Friday, April 25, 2008
Last updated: Saturday April 26, 2008, EDT 7:30 AM
BY ELIZABETH LLORENTE
Staff Writer
A former undercover FBI agent says in a new book that Cuban officials 
asked him to spy on Cuban-Americans including Sen. Bob Menendez and a 
Cliffside Park businessman.
Cuban diplomats in Washington, D.C., were obsessed with generating 
scandalous information about Menendez and two other Cuban-Americans in 
Congress, said Robert Eringer, the author of "Ruse: Undercover with FBI 
Counterintelligence." They blamed Menendez, then in Congress, and his 
two colleagues for tough U.S. policies against Cuba, he said in an 
interview on Friday.
Eringer said he was posing as a literary agent, interested in publishing 
the memoirs of legendary CIA turncoat Edward Lee Howard, when 
representatives of the so-called Cuban Interests Section prodded him to 
infiltrate Cuban exile organizations.
The Cuban officials wanted him to learn "the dynamics," as Eringer put 
it, of Cuban-American communities in the U.S. "For Cuba, the Cold War 
has not ended — it always continued with the United States," said 
Eringer, who added he was promised exclusive business opportunities in 
Cuba as a bribe. "They had no relationship with the United States. These 
Cuban-Americans are people who are well-known to them, and they felt 
they didn't have someone in their camp who could play back to them what 
was going on" in Cuban-American communities.
Cuba and the U.S. have no diplomatic relations. They have "interests 
sections," instead of embassies, in each other's capitols that perform 
many of the consular services embassies typically handle.
Eringer said the Cuban officials were sure the three Cuban-American 
congressional members – Menendez, a Democrat, and Florida Republicans 
Ileana Ros-Lehtinen and Lincoln Diaz-Balart – were receiving illicit 
money from Cuban organizations. They wanted him to "follow the money," 
he said, to "expose and humiliate them."
"The problem," the book quotes a Cuban diplomat as saying, "is three 
congressmen have put a lock on normalizing U.S.-Cuba relations. Wouldn't 
it be grand if somebody investigated them and exposed their back-door 
financial contributions?"
Menendez, the son of Cuban immigrants, said this week he was not 
surprised that the Cuban government was trying to dig up damaging 
information about him. He said many people have told him over the years 
about attempts by Cuban government officials to obtain information about 
him.
"Those of us who have been pursuing freedom and democracy for the Cuban 
people and who have criticized the
communist regime in Cuba," Menendez said, "have known that the Cuban 
Interests Section has been trying to get stuff of a personal nature on 
us so that they can see what useful negative information they can find 
on you.
"It's disturbing that they spend so much time on this kind of thing 
instead of on putting food on the tables of the people in Cuba."
Efforts to reach Cuban officials on Friday night were unsuccessful.
Eringer said Cuban officials gave him a list of people they urged him to 
meet and spy on. Among them was Abel Hernandez, a successful businessman 
from Cliffside Park who is active in anti-Castro lobbying efforts.
"The Cuban government does everything possible to try to find dirt and 
discredit those of us in the United States who have succeeded and 
attained influence," said Hernandez, who belongs to the Cuban American 
National Foundation. "I belong to CANF because it's against communism 
and for human rights. The Cuban government has to create drama all the 
time. They're paranoid, they're full of conspiracy theories. But they're 
not going to shut me up."
Another particular target, Eringer said, was the Cuban American National 
Foundation, a powerful Cuban exile lobby whose national vice president, 
Remberto Perez, lives in Tenafly.
Perez declined to comment for this story.
E-mail: llorente@northjersey.com
A former undercover FBI agent says in a new book that Cuban officials 
asked him to spy on Cuban-Americans including Sen. Bob Menendez and a 
Cliffside Park businessman.
AP
A former undercover FBI agent says in a new book that Cuban officials 
asked him to spy on Cuban-Americans including Sen. Bob Menendez.
Cuban diplomats in Washington, D.C., were obsessed with generating 
scandalous information about Menendez and two other Cuban-Americans in 
Congress, said Robert Eringer, the author of "Ruse: Undercover with FBI 
Counterintelligence." They blamed Menendez, then in Congress, and his 
two colleagues for tough U.S. policies against Cuba, he said in an 
interview on Friday.
Eringer said he was posing as a literary agent, interested in publishing 
the memoirs of legendary CIA turncoat Edward Lee Howard, when 
representatives of the so-called Cuban Interests Section prodded him to 
infiltrate Cuban exile organizations.
FAST FACTS
The Castro regime and the United States have targeted each other for 
espionage for decades. Below are some highly publicized incidents in 
which the United States accused Cuba of spying:
     * Ana Montes, a Defense Intelligence Agency analyst, confessed 
after her arrest in 2001 to spying for Cuba for 16 years.
     * Seven Cuban spies were convicted of or confessed to espionage or 
related crimes in 2001, including trying to infiltrate U.S. Southern 
Command headquarters.
     * Some Cuban spies have posed as "defectors," infiltrating Cuban 
exile organizations and the U.S. government-financed TV Martí, which 
tries to send programming to Cuba.
Source: U.S. Department of State
The Cuban officials wanted him to learn "the dynamics," as Eringer put 
it, of Cuban-American communities in the U.S. "For Cuba, the Cold War 
has not ended — it always continued with the United States," said 
Eringer, who added he was promised exclusive business opportunities in 
Cuba as a bribe. "They had no relationship with the United States. These 
Cuban-Americans are people who are well-known to them, and they felt 
they didn't have someone in their camp who could play back to them what 
was going on" in Cuban-American communities.
Cuba and the U.S. have no diplomatic relations. They have "interests 
sections," instead of embassies, in each other's capitols that perform 
many of the consular services embassies typically handle.
Eringer said the Cuban officials were sure the three Cuban-American 
congressional members – Menendez, a Democrat, and Florida Republicans 
Ileana Ros-Lehtinen and Lincoln Diaz-Balart – were receiving illicit 
money from Cuban organizations. They wanted him to "follow the money," 
he said, to "expose and humiliate them."
"The problem," the book quotes a Cuban diplomat as saying, "is three 
congressmen have put a lock on normalizing U.S.-Cuba relations. Wouldn't 
it be grand if somebody investigated them and exposed their back-door 
financial contributions?"
Menendez, the son of Cuban immigrants, said this week he was not 
surprised that the Cuban government was trying to dig up damaging 
information about him. He said many people have told him over the years 
about attempts by Cuban government officials to obtain information about 
him.
"Those of us who have been pursuing freedom and democracy for the Cuban 
people and who have criticized the
communist regime in Cuba," Menendez said, "have known that the Cuban 
Interests Section has been trying to get stuff of a personal nature on 
us so that they can see what useful negative information they can find 
on you.
"It's disturbing that they spend so much time on this kind of thing 
instead of on putting food on the tables of the people in Cuba."
Efforts to reach Cuban officials on Friday night were unsuccessful.
Eringer said Cuban officials gave him a list of people they urged him to 
meet and spy on. Among them was Abel Hernandez, a successful businessman 
from Cliffside Park who is active in anti-Castro lobbying efforts.
"The Cuban government does everything possible to try to find dirt and 
discredit those of us in the United States who have succeeded and 
attained influence," said Hernandez, who belongs to the Cuban American 
National Foundation. "I belong to CANF because it's against communism 
and for human rights. The Cuban government has to create drama all the 
time. They're paranoid, they're full of conspiracy theories. But they're 
not going to shut me up."
Another particular target, Eringer said, was the Cuban American National 
Foundation, a powerful Cuban exile lobby whose national vice president, 
Remberto Perez, lives in Tenafly.
Perez declined to comment for this story.
E-mail: llorente@northjersey.com
http://www.northjersey.com/politics/FBI_agent_says_Cuba_sought_dirt_on_Menendez.html
 
 
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