You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Caribbean-Latin America
Ana Montes: Top spy freed in US after more than 20 years
2023-01-09
[BBC] Ana Montes - among the best-known Cold War spies caught by the US - has been released from prison after more than 20 years in custody.

The 65-year-old spent almost two decades spying for Cuba while employed as an analyst at the Defence Intelligence Agency.

After her arrest in 2001, officials said she had almost entirely exposed US intelligence operations on the island.

One official said she was among "the most damaging spies" caught by the US.

Michelle Van Cleave, who was head of counter-intelligence under President George W Bush, told Congress in 2012 that Montes had "compromised everything - virtually everything - that we knew about Cuba and how we operated in Cuba".

"So the Cubans were well aware of everything that we knew about them and could use that to their advantage. In addition, she was able to influence estimates about Cuba in her conversations with colleagues and she also found an opportunity to provide information that she acquired to other powers."

After her arrest, Montes was accused of supplying the identities of four US spies and oceans of classified material. She was handed a 25-year prison sentence, with the sentencing judge accusing her of putting the "nation as a whole" at risk.

However, unlike other high-profile spies caught during the cold war, Montes was motivated by ideology, not personal gain. She agreed to work for Cuban intelligence in part based on her opposition to the Reagan Administration's activities in Latin America.

In particular, a report from the defence department's inspector general found, she is believed to have been angered by US support for the Nicaragua Contras - a right-wing rebel group suspected of committing war crimes and other atrocities in the country.

She was initially approached by a fellow student at Johns Hopkins University in 1984 after expressing outrage at US actions in Nicaragua. She was later introduced to a Cuban intelligence agent and at a dinner in New York City she "unhesitatingly agreed to work through the Cubans to 'help' Nicaragua", the inspector general's report said.

After travelling to Havana the following year for training, she joined the Defence Intelligence Agency, where she would eventually become the organisation's senior analyst on the island's communist government.

For almost two decades she met with Cuban handlers every few weeks at Washington DC restaurants and sent coded messages containing top secret information to them via pager. She received her orders by transmissions sent over short-wave radio.

She was finally detained in September 2001 after US intelligence officials received a tip that a government employee seemed to be spying for Cuba. One of the FBI agents who arrested her said she had appeared stoic upon her arrest.

Montes will remain under supervision for five years after her release and will have her internet usage monitored. She will also be banned from working for the government or contacting foreign agents without permission.

But Pete Lapp, one of the FBI agents who arrested Montes, told CBS News that he thought it was unlikely that she would try to re-establish contact with Cuban agents.

"That part of her life is over," Mr Lapp said. "She's done what she's done for them. I can't imagine her risking her liberty."
Related:
Ana Montes: 2023-01-05 Code Name Blue Wren: The True Story of America's Most Dangerous Female Spy
Posted by:DooDahMan

#15  Publicly thank her for her intel she provided on her Cuban higher-ups. Adios!
Posted by: Frank G   2023-01-09 19:50  

#14  Jonathan Pollard was released after 30 years. This puta should have gotten at least the same.
Posted by: DooDahMan   2023-01-09 18:40  

#13  Ref #12: Miami? Splendid idea! Is there a 'Go Fund Me' site for her airline ticket?

Asking for a friend of course.
Posted by: Besoeker   2023-01-09 13:58  

#12  Well, it certainly won't be in sunny Miami.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2023-01-09 12:57  

#11  Soon to be employed by the Post Office.
Bets?
Posted by: ed in texas   2023-01-09 11:07  

#10  The damage undoubtedly went well beyond Cuba. Those desks are fishbowls. Regional intelligence is shared and fused. Not a bad thing, but there are potential consequences relative to non-compartmented intelligence sharing.
Posted by: Besoeker   2023-01-09 10:39  

#9  Also think about the dozens of lives cut short working for freedom in Cuba, she exposed.
Posted by: NN2N1   2023-01-09 10:29  

#8  /\ That's certainly a no shi**er. I'd bet the Hildebeest is still 'read on' to SCI.
Posted by: Besoeker   2023-01-09 09:30  

#7   (probably still maintains her access)

DHS IG finds Homeland Security not too secure on revoking credentials from former employees
Posted by: Skidmark   2023-01-09 09:24  

#6  With this current cast of characters in Washington, I wouldn't doubt it. Besides, the post office is hiring.
Posted by: DooDahMan   2023-01-09 07:48  

#5  without permission

Oh, I'm sure permission will be easy enough to get.
Posted by: M. Murcek   2023-01-09 07:45  

#4  "She will also be banned from working for the government or contacting foreign agents without permission."

I guess they just HAD to say that.
Posted by: DooDahMan   2023-01-09 07:23  

#3  “La Otra” has paid her debt to society. She should be permitted to return to her old Cuba desk at the Silver Bullet or offered an Ambassadorship. Female, criminal, latin, (probably still maintains her access), hates the US, still has friends in the community, she's a perfect fit for the beltway. She could qualify for full Federal retirement soon.

Then there is still that book to write.
Posted by: Besoeker   2023-01-09 06:46  

#2  
#1
Just yank her citizenship and send her back to her actual employer, CUBA. let her retire as a Communist with ZERO US SSA or other bennies.
Posted by: NN2N1 2023-01-09 06:00


NN,

If she does go back - and I would be surprised if she didn't - she will spend the rest of her life in the Worker's Paradise, with all the bennies one could ask for.

And 'supervision for five years'? Hah. The Current Administration couldn't supervise its a$$ with both hands.

Mike
Posted by: MikeKozlowski   2023-01-09 06:19  

#1  
Just yank her citizenship and send her back to her actual employer, CUBA. let her retire as a Communist with ZERO US SSA or other bennies.
Posted by: NN2N1   2023-01-09 06:00  

00:00