Putin Restores a Cuban Beachhead
The Kremlin and the Castros are chummy again, and Moscow is offering 
military aid.
By MARY ANASTASIA O'GRADY
July 27, 2014 5:33 p.m. ET
Cuban spy Ana Belen Montes was the highest-ranking Pentagon intelligence 
analyst ever to be busted for working for the Castros. What's also 
notable, in light of Vladimir Putin's visit to Havana earlier this 
month, is that she was nabbed in 2001, long after the Cold War ended.
Besides leaking classified material and blowing the cover of covert U.S. 
intelligence agents, Montes seems to have been charged by her handlers 
with convincing top brass in Washington that Fidel Castro —who had 
wanted the Soviets to drop the bomb on this country during the 1962 
missile crisis—no longer presents a threat to the U.S. Montes, who rose 
to become the U.S. military's resident intelligence expert on Cuba, 
partly accomplished that mission. The Pentagon's 1998 Cuba threat 
assessment played down its military and intelligence capabilities.
The best Cuba watchers were less sanguine. The Castros remain as 
paranoid, power-hungry and pathological as ever. They may be economic 
fools, but they run a good business making the island available to 
criminal governments, like Iran and North Korea.
Mr. Putin's Cuba trip reinforces the point. The old Cold War villains 
are up to no good one more time.
Russia's president is trying to rebuild the Soviet empire. Eastern 
Europe won't cooperate and in Asia the best he will ever be is China's 
junior partner. But in Latin America Mr. Putin's KGB résumé and 
willingness to stick his thumb in the eye of the U.S. gives him 
traction. Colonizing Cuba again is an obvious move.
Enlarge Image
Cuban President Raúl Castro greets Vladimir Putin in Havana, July 11. 
Kommersant via Getty Images
After the Soviet Union fell in 1991 and the gravy train to Havana was 
cut off, Fidel was furious with the Kremlin. It hasn't been easy to get 
back in his good graces. In 2008 the Moscow news outlet Kommersant 
reported that Putin friend and Deputy Prime Minister Igor Sechin got the 
cold shoulder when he visited the island to work on "restoring 
full-scale cooperation." Kommersant reported that the Castros were 
"displeased" that Russia had been talking up a military deployment to 
Cuba without Havana's approval.
But it seems that the world's most notorious moochers are willing to 
forgive—for the right price. With sugar-daddy Venezuela running into 
economic problems in recent years and Mr. Putin itching for a place in 
the Caribbean sun, Cuba has decided to deal.
In February 2013 Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev traveled to 
Cuba, where he signed agreements to lease eight Russian jets worth $650 
million to Havana and proposed some $30 billion in debt forgiveness. Two 
months later, Russian Chief of Staff Gen. Valery Gerasimov visited key 
military and intelligence sites on the island. In August a spokesman for 
the Black Sea Fleet announced that the Russian guided-missile warship 
Moskva, the fleet's flagship, had set off for Cuba and other ports in 
Central and South America.
Fast forward to February of this year. Russian Defense Minister Sergei 
Shoigu announced that Russia had engaged in talks to establish military 
bases in Venezuela, Nicaragua and Cuba. The next day a Russian 
intelligence-gathering ship docked in Havana.
In May, Russia's Security Council and Cuba's Commission for National 
Security and Defense agreed in Moscow to form a joint working group. 
"The situation in the world is changing fast and it is dynamic. That's 
why we need the ability to react promptly," Nikolai Patrushev, secretary 
of the Russian Security Council, told the press. Cuban Col. Alejandro 
Castro Espin, son of Raúl Castro, led the Cuban delegation. In June 
Russia signed a space cooperation agreement with Cuba to allow it to use 
the island to base its Glonass (Russia's alternative to GPS) navigation 
stations.
When he called in Havana this month Mr. Putin flaunted his intentions to 
restore a Russian beachhead in Cuba. The shootdown of the Malaysian 
Airlines flight on the same day that he ended his Latin American tour 
raised the visibility of a trip that was made for both psychological and 
strategic reasons. Mr. Putin wants to assure the Free World that he can 
be a menace in the U.S. backyard—and he wants a local foothold to make 
the threat real.
Mr. Putin officially wrote off $32 billion of bad Cuban debt on his 
trip, leaving just $3.2 billion due over the next 10 years. Russia is 
looking for oil in Cuban waters, and Mr. Putin signed new agreements in 
energy, industry and trade with Castro. Days after the visit he denied 
rumors that the Kremlin intends to reopen its old 
electronic-eavesdropping facility on the island.
That's cold comfort, even if you believe him. Satellite technology has 
made land-based listening posts obsolete in many ways. Far more 
troubling is the emergence of Mr. Putin as a Latin American presence. 
Tyrants all over the region, starting with the Castros, admire his 
ruthlessness and skill in consolidating economic and political power. 
They want to emulate him. It's a role model the region could do without.
Write to O'Grady@wsj.com
Source: Mary O'Grady: Putin Restores a Cuban Beachhead - WSJ - 
http://online.wsj.com/articles/mary-ogrady-putin-restores-a-cuban-beachhead-1406496813
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