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Antonio Veciana

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Antonio Veciana
Died18 June 2020Edit this on Wikidata

Antonio Veciana Blanch(October 18, 1928 – June 18, 2020) was aCuban exilewho became the founder and a leader of theanti-CastrogroupAlpha 66.[1][2]

In the mid-1970s, Veciana told theUnited States House Select Committee on Assassinations(HSCA) that a representative for theCentral Intelligence Agency(CIA) he knew as Maurice Bishop directed him to organize Alpha 66 and helped plan many of the group's operations, including twoassassination attempts on Fidel Castro.He also claimed that he met a man he later recognized to beLee Harvey Oswaldduring a meeting with Bishop about two to three months prior to theassassination of United States President John F. Kennedy.The HSCA found that Veciana was involved or likely involved in the two assassination plots on Castro, but reported that it could not successfully "substantiate the existence of Bishop and his alleged relationship with Oswald".[3]

Career

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At the time of the 1959Cuban RevolutionVeciana was employed as an accountant byJulio Lobo,and well known as the President of the professional accountants' association.[4]

Veciana said he was recruited as a spy for the CIA byDavid Atlee Phillips(also known as Maurice Bishop) in 1959 to killFidel Castro.[5]After the initial contact with Bishop, Veciana took a 2-3 week course inpsychological warfareand sabotage.[4]After the failedBay of Pigs Invasionin April 1961, Bishop directed Veciana to help organise anassassination attempt on Castroin Havana from an apartment rented in the name of Veciana's mother-in-law. Veciana left Cuba the day before the October 1961 attempt, his wife and children having already left some months earlier.[4]The attempt, which involved abazooka,failed.[6]

1960s, Alpha 66

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According to Veciana, he settled inMiamiwith his family, and after Bishop contacted him there, at Bishop's direction Veciana foundedAlpha 66in mid-1962,[4]becoming its civilian chief and principal fundraiser, and recruiting its military chief from another Cuban exile organization.[4]Alpha 66 became one of the most active Cuban exile groups, acquiring guns and boats and launching commando raids on Cuba.[4]

From August 1968 to June 1972 Veciana was active inBolivia.Formally a banking adviser to theCentral Bank of Boliviaon contracts financed by theU.S. Agency for International Development,his office was located in the passport division of the American Embassy, and his primary activity was organising anti-Communist and anti-Castro activities. This included another assassination attempt on Castro in Chile in 1971[4]involving a plan to put a gun inside a television camera. Veciana's recruiting of Cuban associates who prepared a plan to blame Russian agents for the assassination led to a falling-out with Bishop and the eventual termination of their relationship. When Bishop broke off the relationship in 1973, he paid Veciana $253,000 in recognition of his services; Veciana had previously refused payment.[4]

1970s, and HSCA interview

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On July 24, 1973, Veciana was arrested in Miami on charges related to smuggling 25 kilograms of pure cocaine from Bolivia into the United States with two other co-conspirators who had also fled to Florida from Cuba after Castro came to power, Augustin Barres and Ariel Pomares. The indictment charged Veciana and Pomares with conspiracy to distribute narcotics and possess them with intent to distribute, and with the distribution of approximately seven kilograms of cocaine. Veciana was responsible for traveling to Bolivia, purchasing the drugs and delivering them to Bolivian diplomats who then smuggled them into the United States. On January 14, 1974, Veciana and Pomares were convicted on both counts after a five-day trial in theUnited States District Court for the Southern District of New YorkbeforeUS district judgeDudley Baldwin Bonsal.For his part, Veciana was sentenced to concurrent terms of imprisonment of seven years on each count, also to be followed by a special parole term of three years.[7][8]He served 27 months, and continued to profess his innocence after his release.[4]

In 1976 Veciana told the United States House Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA) that at one meeting with Bishop inDallasin late-August or September 1963 he had arrived to see Bishop talking withLee Harvey Oswald.[4]Veciana said that several months after the assassination Bishop had offered to pay a relative of Veciana who worked in the CubanIntelligence DirectorateinMexico Cityto say publicly that he had met Oswald there.[4]

On September 21, 1979, in Miami, Veciana was wounded in the head during adrive-by shootingwhile he was riding in his car.[2]He was initially admitted toPan American Hospitalwith a small-caliber bullet imbedded above his left ear, then transferred toJackson Memorial Hospital.[2]Veciana's family and friends said that agents of the Cuban government had attempted to kill him.[2]Veciana was not active in Alpha 66 at the time of the shooting.[2]His wife said he had receiveddeath threatseight months earlier, and Nazario Sargen, the then current leader of Alpha 66, said Veciana told a press conference a few months previously that the Cuban government was planning to kill him after he had learned about the plot from the United StatesFederal Bureau of Investigation.[2]

Later years

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Veciana was briefly employed as treasurer byMaurice Ferré's 2004 campaign for mayor of Miami-Dade. He resigned after a few days, as he did not meet the state requirement of being a registered voter.[9]

In 2013 Veciana gave interviews saying that he believed that theassassination of John F. Kennedywas carried out by senior military and intelligence officials.[10][11]On January 16, 2016, the Assassination Archives and Research Center published a video on YouTube of a conference in which Veciana unequivocally stated that Maurice Bishop was in factDavid Atlee Phillips[12][13]

Veciana was the husband of Sira Muino[2]and father of journalistAna Veciana-Suarez.[14]

In the years prior to his death, Veciana lived in an elder-care facility in Miami-Dade, Florida.[15]He died in Miami on June 18, 2020 at age 91.[16]

References

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  1. ^"III. Antonio Veciana Blanch".Appendix to Hearings before the Select Committee on Assassinations of the U.S. House of Representatives.Vol. X. Washington, D.C.: United States Government Printing Office. March 1979. p. 37.
  2. ^abcdefgWilliams, Dan (September 22, 1979)."Anti-Castro Leader Shot In the Head".Miami Herald.p. 2-B.RetrievedApril 30,2017.
  3. ^"I.C.".Report of the Select Committee on Assassinations of the U.S. House of Representatives.Washington, D.C.: United States Government Printing Office. 1979. pp. 135–137.
  4. ^abcdefghijkAppendix to Hearings before the Select Committee on Assassinations of the U.S. House of Representatives, Volume X 1979,pp. 37–56.
  5. ^Giraud, Gabriel (May 28, 2017)."Un ex-espion de la CIA se décrit en" terroriste "".Le Figaro.RetrievedMay 29,2017.Il a été recruté en 1959 par l'agent David Atlee Philipps - connu sous l'alias Bishop - dans le but de tuer Fidel Castro.
  6. ^Jay Mallin,The Miami News,23 November 1961,A BAZOOKA DIDN'T FIRE IN HAVANA AND CASTRO TALKED ON
  7. ^United States of America, Appellee, v. Ariel Pomares and Antonio Veciana, Defendants-appellants,499 F.2d 1220(United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit 1974).
  8. ^"United States vs. Ariel Pomares and Antonio Veciana (Docket 74-1219, Decided July 5, 1974)"(PDF).
  9. ^Noaki Schwartz,Miami Herald,2 June 2005,Audit: Ferré camp broke the law
  10. ^Alfonso Chardy,El Nuevo Heraldo,17 November 2013,La conexión cubana en el asesinato de JFK
  11. ^Iliana Lavastida,Diario Las Américas,"A Kennedy lo mató la CIA", asegura un exagente de la CIAArchived2013-12-03 at theWayback Machine,November 2013
  12. ^Antonio Veciana,) (September 26, 2014).Antonio Veciana - Admissions and Revelations HD(Conference). Bethesda Hyatt Regency, Bethesda, Maryland: Assassination Archives and Research Center..
  13. ^JFK files: As Donald Trump looks to release classified documents, last living link to assassination drops bombshell,The Independent, 23 October 2017.
  14. ^Jay Weaver,Miami Herald,19 January 2006,Herald writer pleads guilty to 2003 contempt charge
  15. ^"A prominent Cuban exile ping-ponged between care centers | Miami Herald".Miami Herald.Archived fromthe originalon 2020-10-15.
  16. ^"CIA-trained former Cuban spy Antonio Veciana dies in Miami".www.digitaljournal.com.June 19, 2020.
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