I lied
because I was taught by the CIA, says Posada Carriles
HAVANA, Cuba, Jan 30,
(acn).-
The attorney Jose Pertierra denounced the confessed
terrorist Luis Posada Carriles argued before the Federal
Court of El Paso, that his long years of work with the
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) had misled him,
confused him and that he was suffering from memory loss.
In a motion filed Thursday at that court, where he was
prosecuted for perjury, not murder, Posada Carriles had
that curious defense when questioned by immigration
officials shortly after illegally entering the United
States in March 2005.
Pertierra notes in an
article reproduced by
Granma newspaper this
Friday that Posada claims that during its course of
employment with the CIA, he used several false
identities and passports to facilitate his work
underground against Cuba, Venezuela and other Latin
American countries.
So many lies confuse him now,
his legal team argues in the 14-page document submitted
to Judge Kathleen Cardone.
Pertierra says that the
government wants to exclude from trial all evidence of
the relationship of Posada Carriles with the CIA, saying
that it was not relevant and that is confidential.
That's because, clarifies
Pertierra, Washington knows Posada has much to say and
it is trying to limit the testimony and evidence as much
as possible in order to prevent the crimes committed by
Posada Carriles through decades of work for the CIA from
coming to light.
There are declassified CIA
cables and confessions of the perpetrators of the crime
which state that Posada masterminded the bombing of a
Cubana airliner Aviation on October 6th 1976, when 73
people died, the lawyer recalled.
He also recalled that
Venezuela filed a request for his extradition in June
2005 and it is still pending without the White House
answering to it, and that Posada confessed to The New
York Times in 1998, that he orchestrated a terrorist
campaign against the hotels and restaurants in Havana.
These actions resulted in
the cold blood murder of Italian Fabio Di Celmo, in the
Copacabana Hotel, in which several others were wounded.
In previous documents,
Posada claimed that everything he did in Latin America
was "on behalf of Washington"; he knows that the more
he threatens to tell of his relationship with the CIA,
the more trembling from those who hide the skeletons in
Washington, says Pertierra.
In order to convince Judge
Cardone that his relationship with the CIA is relevant
to the process in which they accuse him of being a liar,
Posada's defense is that the CIA taught him how to lie,
concluded the lawyer in this article taken from
CubaDebate.