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Home Front: WoT
Couple Indicted on Charges of Spying for Cuba
2009-06-06
WASHINGTON — The Justice Department charged Friday that a former State Department analyst and his wife worked as spies for Cuba for nearly 30 years, using a short-wave radio to pass on secret diplomatic information to their Cuban handlers.

Officials said the couple, Walter K. Myers, 72, and Gwendolyn S. Myers, 71, received little in the way of compensation from the Cubans except for the short-wave radio and some travel expenses. Rather, the officials said, the couple appears to have been driven by their strong affinity for Cuba and their bitterness toward “American imperialism.”

“We think they did it because they love Cuba,” said a law enforcement official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the case.
Now they can spend the rest of their days in a Federal pen ...
The Myerses, who live in Washington, were arrested on Thursday and charged in a grand jury indictment unsealed Friday with serving as illegal agents of the Cuban government and wire fraud. A defense lawyer declined to comment on the charges.

The case had been under investigation for three years but intensified two months ago, when an undercover agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, posing as a Cuban agent, approached Mr. Myers. That led to a series of meetings in which the Justice Department said that Mr. Myers and his wife made incriminating admissions about their decades-long work for Cuba.

Mr. Myers began working as a contract instructor at the State Department in 1977 and rose to the position of senior analyst with top-secret security clearance, specializing in European affairs. He retired from the department in 2007.

In the indictment, the Justice Department said that Mr. Myers examined some 200 intelligence reports that dealt with Cuba in 2006 and 2007, many of them classified or top-secret reports that were unrelated to his own duties at the State Department. While some of the material that the government says the Myerses passed on to Cuba apparently related to State Department personnel and internal policy matters, the indictment does not detail the bulk of the material or the sensitivity of it.

David Kris, the assistant attorney general for national security at the Justice Department, called the Myerses’ activity for Cuba “incredibly serious.”

The indictment and the governmentÂ’s supporting material say the Myerses were recruited as spies during an academic trip to Cuba in 1978.

In a diary entry that the Justice Department said Mr. Myers wrote at the time of the trip, he expressed his passion for Cuba and its Communist revolutionary goals and his distaste for “American imperialism” and the United States’ indifference to medical care, the poor and other basic public needs. “Cuba is so exciting!” he wrote, adding that “the revolution has released enormous potential and liberated the Cuban spirit.”
Then he went home and got to work inside the State Department. He was a classic mole ...
The government alleged that soon after their return to the United States, the Myerses began using Morse code, encrypted messages and the short-wave radio to pass sensitive diplomatic information to Havana. They met Fidel Castro on a clandestine trip to Cuba in 1995 and made trips over the years to meet Cuban contacts in Trinidad and Tobago, Argentina, Brazil, Ecuador, and Jamaica, the government charged.

It appears from government documents that suspicions among American counterintelligence officials about a possible security leak within the State Department first led the authorities to focus on Mr. Myers two or three years ago.

This April, an undercover agent from the F.B.I., posing as a Cuban official, approached Mr. Myers outside the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies in Washington, where he taught. The agent said he had instructions to contact him concerning the thawing diplomatic changes in the air between Cuba and the United States. The agent offered Mr. Myers a cigar and wished him a happy birthday.

The agent directed Mr. Myers to search out State Department information about Cuba, and at one in a series of follow-up meetings, Mr. Myers and his wife told the agent that they hoped to “sail home” to Cuba some day on their sailboat, the government said. The couple also expressed some mixed emotions, saying that they were “burned out” by their clandestine activity yet wanted to continue to help Cubans because of their strong ties.

“It’s forever,” the affidavit quoted Mr. Myers as telling the agent. “You know, it’s like Fidel. It’s forever.”
Posted by:Steve White

#8  Obama, Barack MYERS, WALTER
ASHBURN,VA 20147 NOT EMPLOYED/RETIRED 7/25/08 $250

"OK, then, Charges dropped, you are free to go."
Posted by: Skunky Glins 5***   2009-06-06 19:54  

#7  Good news: A aging pair of careless, Cubana chomping amateur espionage agents have been discovered and arrested.

Bad news: No one knows how many PROFESSIONAL hostile intelligence sleeper agents remain in Washington.
Posted by: Besoeker   2009-06-06 13:16  

#6  I wonder if they were political contributors, and what candidates they might have given money to.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2009-06-06 13:12  

#5  In 2006 Myers made a very high profile statement trashing the US relationship with the UK. The fallout has been considerable:
wikipedia
In November 2006, Myers created controversy by describing the "special relationship" between the United States and the United Kingdom a "one sided" "myth".[7][8] He said that he was "ashamed" of the treatment by US President George W. Bush toward Prime Minister Tony Blair.[8] In response, UK MP Denis MacShane said, "After the Republican defeat in the midterm election, every little rat who feasted during the Bush years is now leaving the ship. I would respect this gentleman, who I have never heard of, if he had had the guts to make any of these points two or five years ago."[8] The US State Department distanced itself from Myers comments, stating, "He was speaking as an academic, not as a representative of the State Department."

Original '06 story from The Telegraph (Posted here at Rantburg late yesterday)
Posted by: Atomic Conspiracy   2009-06-06 12:26  

#4  Hey, if I made a trip to Cuba, I would never get a security clearance.
This guy tours there and nobody raises an eyebrow?
Posted by: 3dc   2009-06-06 12:07  

#3  "We think they did it because they love Cuba,"

Send them to Gitmo...
Posted by: Raj   2009-06-06 11:04  

#2  Now now, Skunk, it's easier to support the revolution when you're comfortable in the States ...
Posted by: Steve White   2009-06-06 10:35  

#1  why didn't they move too cuba
Posted by: funky skunk   2009-06-06 10:14  

00:00