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Authors: Lamar Waldron

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could gain notice in a Congress under firm Democratic control.

Ford wasted no time in using his new position to curry favor with the

person who had replaced Bobby Kennedy as America’s second most pow-

erful man, J. Edgar Hoover. Just a week after the Warren Commission’s

first meeting, Ford went to one of Hoover’s top aides, who wrote that

Ford told him “he would keep me thoroughly advised as to the activities

of the Commission. He stated this would have to be on a confidential

basis.” Five days later, Ford started delivering on his promise, and was

soon telling his FBI contact that “two members of the Commission . . .

still were not convinced that the President had been shot from the sixth

floor window of the Texas Book Depository.”27 Hoover’s Assistant Direc-

tor, William Sullivan, later said that Gerald Ford “was our man on the

Commission . . . it was to him that we looked to protect our interest

and keep us fully advised of any development that we did not like . . .

and this he did.” While Ford’s general role as an FBI informant has

been known for years, almost all of his reports were kept classified until

August 2008, when several were released.28

All of the members of the Warren Commission were respected estab-

lishment figures who could be counted on to maintain a good public

face, despite any private doubts they might have. Except for Dulles, they

had full-time positions aside from the Commission, leaving them little

free time to seriously investigate areas the FBI had not already explored.

Chapter Twenty
279

While the Commission hired a staff of lawyers, it essentially had to rely

on the FBI for most of its investigations.

J. Edgar Hoover hated the idea of the Commission even more than LBJ

did, and Hoover managed to essentially determine its conclusion before

the Commissioners really had a chance to get started. On December 8,

1963, Hoover leaked the FBI’s own assassination report, and used his

extensive media connections to make sure it was front-page news.
Time

magazine
said the FBI report

. . . was expected to be forwarded to the Warren Commission some-

time this week. It will indicate that 1. Oswald, acting in his own luna-

tic loneliness, was indeed the President’s assassin; 2. Ruby likewise

was a loner in his role as Oswald’s executioner; 3. Oswald and Ruby

did not know each other; and 4. There is no proof of a conspiracy,

either foreign or domestic, to do away with Kennedy.29

The Warren Commissioners were stunned. Representative Hale Boggs

said privately that the FBI had “tried the case and reached a verdict”

barely two weeks after JFK’s murder.30 Hoover put the Commissioners

in a straitjacket: If they reached any other conclusions, they would be

going up against the much admired FBI and its powerful Director.

Hoover’s report on the assassination would undermine both the FBI’s

and the Warren Commission’s actions in the coming year, even though

the FBI report had severe problems. The FBI accounted for only the three

shots it claimed Oswald fired—one that hit JFK in the back, one that hit

him in the head, and one that hit Connally—but failed to acknowledge

the shot that missed the limo entirely, hitting a curb far from the motor-

cade. The story might have ended there, except for the bullet fragment

or chip from the curb that hit a bystander, who then talked to police and

newsmen. This created the problem of a “fourth shot” that wouldn’t go

away. In addition, the FBI had only recently learned about, and had not

accounted for, Oswald’s visit to Manolo Ray supporter Silvia Odio in

Dallas. In terms of Oswald’s motivation, the FBI tried to steer clear of

any political motivation that could raise the specter of Cuban or Rus-

sian involvement. It focused instead on Oswald’s mother, evoking the

“domineering, disturbed mother produces murderous son” scenario

depicted in the popular film
Psycho
.31

Despite the authoritative nature of Hoover’s report, even high-ranking

FBI officials doubted its conclusions.
Vanity Fair
quoted William Sul-

livan, the FBI Assistant Director who also served as its Domestic Intel-

ligence Chief, as saying, “There were huge gaps in the case, gaps we

280

LEGACY OF SECRECY

never did close.” Those on the Warren Commission were dissatis-

fied as well: Senator Richard Russell said, “We have not been told the

truth about Oswald.” Congressman Hale Boggs was eventually even

more blunt in his assessment, saying Hoover “lied his eyes out to the

Commission—on Oswald, on Ruby, on their friends, the bullets, the

gun, you name it.”32

Russell and Boggs may not have realized it, but Richard Helms was

withholding even more information from the Warren Commission. Even

as the Commission had its first meetings, some of the top-secret anti-

Castro operations Helms withheld from it were still unfolding.

For Commander Almeida in Cuba, the days after JFK’s assassination

must have been fraught with tension, especially when Harry told him

Bobby had put the coup plan on hold. Some Cuban officials worried

about an American attack because of Oswald’s very public pro-Cuba

stance, but Almeida had more reason to worry than most, because he

knew the US was already prepared to invade. Even worse, within days

of JFK’s death, at least one rumor of a coup surfaced in Cuban govern-

ment circles. The fact that two of Artime’s Miami exile associates had

recently reported rumors of a coup to their CIA contacts meant that

Fidel’s Miami agents might also have heard such rumblings. It’s also

possible that Castro’s agents had detected the coup preparations of one

of Almeida’s allies in the Cuban government.

Almeida decided to leave Cuba, but in a way that would not arouse

suspicion. On Thursday, November 28, 1963, a CIA memo was sent from

the Miami station to McCone, reporting the “departure [of] 2 Britannias

[airliners], probably for Algeria, with 170 Cubans aboard headed by Juan

Almeida.”33 A large group of Cubans had gone to Algeria earlier that fall

to show support for its leftist government.

Almeida’s instincts, or inside information, were correct because just

two days later, on Saturday, November 30, a CIA memo revealed that “a

Western diplomat . . . had learned [from someone in the Cuban govern-

ment] that Che Guevara was alleged to be under house arrest for plot-

ting to overthrow Castro.” This wasn’t just some rumor off the street; the

CIA said the “source” of the information about Che’s involvement “in

an anti-Castro plot” was a “trained observer of proven reliability who

is a member of the Western diplomatic community in Cuba.”34 The tim-

ing of Che’s arrest, just one day before the originally scheduled date for

Almeida’s coup, raises the possibility that Fidel had learned something

about the coup and arrested one of those he thought responsible.

Chapter Twenty
281

While it’s possible Che was going to be an ally of Almeida for the

coup, Fidel might have focused suspicion on Che for another reason.

Three decades later, historian Jorge Castaneda first documented that

Che had been making secret plans to leave Cuba in late December 1963,

to return to his home country, Argentina, for an extended period of time.

Che told only three of his most trusted subordinates about his plan, but

not even they were not told why Che was leaving Cuba.35 Had Castro

found out about Che’s plans to leave Cuba, put them together with

reports of a possible coup, and decided to arrest Che?

As detailed in
Ultimate Sacrifice
, Che’s problems with Fidel, the Rus-

sians, and Cuba’s Communist Party were well known by the fall of 1963.

Even William Attwood, JFK’s special envoy for the secret peace talks,

said in a November 1963 memo that “there was [a] rift between Castro

and the [Che] Guevara . . . Almeida group on the question of Cuba’s

future course.” Attwood wrote that Fidel’s intermediary in Cuba told

him that “[Che] Guevara . . . regarded Castro as dangerously unreliable;

and would get rid of Castro if [Che] could carry on without [Castro] and

retain his popular support.”36 With Castro’s intermediary revealing such

concerns about Che to Attwood, it’s not surprising that Fidel would

have arrested Che if word of a coup and assassination plot surfaced.

Che’s house arrest probably lasted for only a short time, perhaps just

a day or two. December 2 is one of Cuba’s biggest holidays, the anniver-

sary of the founding of the Cuban Army, whose first battle saw Almeida

save his friend Che’s life at the start of the Revolution. As Commander

of Cuba’s Army, Almeida was also considered its founder, so the Cuban

public would definitely notice if he didn’t appear for the celebration.

Apparently, things had calmed down enough for Almeida to return from

Algeria to be part of the celebration, something he would not have done

if Almeida was worried that he was returning home to the same fate as

Che. Almeida’s only other choice would have been to make a public

break with Fidel and defect, as he had wanted to back in March 1961.

The day after the big December 2, 1963, celebration, a CIA report

says Almeida “expressed [his] despair” to a subordinate. The thirdhand

report indicated Almeida’s concern over possible American retaliation

against Cuba. Almeida appeared to be laying the groundwork with the

subordinate to explain why he might not take action against the US if

they did invade.37 Whatever his private worries, Almeida put on a good

public face, and on December 6, 1963, the Cuban radio-news service

noted Almeida’s presence at a ceremony to install a new communica-

tions minister.38

282

LEGACY OF SECRECY

In the second week of December 1963, John McCone and Richard Helms

were still trying to get LBJ to continue JFK’s efforts to overthrow Fidel.

Since sensitive information took time to reach CIA headquarters from

Cuba, McCone and Helms didn’t learn about Che’s house arrest until

December 10, 1963, or about Almeida’s despair until December 18. In

the interim they pressed forward, and a December 9, 1963, CIA memo

encouraged McCone to get LBJ to support “a coup in Cuba.” The memo

even mentioned JFK’s November 18 speech in Miami, which had con-

tained words intended for Almeida, and suggested that LBJ make simi-

lar remarks.39

The report of Che’s arrest must have given McCone and Helms pause.

However, by the time they learned about it, the information was ten days

old. Almeida had already returned to Cuba from Algeria and had been

seen in public. As long as Almeida was free, the coup could go forward.

Apparently, the Joint Chiefs of Staff were still receptive, because they

sent a memo asking if “dissatisfied Cuban military leaders represent a

coup potential.”40

LBJ planned to hold his first big meeting about Cuba on December 19,

1963, but the day before that, Richard Helms and Desmond FitzGerald

got disappointing news: A CIA report said that Raul Castro had kicked

Rolando Cubela (AMLASH) out of the Army. Cubela, never powerful to

begin with, now was reported to “be doing nothing . . . and had no plans

for the future.”41 Helms and FitzGerald could only hope that Cubela

would be allowed to keep his travel budget and house at Varadero Beach

next to Castro’s, which turned out to be the case.

LBJ’s December 19, 1963, meeting marked a major turning point in US

policy and operations against Cuba. With at least sixteen people present,

the gathering was far larger than Bobby’s typical Cuba meetings, or even

the big Cuba meeting JFK chaired ten days before his death. Notable by

his absence was Bobby, which was probably no accident on LBJ’s part.

The meeting was President Johnson’s clear signal that he was now call-

ing the shots when it came to Cuba.42

President Johnson had learned at least the broad strokes of the JFK-

Almeida coup plan, and in the meeting expressed “particular interest

in the exploitation of discontent within the Cuban military.” However,

many at the meeting had never been told about Almeida (of the five

representatives from the State Department, only Rusk had been told

about Almeida), and since there had been no decision to go forward

with the coup, the rest would not learn about it at this meeting. Thus,

Chapter Twenty
283

comments from the CIA were still subject to the same careful wording

that had characterized JFK’s last major Cuba meeting.43 Still, the detailed

presentation from FitzGerald probably contained some new information

for LBJ, to supplement what LBJ had been learning in his almost daily

meetings with McCone—which were often brief, had to cover the whole-

world situation, and often concentrated on the disturbing information

from Mexico City.44

Desmond FitzGerald initially discussed the CIA’s support for the

“autonomous anti-Castro groups” of “Manuel Artime [and] Manolo

Ray.” FitzGerald said these groups’ purpose was to “conduct externally

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