy Library in Boston,
and most of the material is closed to the public. No other Attorney General
walked off the job with such a trove of government paperwork. A partial guide
to these records lists scores of intriguing files, including documents
pertaining to Operation Mongoose, the CIA and Cuba, Edward Lansdale and Edward
Murrow. (The guide also refers to Frank Sinatra files that contain “references
to various gangsters, including [Sam] Giancana and others…including Judith
Campbell,” a JFK mistress.) But the Kennedy family considers these papers–many
of which Robert Kennedy obtained from the CIA, the FBI or the State
Department–the private property of his heirs. It strictly limits access to the
records, which are being stored at government expense. Several eminent
historians who have requested permission to examine this historical
treasure–including Richard Reeves, Robert Dallek, Nigel Hamilton, Laurence
Leamer and Seymour Hersh–have been turned away by the Kennedys. Evan Thomas was
allowed to see only portions of the material. And Max Kennedy, a son of Robert
and the person who oversees these records, did not respond to our request to
look at the files for this story. Official papers RFK generated in the course
of public business should be open to public inspection, and the release of
classified government records that he took when he left office ought to be
controlled not by the Kennedy family but by government declassifiers subject to
the Freedom of Information Act.
Forty
years after the Kennedy glory days, it is well known that John Kennedy’s
Camelot had its dark side. Debate remains over how dark. The March 16 memo
offers evidence that John and Robert participated in one of the ugliest
exercises of those turbulent days. Blowing away Castro at the onetime home of
Ernest Hemingway, an author admired by John Kennedy as well as Fidel Castro,
sounds more like derring-do conjured up by a novelist than a plan contemplated
by an Attorney General in the presence of a President. Yet that’s the most
logical reading of this piece of the incomplete historical record–a record
which will remain incomplete as long as the Kennedy family keeps sitting on
thousands of the RFK documents.
David CornDavid Corn is Mother Jones' Washington bureau chief. Until 2007, he was Washington editor of The Nation. He has written for the Washington Post, New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Philadelphia Inquirer, Boston Globe, Newsday, Harper's, The New Republic, Mother Jones, Washington Monthly, LA Weekly, the Village Voice, Slate, Salon, TomPaine.com, Alternet, and many other publications. He is the co-author (with Michael Isikoff) of Hubris: The Inside Story of Spin, Scandal, and the Selling of the Iraq War (Crown, 2006). His book, The Lies of George W. Bush: Mastering the Politics of Deception (Crown, 2003) was a New York Times bestseller. The Los Angeles Times said, "David Corn's The Lies of George W. Bush is as hard-hitting an attack as has been leveled against the current president. The Washington Post called it "a fierce polemic...a serious case....[that] ought to be in voters' minds when they cast their ballots. A painstaking indictment." His first novel, Deep Background, a political thriller, was published by St. Martin's Press in 1999. The Washington Post said it is "brimming with gusto....As clean and steely as an icy Pinot Grigio....[An] exceptional thriller." The Los Angeles Times called it "a slaughterhouse scorcher of a book you don't want to put down" and named it one of the best novels of the year. The New York Times said, "You can either read now or wait to see the movie....Crowded with fictional twists and revelations." The Chicago Tribune noted, "This dark, impressive political thriller...is a top-notch piece of fiction, thoughtful and compelling." PBS anchor Jim Lehrer observed that Deep Background is "a Washington novel with everything. It's a page-turning thriller from first word to last...that brings some of the worst parts of Washington vividly alive." Corn was a contributor to Unusual Suspects, an anthology of mystery and crime fiction (Vintage/Black Lizard, 1996). His short story "My Murder" was nominated for a 1997 Edgar Allan Poe Award by the Mystery Writers of America. The story was republished in The Year's 25 Finest Crime and Mystery Stories (Carroll & Graf, 1997). He is the author of the biography Blond Ghost: Ted Shackley and the CIA's Crusades (Simon & Schuster, 1994). The Washington Monthly called Blond Ghost "an amazing compendium of CIA fact and lore." The Washington Post noted that this biography "deserves a space on that small shelf of worthwhile books about the agency." The New York Times termed it "a scorchingly critical account of an enigmatic figure who for two decades ran some of the agency's most important, and most controversial, covert operations." Corn has long been a commentator on television and radio. He is a regular panelist on the weekly television show, Eye On Washington. He has appeared on The O'Reilly Factor, Hannity and Colmes, On the Record with Greta Van Susteren, Crossfire, The Capital Gang, Fox News Sunday, Washington Week in Review, The McLaughlin Group, Hardball, C-SPAN's Washington Journal, and many other shows. He is a regular on NPR's The Diane Rehm Show and To The Point and has contributed commentary to NPR, BBC Radio, and CBC Radio. He has been a guest on scores of call-in radio programs. Corn is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Brown University.
Gus RussoGus Russo is
the author of Live by the Sword: The Secret War Against Castro and the
Death of JFK (Bancroft). He has worked as an investigative reporter for
PBS's Frontline and ABC News.