Santa Fe New Mexican

Ex-U.S. ambassador accused of being a Cuban spy since ’81

- By Devlin Barrett

The Justice Department unsealed charges Monday against a retired ambassador, accusing him of being a “clandestin­e agent” for decades — allegedly betraying his country by acting covertly on behalf of Cuba’s spy agency.

The arrest of 73-year-old Manuel Rocha capped an undercover sting operation that lasted more than a year, in which an FBI agent pretending to be a Cuban intelligen­ce operative secretly recorded Rocha making incriminat­ing statements about his life of diplomatic deception.

Attorney General Merrick Garland issued a statement calling the Rocha case “one of the highest-reaching and longest-lasting infiltrati­ons of the United States government by a foreign agent.”

Court papers filed in Miami describe a series of meetings in which Rocha discussed his secret work for Cuba, including one where he said that the “Direccion” — a reference to that country’s General Directorat­e of Intelligen­ce — “asked me … to lead a normal life.”

Rocha allegedly said he followed that instructio­n by creating a public reputation as “a right-wing person,” when he in fact was committed to the cause of communist Cuba.

At one secretly recorded meeting between Rocha and the undercover agent, the suspect allegedly described how he became a State Department employee: “I went little by little. … It was a very meticulous process. … I knew exactly how to do it, and obviously, the Direccion accompanie­d me. … They knew that I knew how to do it.”

Rocha was born in Colombia and became a U.S. citizen in 1978. He joined the State Department in 1981. The criminal complaint against him says that at least as early as that year, he “secretly supported the Republic of Cuba and its clandestin­e intelligen­ce-gathering mission against the United States by serving as a covert agent of Cuba’s intelligen­ce services.”

Rocha pushed false and misleading informatio­n within the U.S. government, authoritie­s say, and met with Cuban intelligen­ce operatives. In the secretly recorded conversati­ons with the undercover FBI agent, Rocha allegedly insisted he was still committed to the revolution­ary cause of communist Cuba, according to the court papers unsealed Monday. Rocha’s arrest last week was first reported by The Associated Press.

Over the years, Rocha rose through the ranks of the State Department to serve in positions at the U.S. embassies in the Dominican Republic, Honduras, Mexico and Argentina before ascending to more sensitive government posts.

From mid-1994 to mid-1995, Rocha served on the U.S. National Security Council, with a portfolio that included Cuba.

From 1999 until 2002, Rocha served as the U.S. ambassador to Bolivia.

That job and others gave him access to U.S. government secrets, including classified informatio­n. Authoritie­s say Rocha repeatedly lied when answering security questions that determined whether he could keep those jobs.

Rocha is charged with conspiring to act as an agent of a foreign government without notifying the Justice Department, acting as an agent of a foreign government without such notificati­on; and lying to obtain a passport. He faces up to 10 years in prison if convicted of the most serious charge, and he is expected to make a brief court appearance Monday.

 ?? ?? Manuel Rocha
Manuel Rocha

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