MORE THAN A DOZEN DEFECTORS FROM CUBA’S ELITE INTELLIgence and security services speak in these pages. They worked during different eras for the Castro brothers, with bare-knuckled dedication, dueling with the CIA from the dawn of the Cuban revolution through the late 1990s, until each made the dangerous decision to flee into the welcoming arms of American officials. A few of these brave men must live obscurely with new identities assigned by federal authorities because they are under Cuban government death sentences.
Florentino Aspillaga Lombard, the most knowledgeable Cuban defector ever to change sides, appears here with his true name, although he has lived with a new one since 1987, surviving two assassination attempts by Cuban operatives. Aspillaga agreed to share his personal saga with me during about fifteen hours of recorded interviews. He also gave me a copy of a revealing personal and professional memoir written soon after he arrived in the United States. Until now scarcely any of his memories have appeared on the public record. He has asked nothing of me in return for his remarkable story, has put no limits on how I tell it, and has no stake in the publication of this book.
I have also interviewed other ranking defectors from the Castro brothers’ intelligence and counterintelligence agencies and their personal security and commando squads. Some of these men speak in true name, others I have had to disguise for their protection. (When names are changed, readers are told.) All of the defectors knew that my purpose in meeting with them was to write this book unveiling the mysteries and crimes of Cuban intelligence over the last half century. They too asked nothing of me other than a cafecito now and then, and that I retell their stories accurately.
All of them knew of my own three-and-a-half decades of foreign intelligence work for the CIA and the National Intelligence Council. Most had read my earlier book, After Fidel, and were comfortable conferring with me, most of them on numerous occasions. I had never met any of them during my years in government, although I was familiar with much of their reporting and experiences. In almost every instance, I knew, for example, how highly they were regarded by American intelligence authorities, and how thoroughly their bona fides had been verified.
Nevertheless, in our meetings I applied most of the same debriefing rigors that are standard for intelligence and law enforcement officers. In some instances I was able to confirm what one defector told me by asking another who had not worked closely with him in Cuba. My knowledge as an historian of the Castro brothers and their revolution—as a CIA Cuba desk analyst, National Intelligence Officer for Latin America in the early 1990s, and a university lecturer for 30 years in Washington and Miami—permitted me to pose questions to them with authority. When recounting an especially interesting story in response to a question, one defector told me, “No one ever asked me that before.”
Their recollections have also been checked against the memories of many former CIA officers I interviewed. Nearly all of them have requested anonymity, but they spoke to me candidly and in numerous meetings, phone conversations, and correspondence. I also had the good fortune to know many of the now-deceased senior CIA officials whose curious and controversial roles in the Cuba wars of the early 1960s are described here. I interviewed several of them before their deaths.
My research inevitably led me to the hundreds of thousands of pages of declassified CIA documents stored at the National Archives. There is no other trove of American intelligence history as brutally revealing of once highly sensitive operational secrets as these records related to the assassination of John F. Kennedy. Legislation passed by Congress, and signed into law by President Bill Clinton in 1992, created the Assassination Records Review Board. The members had the authority to require the declassification of all U.S. government documents considered relevant to the assassination in Dallas. In my last position at CIA, when I served as Director of the Center for the Study of Intelligence from 1994 to 1998, officers of the Center’s Historical Review Group—mostly Agency retirees working on contract—were responsible for declassifying the CIA documents. The CIA History Staff was also part of the Center I managed.
Since my own retirement I have read thousands of those historical records— headquarters assessments by analysts and operatives, field cables, debriefing and polygraph reports, assessments of spies working for CIA, and revealing Agency histories—many of which were released to the Archives with the greatest reluctance and concern. Readers will learn for the first time the identities of secret CIA agents, successful deception operations run against Fidel Castro and his intelligence chieftains, the inner workings of Cuban intelligence, and previously unknown details of the Kennedy-era CIA assassination plotting against Castro.
It was an extraordinary revelation by Aspillaga during my first meeting with him that led me down the circuitous path this narrative pursues. He told me of the order he received early on the morning President Kennedy was shot that strongly suggests prior Cuban government knowledge of what Lee Harvey Oswald would do. Skeptical at first, my research over the last few years led me to declassified reporting from two other reliable American intelligence community sources—both deceased—whose stories about Oswald and Cuban intelligence officers lend significant weight to what Aspillaga told me.
But this is not just a book about the most notorious and documented crime of the twentieth century. It is the first penetrating look into the workings of one of the world’s best and most aggressive intelligence services, now known to have been personally led for nearly fifty years by Fidel Castro, acting as Cuba’s supreme spymaster. The defectors all agree that almost nothing of importance in Cuban intelligence operations against the United States happened without Castro’s involvement. So this is really a many-layered story about him; his character, conspiratorial instincts, audacity, devious brilliance, and hatred of the United States. His many secrets exposed here for the first time reveal Fidel Castro in ways never before fully appreciated.