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Judi Lynn

(160,450 posts)
Fri Jan 25, 2013, 07:37 PM Jan 2013

Our Man in Havana

Our Man in Havana

Was USAID planning to overthrow Castro?

BY PETER KORNBLUH |JANUARY 25, 2013

At the very end of John Kerry's Jan. 24th confirmation hearing, Sen. Robert Menendez (D-NJ) treated him to a lecture about repression in Cuba. "And then we have a United States citizen who all he tried to do is give access to the Internet to a small Jewish population in Havana and has been languishing in jail for almost four years," Menendez asserted. "That is real torture." In his final question to Kerry, Menendez asked if "we can expect you to be a strong supporter" of U.S. "democracy programs worldwide?" The all-but-confirmed nominee for secretary of state answered, "yes."

The democracy program in Cuba that concerns Menendez has come under increasing public scrutiny since that U.S. citizen, Alan Gross, was detained in Havana on Dec. 3, 2009. In the wake of his arrest, the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee (SFRC), none other than John Kerry, put a temporary hold on the USAID-run operation, officially known as the Cuban Democracy and Contingency Planning Program (CDCPP). For almost a year, the SFRC made an effort to bring a degree of accountability to this little-known, under-the-radar, $140 million U.S. government initiative in Cuba.

To his credit, it is Gross himself who has done the most to lift the veil of secrecy from the CDCPP. Last year, he and his wife, Judy, filed a civil lawsuit against USAID and the contractor for whom Gross worked as a consultant, Development Alternatives Inc. (DAI), in an effort to call public attention to his plight and press the Obama administration to step up efforts to negotiate his release. Specifically, their suit seeks damages for the failure of USAID and DAI to inform him of the risks he faced, to "take basic remedial measures to protect Mr. Gross," and to provide the education and training "necessary to minimize the risk of harm to him."

Their legal complaint acknowledged that he was paid under a broader USAID contract with DAI to travel multiple times to Cuba, posing as a tourist, carrying specialized technology to establish independent satellite communications networks on various parts of the island; it quotes his own trip reports that this was "very risky business" for which he was not adequately trained or supervised.

More:
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2013/01/25/our_man_in_havana

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Our Man in Havana (Original Post) Judi Lynn Jan 2013 OP
He's a spy! immoderate Jan 2013 #1
If this had happened in any other country it would be a non-issue for the media. DollarBillHines Jan 2013 #2
This just gets better! flamingdem Jan 2013 #3

DollarBillHines

(1,922 posts)
2. If this had happened in any other country it would be a non-issue for the media.
Fri Jan 25, 2013, 09:17 PM
Jan 2013

It is difficult for me to gin up any sympathy for him. Gross knew he was on shaky ground.

flamingdem

(39,308 posts)
3. This just gets better!
Fri Jan 25, 2013, 09:51 PM
Jan 2013

Just wish the media would get into the irony here. I wonder what Gross' wife will do next. Chances are all parties are waiting for Kerry to do something but of course now he'll have Menendez nipping at this heels and behind the scenes negotiations will be tougher.

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