Castro: family jewels a smokescreen
Castro charges CIA more murderous than ever 1 hour, 5 minutes ago
HAVANA (Reuters) - Convalescing Cuban President Fidel Castro charged
on Sunday the release of classified CIA documents detailing past
abuses was a smoke screen behind which the Bush administration hoped
to hide even worse methods.
“I think that this action could be an attempt … to make people
believe that these methods belong to another era and are no longer
used,” Castro wrote in an editorial published by the communist
country’s official media.
“Everything described in the documents is still being done, only in a
more brutal manner around the entire planet, including an increasing
number of illegal actions in the very United States.”
The CIA declassified on Tuesday hundreds of pages of long-secret
records that detailed some of the agency’s worst illegal abuses
during about 25 years of overseas assassination attempts, domestic
spying and kidnapping.
The documents are known in the CIA as the “Family Jewels” and some
describe the agency’s efforts to persuade Johnny Roselli, believed to
be a mobster, to help plot the assassination of Castro.
“Sunday is a good day to read what appears to be science fiction,”
Castro began his three-page editorial, titled “The Killing Machine.”
He went on to quote extensively from material covering the attempt on
his life, as well as a New York Times analysis of all the documents.
Cuba charges that Castro has been the target of hundreds of
assassination attempts. The Cuban leader has said numerous times that
President George W. Bush has ordered him killed.
Castro also reiterated in detail his long-held belief that U.S.
President John F. Kennedy, assassinated in 1963, was the victim of a
plot involving elements of the CIA and militant anti-Castro Cuban
exiles.
Castro, a master sharp-shooter with a telescopic rifle, insists Lee
Harvey Oswald could not have been the only shooter in Dallas.
“You lose the target after every shot even if it is not moving and
have to find it again in fractions of a second,” he said.
Castro has not been seen in public since undergoing emergency
intestinal surgery in July last year, when he handed over power
temporarily to his younger brother, Raul.
But the 80-year-old revolutionary has returned to public life since
March by writing occasional articles, called “Reflections of the
Commander in Chief.” He has been writing more frequently in recent
weeks, fueling speculation that his health is improving.