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politics and politicians Title: Jerry Brown's Castro Trouble Meg Whitman isnt the only gubernatorial candidate with a legal skirmish in her past. Cuba expert Ann Louise Bardach reports that Jerry Brown violated U.S. sanction law during a trip to Cuba by using a CIA turncoat as a travel agent. Similar sanction violations were prosecuted extensively by George W. Bush. Plus: never before reported details of Browns mojito-fueled conversations with Fidel on topics from Elian Gonzalezs future to Hugo Chavezs role in Venezuela; Browns four-hour limo ride with Fidel; the double agent who booked Browns travel; and Browns later concerns about breaking the law. It was well after midnight on July 24, 2000, when I heard a knock at the door of our room on the Hotel Nacionals sixth floor. Visiting hours in Cuba run later than they do in the United States, but even by Havana standards, this was a tad late. My husband opened the door to reveal Jerry Brown, the mayor of Oakland, former governor of California, former presidential candidate, and one of the most original and unpredictable politicians in American history. Its true you never know who youll run into at the Nacional Hotel in Havana. A shabby Grand Hotel, whose suites are rumored to be secretly wired, the very walls of the Nacional seem to breathe intrigue. Think Casablanca on the Caribbean. Well, it makes it a crime! Brown exclaimed. The Treasury Department can prosecute me. And never more so than in the summer of 2000. Fidel Castro, after all, was celebrating his greatest triumph since the Bay of Pigs: the return of the miracle rafter child, Elian Gonzalez. Welcomed into our modest room, an amiable Brown, who had put on some weight and lost some hair in recent years, first inquired what we had to drink. Finding something to his liking in the minibar, he settled into the rooms one upholstered chair and put his feet up. Earlier in the evening, we had encountered and chatted with Brown and his aides in the small dining room on the Nacionals sixth floor. He and his companions said they were enjoying Cubas many enchantments, including the hotels mojitos, when not attending to official business. My Havana meeting with Brown came at the beginning of his one-week Cuban adventure, a Caribbean getaway that perhaps did not take into consideration his future political ambitions. It was unlikely that Brown anticipated he would soon be the attorney general of California or that 10 years hence hed be throwing his hat into the ring once again to be governor of California. Or that his Republican opponent, Meg Whitman, would be willing to pony up some $150 million to defeat him. Until last week, Whitman was basking in a five-point lead, numbers that plummeted after revelations of her long-term employment of an undocumented Latino housekeeper. Suddenly Brown, in a state where Latinos cast 22 percent of the vote, has the five-point advantage. But as it turns out, Brown had his own Latin misadventure, one that may have skirted the law. Indeed, by the time Brown returned from his Cuban idyll on July 29, 2000, he had bonded with its Maximum Leader and lunched with the worlds most famous 6-year-old, Elian Gonzalez. And all thanks to a trip planner who happened to be a former CIA officer-turned-double agent-turned-tour guide. *** Traveling to Cuba with Brown was Jacques Barzaghi, his controversial aide de camp; George Musgrove, Oaklands assistant city manager; and the director of KTOP, Oaklands public TV channel, who was there to memorialize the mayors mission. Brown explained to me that he was there to officiate Oaklands sister-cityhood with Santiago de Cuba. True to form, Brown offered plenty of engaging and unpredictable conversation: He lamented that the liberals were ruining Oaklands school system and discussed his plans for a establishing a charter military school. Brown and company also expressed shock at the number, youth, and visibility of the prostitutes who flocked around Cuban hotels and visiting foreigners. Brown then surprised me with a query of his own. Do you know who this guy Philip Agee is? Before I could reply, he added guilelessly, Hes our travel agent. *** Prior to his reinvention as a Cuban tour guide, Agee, who died in 2008, was a CIA agent who had disclosed the identity of scores of U.S. intelligence assets in 1975 before fleeing the country. Many in U.S. intelligence, including former CIA director George H.W. Bush, believed that Agees disclosures led to the murder of at least one of those named.
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#1. To: calcon (#0)
Our Cuba policy is insane.
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