Cuba, War and Ana Belen Montes
Cuba, War and Ana Belen Montes
February 8, 2016
by W. T. Whitney
The U.S. government has imprisoned Ana Belen Montes for almost 15 years. Now an international campaign on her behalf is gaining steam with committees active in Latin America, Europe, Canada, and the United States. Arrested by the FBI two weeks after September 11, 2001, and charged with conspiring to commit espionage for Cuba, this high level analyst for the U.S. Defense Intelligence Service avoided a death sentence for treason by pleading guilty and telling all to the U. S. Justice Department.
Ana Belen Montes received no money. The former specialist in Cuban and Latin American affairs is serving a 25-year jail term.
Three petitions, accessible here, here and here, are circulating; one asks for her release, two for humane treatment. Defenders charge that in prison in Texas, Montes is isolated from the general prison population and prevented from receiving visitors, telephone calls and emails.
Advocates face an uphill battle. Documents relating to her trial and press reports then and since portray her as a U. S. citizen who took the wrong side in a U. S. war. Government officials probably despised one of their own who betrayed them. Maybe her familys Puerto Rican origins gave rise to suspicions she sympathized with Cuba and Puerto Ricos shared anti-colonial struggle. True or not, her fate stands as a warning for Puerto Ricans.
With U. S. war against Cuba continuing, the U.S. government likely will resist both easing up on her prison conditions and releasing her. For the new solidarity movement she is a hero, but really shes a special kind of hero: a prisoner of war true to her cause.
More:
http://www.counterpunch.org/2016/02/08/cuba-war-and-ana-belen-montes/