Near the end of his appearance last week on A Mano Limpia on
Why? Because these men were top targets of Cuban intelligence.
Never mind Posada’s background or the fact that the Bush Administration itself calls him a terrorist.
Never mind that Alvarez pleaded guilty after machine guns, a silencer, a grenade launcher, and other weapons were found stored on property he owns in Broward County. (He entered the plea, the Herald reported, after a mean-spirited judge rejected a “proposal to include Cuban Americans from
No, we got played because Simmons accuses an FBI informer in the case of being a double agent, and because
If Fidel’s for it, I’m against it. With that mindset, Simmons is going to do very well in
He’s certainly doing well on A Mano Limpia, where host Oscar Haza treated him with the journalistic gentleness we only see when Randy Alonso meets his comandante en jefe. It was less an interview than a chat where the host mainly nudges the guest from one topic to another – guided in this case by the notes from which Simmons read. The program, with a bad voice-over translation, is linked at Penultimos Dias.
In this hour, Simmons smilingly accuses four people of serving as agents of influence for
Simmons is a U.S. Army officer. The Defense Intelligence Agency refers to him as a “former employee.” In his spare time he and a collection of former Cuban intelligence officers work at an organization he founded. His bio makes it appear that he worked on
Simmons made his accusations, he said, based on his conversations with former Cuban intelligence officers. Haza, to his credit, did ask if these Cubans might be lying; Simmons said there’s “no possibility” of that. Well, that settles that!
Simmons spoke at most length about Alberto Coll, who was convicted in 2005 of lying on
When Coll faced charges related to that travel violation, rumors abounded that he was being investigated for espionage. Haza asked if Simmons had anything to do with the Coll investigation. Simmons said he would “rather not say.” Haza politely left it at that.
But Simmons insisted that there was more to Coll’s story, even though the prosecutor in the case said on the record to journalist Ann Louise Bardach, that “we recognized this was not the crime of the century, and that’s why we recommended the lowest possible punishment – something we never do.”
Simmons’ Cuban sources tell him that Coll met twice in
In fact, Simmons never said what Coll actually did as an agent of influence. He said – surprise – that Coll spoke to his superiors after his
Similarly, while at the Pentagon, Coll was in a position to “counsel and inform” the Cuban government about
You get the idea.
Simmons charges that Gillian Gunn Clissold is a Cuban agent, again without evidence. He identifies her as a
Simmons worked in a smear of the Cuban American National Foundation – a long-standing, pro-embargo organization that now favors expanded travel to
Simmons is writing a book with a
I wish him well in that pursuit, but he is showing himself now to be a mediocre smear artist. He portrays himself as an expert on one of the world’s top intelligence services, a service that operates in a language he can’t speak. Simmons trades on his government experience, and on the uniform he wears, to level grave charges against American citizens. He offers no evidence but his own judgment, and conversations he has supposedly had with former Cuban officials. His assertions make for good television in the 305 area code, but they are not backed by anyone in government who has the courage to speak in public.
More important, it doesn’t inspire confidence that our government put a person such as this up against one of the world’s top intelligence services. Watch the program and judge for yourself, but this example jumped out at me. Simmons noted that Coll has the same alma mater, the
By my count, there are 20,356 students enrolled now at the
[Update: A reader asked, with good reason, why I discussed only three of the four people whom Lt. Col. Simmons accused of being Cuban agents of influence, omitting Marifeli Perez-Stable. I meant nothing by the omission. Her views on
Seriously, he doesn't speak Spanish? What a joke. What's the average IQ of the Haza audience?
ReplyDeleteThere's only one explanation -- Simmons has to be a Cuban double agent; because this works so well to the Cuban agenda -- making these anti-Castro spokespeople look completely and utterly ridiculous. A job well done Simmons!
ReplyDeletePeters, you seem particularly touchy about this individual -- Is there something that you are afraid of?
ReplyDeletewhat doesn't one of these shows have Peters on with Simmons -- now THAT would be entertainment!
ReplyDeleteIn the Coll matter, all the public information out there would lead any reasonably informed person (that excludes Bardach) to believe that he was the target of a Cuban intelligence recruitment effort. For reasons known only to himself, he either did not recognize it as such and remained involved in the effort, or he did recognize it as such and remained involved in the effort. The feds didn't care which, they just wanted to end it.
ReplyDeleteSimmons can't speak spanish, he has probably high school education (his listeners have less).
ReplyDeletered neck latins en punto "let hickdome ring!@
Anon from 11:50, sweating bullets, thanks for asking.
ReplyDeleteAnon from 4:11, that’s an interesting thought, but the line Simmons is peddling now, and that others insinuated when the case was alive, was that he was engaged in espionage. Re Bardach, are you saying she got something wrong in this case?
I have to go with Anon from 4:11. Regardless of the stories being peddled by the haters it's plausible that Coll was the target of Cuban espionage efforts...much more plausible than him being a turncoat of some sort.
ReplyDeleteAs for Bardach - her piece in Slate is probably her best effort. It should be noted that her seething hatred for any Cuban or Cuban-American who doesn't lick Fidel's boots is well-known. I have never heard or read her saying anything even remotely generous of someone who supports the embargo. To her it is also an irrational hatred of all things Fidel...ironically she is the other side of the coin.
The smartest thing ever written on this "who is a spy" mess was Bardach's article in the
ReplyDeleteWashington Post "The Spies Among Them"
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A43495-2004Jan23?language=printer
try reading it, bozo, and learn something!
good grief, Bardach is a poseur. Watching her feeble intellect in action attempting to explain the Cuban reality is downright embarrassing. The laughable notion of her protrayed as a "Cuba expert"(!) is nothing more than an intellectual fraud perpetrated on the reading public.
ReplyDeleteThree cheers for Bardach and three cheers for SLATE.
ReplyDelete"Anonymous" seems to have an "irrational hatred of all things" factual==as in the Coll case--the judge, the author and all the witness are lying?
While, anonymous, hiding behind his "name", slings mud at an author who researched and reported verifiable facts, it looks as if Coll has survived the verbal attacks, whew.
Three cheers for Bardach and three cheers for SLATE.
ReplyDelete"Anonymous" seems to have an "irrational hatred of all things" factual==as in the Coll case--the judge, the author and all the witness are lying?
While, anonymous, hiding behind his "name", slings mud at an author who researched and reported verifiable facts, it looks as if Coll has survived the verbal attacks, whew.
Kudos to Mr. Peters for this revealing piece and to Ms. Bardach for her honest and insightful reporting
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteWhy Peters article sounds so angry, so personal, so ..? Probably Simmons has the answer.
ReplyDelete