Washington Blew Up Cuban Airliner In 1976
BY JOAQUÍN ORAMAS
The following article is reprinted from the October 9, 1996, issue of the Cuban
newsweekly Granma International. It was originally published under the headline,
"Time doesn't erase the pain."
Twenty years of history go by in a flash. However, the inexorable passage of time
hasn't been able to erase from the hearts and minds of Cubans the pain and indignation
that shook our people's sensibility on learning of the terrible consequences of
the sabotage of a Cubana airliner, perpetrated by the U.S. Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA).
Minutes after taking off from the Barbados airport on October 6, 1976, a Cubana
airliner with 73 people on board exploded in midair over the Caribbean Sea. All
the passengers (57 Cubans, 11 North Koreans and five Guyanese) perished. Subsequent
investigations confirmed that the explosion was the result of a sabotage perpetrated
by counterrevolutionary elements who placed a bomb in the aircraft.
Venezuelans Freddy Lugo and Hernán Ricardo were charged with direct responsibility
for the crime, and counterrevolutionary Cubans Orlando Bosch and Luis Posada Carriles
were accused of masterminding the sabotage and providing the means for Lugo and
Ricardo to carry it out.
The Venezuelans' confessions and supporting evidence stunned and angered millions
of people. Photographs of more than one million people filling Revolution Square
to express their repudiation, supported by condemnation of the horrific crime
in every Cuban city and town, are tremendously moving.
How could some individuals' hatred for the efforts of an entire people to develop
and defend its sovereignty lead to such abominable deeds? That was the question
on the lips of many sensible people who, personal beliefs and political positions
aside, found such methods totally unacceptable. Clearly, the explosion wasn't
the result of some desperate act, but part of a plan and method initiated immediately
following the triumph of the Cuban Revolution. Counterrevolutionary bands organized
by the CIA and sponsored by the U.S. government, after failing in their attempts
to instigate fratricidal warfare on the island, tried to unleash terror on Cuba.
Prior to the explosion, Cuban counterrevolutionary elements had carried out dozens
of attacks on Cuban offices and installations as well as entities related to Cuba.
Shortly after mounting attacks on the Cuban embassy and the Air Panama offices
in Colombia, CORU, a CIA organization of Cuban counterrevolutionaries, claimed
responsibility for those and other acts of aggression and stated: "Very soon,
we're going to attack aircraft in flight."
Echoing the Cuban government's accusations against those responsible for the crime,
in October 1976 the Montreal daily La Presse recalled that Orlando Bosch and Luis
Posada Carriles had both been trained by the CIA to assassinate Cuban leaders.
It also revealed that they were linked to the murder of Orlando Letelier, former
foreign minister of Chile's Popular Unity government.
Cuba revealed the facts surrounding the Barbados sabotage at the 5th Regional
Navigation Conference, held in Lima in October 1976, and U.S. pressure was unable
to deter the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) from condemning
it at its general assembly. The ICAO resolution exhorted any state with the means
to do so to pursue and punish with the utmost severity those criminals who carried
out this act, so that the sanction would correspond to the magnitude of the crime
and constitute a deterrent to future sabotage.
What did the U.S. government do? It attempted to silence the international repercussions
provoked by the sabotage. Raúl Roa, Cuba's foreign minister, made this
clear during a conference held in Trinidad and Tobago to discuss the steps to
be taken in relation to the investigation and evidence that had come to light
concerning the Barbados sabotage. The conference was attended by the host country,
Cuba, Barbados, Guyana and Venezuela.
Today Orlando Bosch flaunts his impunity on the streets of Miami, protected by
the U.S. authorities. Posada Carriles escaped from prison, with the aid of Venezuelan
elements and the CIA, to work subsequently as one of the instigators of the U.S.
dirty war against the Sandinista government. He was also linked with the Salvadoran
death squads, always at the service of the CIA.
During these 20 years, the U.S. government and even the ICAO have maintained a
wall of silence over the criminal sabotage of the Cuban passenger flight transporting
young athletes, students and workers. They did not even recall it during the recent
controversy over the downing of the two light aircraft piloted by counterrevolutionary
elements that violated Cuban airspace.
It didn't suit their purposes to talk about the Barbados sabotage, nor about the
thousands of attacks on Cubans, Cuban properties and friends of Cuba.
Nevertheless, time has not erased the memory of the profound pain that shook the
Cuban people when that event occurred, nor has it diminished one iota the validity
of what Fidel said to the over one million Cubans who filled Revolution Square
to honor the martyrs of that terrible explosion: `When an energetic and virile
people weep, injustice trembles."