RSS Feed for This PostCurrent Article

Spies Like Them?

What’s wrong with this story? I do not deny nor dispute the allegation that Walter and Gwendolyn Meyers were spying for Cuba. But do not buy into the lame explanation being proffered to the news media. Here’s a representative report:

A former U.S. State Department official and his wife have been arrested for spying for the Cuban government for nearly 30 years, the Justice Department said on Friday.

Walter Kendall Myers, 72, aided by his wife Gwendolyn Myers, 71, used his Top Secret security clearance to pass on classified information to the Cuban government and at one point met with Cuban leader Fidel Castro, according to court documents.

The two were charged with conspiracy to act as illegal agents of the Cuban government and to communicate classified information to Cuba, the Justice Department said. They were also charged with wire fraud and acting as illegal agents.

They face up to 35 years in prison. The two pleaded not guilty and will be held until a detention hearing on Wednesday, a Justice Department official said. . . .

According to court documents, the two were recruited in 1979 by a Cuban official who directed Kendall Myers to pursue a job at either the State Department or the CIA.

Myers worked part-time at the State Department since 1977 and joined full-time in 1985, eventually working his way up to a position of senior analyst specializing in intelligence analysis on European matters.

With a Top Secret/SCI security clearance, he had daily access to classified information and viewed more than 200 intelligence reports about Cuba, according to the affidavit.

He retired in 2007.

Gwendolyn Myers worked at a bank. The two received messages from the Cuban government via shortwave radio and hand-passed messages, and typically passed their responses to handlers by hand.

Gwendolyn Myers said her favorite way to pass information was by swapping carts at a grocery story, according to the affidavit filed by an FBI agent.

A Justice Department official said they were motivated by a desire to help the Cuban government, not money. They traveled occasionally to Cuba and other locations across Latin America to meet with their handlers, and met Castro in 1995.

Kendall Myers told an undercover FBI source posing as a Cuban intelligence officer he had received “lots of medals” from the Cuban government. The undercover operation began in April.

In meetings with the FBI source, who at one point offered Kendall Myers a cigar, the couple allegedly agreed to provide information on the April 17-19, 2009 Summit of the Americas in Trinidad and Tobago, according to court documents. . . .

Here’s the challenge–what does not make sense about this explanation? I’ll pose some questions (which I will answer tomorrow) for you to ponder and to offer up your own theory.

1. Is this the kind of spy tradecraft we would expect the Cubans to do?

2. What was the triggering event that led the FBI to suspect these folks were involved with the Cubans?

3. If old Walter did not steal documents then why did they need to engage in a high risk cart switch to hand off documents at a public grocery?

4. How damaging is a Walter Meyers compared to a Aldrich Ames or a Robert Hansen?

5. Did the timing of this revelation have anything to do with talks underway at the OAS to readmit the Cubans to the OAS?

Have at it girls and boys. What do you think?

  • Zoom

    How did a ‘senior analyst’ with a Top Secret/SCI security clearance at the State Department traveled occasionally to Cuba?
    And, if he retired in 2007, how would he get information on the Summit of the Americas this year?

  • jwrjr

    Answer to Q.5 – “obviously”. It looks much like typical Ozero misdirection.

  • Diana

    This whole story is ridiculous. The man retired two years ago, he must be a psychic. Yep, that’s how he’s still getting his hands on these documents. About as psychic as Obama was in 2002 for Powell’s speech in 2003.

    Hey, maybe they’re now into trumping up charges so they don’t have to pay retired state and federal workers their retirement? They have figured out how to cut the deficit.

  • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhXA3fXpCFk Woman Voter

    I found it interesting that they have operate undetected for nearly 30 years and now, when they are in their 70′s they bleeped onto the radar?!?

    What have they traded in those 30 years and to what other countries beyond Cuba did they offer their services to…hemmm lots of questions.

  • Docelder

    Wouldn’t the damage depend on what their need to know was? Going on the premise that just because they had top secret clearance, didn’t mean they had any access at all to things that weren’t past what was immediately necessary for them to know to do whatever their job was there. Just hoping of course the information is so compartmentalized. If their job was regarding Cuba intelligence, then we don’t really know what would have been passed and whether passing it actually changed anything. Further, just guessing that whatever information Castro had, was passed to Russia. So, maybe the larger danger was the passing of methodology of operations as opposed to actual relevant Cuba information? Interesting story though.

  • politicalidentitycrisis

    But, why were they arrested???? Aren’t we bestest friendsies with Castro now and our Celebrity in Chief just loves him some Cuba. They must love us back!!!

  • kat in your hat

    Maybe Cuba gave them up. Not like they needed them anymore anyway.

    Here are more details on this story, might help answering Larry’s questions: “Couple accused of spying for Cuba for 30 years” http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090606/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/us_us_cuba_spy_charges

  • Ellen D

    This whole thing sounds like a bad movie. They got instructions by shortwave radio??? Anyone seen the British comedy series “Allo Allo”? Have they used those things since WW2?

    Castro met them and gave them medals? Sure sounds undercover to me.

    And the stuff they passed on by shopping cart weren’t official documents but their own reports? Who puts their opinions on paper leaving a paper trail – are they mute?

    This sounds as wacko as the “terrorists” that turn out to be garden-variety crazies lured by the government.

    I can’t wait to hear Larry’s opinion.

    • beebop

      His grandfather was Alexander Graham Bell …. maybe they had some old equipment laying around?

      • http://noquarter foxyladi14

        lol

  • TeakWoodKite

    Number five. The immediate and then the “Who and what is no longer useful” are to probabilities.

    Timing is everything as it relates to disclosure.

    First proxy by the Soviets and more recently China.

    high risk cart switch to hand off documents at a public grocer

    Cheap thrills? or was this a double blind?

  • Retired

    We just don’t know enough about this yet (at least publically) to draw any conclusions. At this point, it sounds pretty nutty. But first reports ususally do.

  • http://www.what-is-this.com/ Jesmi

    I agree. If their job was regarding Cuba intelligence, then we don’t really know what would have been passed and whether passing it actually changed anything. Further, just guessing that whatever information Castro had, was passed to Russia. So, maybe the larger danger was the passing of methodology of operations as opposed to actual relevant Cuba information? Interesting story though.

  • doug

    1. I think we had followed the couple a very long time. They were no longer useful to Cuba and there was little to be gained by not rolling them up.

    2. The couple was probably feeling a bit alone and hence were vulnerable to the sting they fell for. Getting them to babble about the past was a real coup. Not something likely to happen except to a semi-retired, poorly handled grade C spy.

    3. Good job with the sting since we can make a big case of it and reveal little of significance. The important thing is to make an example of them.

    4. They are not and were not in the same league as Ames or Hanssen. Not even close.

    5. As for what triggered it? Perhaps it was just a way to make up for the Franklin et al debacle.

  • BARB

    This story makes no sense. Perhaps this is the bottom line:

    “The Myerses’ arrest could affect congressional support for easing tensions with Cuba dating back to the Cold War. Two months ago, the Obama administration took steps to relax a trade embargo imposed on the island nation in 1962.”

    This story does remind me of the 4 ex-con “terrorists” recently arrested after being setup by a government informer. Anyway, it give BO the opportunity to flip-flip on another of his so-called “promises”.

  • Cindy

    I think they did it for the cigars.
    (I know my husband would)

  • Chris Vosburg

    Nice piece, Larry. As you point out, there’s a slight smell of tuna about this, and it’s worth pursuing.

  • Mr.Murder

    “5. Did the timing of this revelation have anything to do with talks underway at the OAS to readmit the Cubans to the OAS?”

    You see how deeply the oil/tobacco lobby has its hands in the Bureau’s business. Cuba is too close to home, the compromoised Feds are getting involved with foreign policy.

    Compare this to the NSA/CIA tug of war going on.

    My initial thought was that this kind of stuff is payback for the other tug of war(notice the new Osama tape coming out right after the NSA/CIA kerfluffle emerged).

  • Mr.Murder

    Has the Cuba lobby ever done any direct mailing campaigns that happened to sort through an air field in Alabama?

    Oswald’s handlers used to work there, so did the most heroic mailsorter to ever fail to report duty….

    You know there were direct mail campaigns calling MLK a commie that came out in that era as well, and delivered from the same place. How long exactly has the Bureau been doing psyops side jobs, and why? Why did Company handlers have contacts with the same circle of hustlers?

    • Mr.Murder

      Perhaps famous direct mailer/operative outing specialist Karl Rove could share some experiences of that time. Has he not, or ever been, a red-baiting direct mailer?

      Were civil rights leaders really in Castro’s league? Inquiring minds wanna know! PS- Don’t send me the same fan mail.

  • Mr.Murder

    Larry nailed it, the guy is a ringer for the tobacco lobby. If you can’t beat ‘em, confess and implicate ‘em!