National Post

MILITANT WAGED LENGTHY QUEST TO OUST CASTRO

- Frances Robles

Luis Posada Carriles, the anti-Castro militant and former CIA operative who made headlines for decades for his failed attempts to topple the Cuban dictator, died Wednesday in Miramar, Florida. He was 90.

The cause was fluid in his lungs and complicati­ons of a stroke he had in 2015, his daughter, Janet Arguello, said.

Posada spent nearly 60 years on a quixotic and often bloody mission to bring down Fidel Castro by any means possible. He was accused of using bombs and bullets in a crusade that took the lives of innocents but never did manage to snare the Cuban leader, who died at 90 in 2016.

Posada hopped from country to country, finding refuge in jungles, arming rebels, surviving stints in prison and living on the run off the largesse of Cuban exile supporters, then dying a free man at a home for aging military veterans.

“My old tired heart has made enough rounds,” Posada said in a jailhouse interview with The Miami Herald in Panama in 2003. “I’m going to eat my steak, drink my wine and struggle for my country. That will be my life’s end.”

But others saw it differentl­y.

“He was an internatio­nal terrorist of the first order,” said Peter Kornbluh, the director of the Cuba Documentat­ion Project at the National Security Archive, who spent decades collecting declassifi­ed documents on Posada’s ventures.

Luis Posada Carriles was born on Feb. 15, 1928, in Cienfuegos, in central Cuba, one of four children. His father owned a bookstore and printing press.

Posada attended the University of Havana, a few years behind Fidel Castro there. He worked for a time at the Firestone Tire and Rubber Co., first in Havana and then in Akron, Ohio.

By 1960, Posada had a prison record in Cuba for anti-Castro activities and was soon working for the Central Intelligen­ce Agency. He almost participat­ed in the Bay of Pigs invasion in 1961, but the mission, a CIA-backed operation, failed disastrous­ly before his plane could take off and take him to Cuba to join fellow Cuban-exile guerrillas there. He later joined the Venezuelan intelligen­ce service, where Cuban government media said his job was to be a “CIA mercenary.”

One of the deadliest events linked to Posada came in 1976, when a Cubana de Aviación flight exploded off the coast of Barbados, killing all 73 people aboard, including teenagers from Cuba’s national fencing team.

A November 1976 FBI report obtained by the National Security Archive showed that an informant had placed Posada at two meetings where the bombing was plotted.

Living in Venezuela at the time of the attack, Posada was tried before a military tribune but acquitted. He remained in prison while prosecutor­s appealed the ruling, seeking to take the case to a civilian court. But disguising himself as a priest, he escaped.

Posada always insisted that he was innocent of the airplane bombing — what he called “an abominable deed.”

In an interview with The New York Times, Posada admitted to having organized a string of hotel bombings in Havana in the late 1990s that left one Italian tourist dead and 12 people wounded, but he later contended that his comments had been taken out of context.

Posada stayed on the run before reappearin­g in 2000 in Panama. Castro, who was in Panama for a presidenti­al summit, stunned the world when he announced at a news conference that his old foe was in town, trying to kill him. Shortly afterward, Posada and a group of comrades with terrorism-related records were arrested in Panama City with C4 explosives.

Posada was sentenced to eight years in prison, but the president, Mireya Moscoso, in her last week in office, pardoned him in 2004. He showed up in the United States a few months later.

“He had that magnetic quality to him that I’m sure explains how he was able to survive all those years,” said Posada’s lawyer, Arturo V. Hernandez. “He was able to establish alliances to help him. You can’t do that if everybody hates you.”

Posada was charged with lying to the immigratio­n authoritie­s about the bombings and how he had entered the country, but was acquitted in 2011.

A judge ruled that Posada could not be returned to Cuba or Venezuela, the two countries that eagerly sought his return. So Posada stayed in South Florida, where he remained estranged from his wife, Nieves, their daughter and a son, Jorge. They survive him. Complete informatio­n on survivors was not immediatel­y available.

“I think I did what I had to do,” Posada said in the jailhouse interview with The Herald, in which he renounced terrorism, though he said that he still longed to stomp Castro “like a cockroach.”

“I’m doing what I have to do as a Cuban patriot.”

 ?? ALAN DIAZ / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Anti-Castro activist Luis Posada Carriles gestures at a news conference in Miami in 2011.
ALAN DIAZ / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Anti-Castro activist Luis Posada Carriles gestures at a news conference in Miami in 2011.

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