(1)
Joseph
Trento, Secret History
of the CIA (2001)
The Kronthal
case demonstrated just how careless Dulles and Wisner were about
their early recruitments. As the CIA investigators later found,
Kronthal had led a dark life in the art world, working with the
Nazi regime during the war in fencing art stolen from Jews. It
was during this period that German intelligence caught him in
a homosexual act with an underage German boy. However, his friendship
with Herman Goering prevented his arrest and saved him from scandal.
Kronthal had every reason to believe the incident had been safely
covered up.
When the
Soviets took Berlin, they found all of Goering's private files,
which included Kronthal's records. When Kronthal replaced Dulles
as Bern Station Chief in 1945, the NKVD prepared a honey trap
based on the information they had obtained. Chinese boys were
imported and made available to him, and he was successfully filmed
in the act. "His recruitment was the most well-kept secret
in the history of the Agency," James Angleton said. The entire
time Kronthal worked for Dulles and Wisner, he was reporting every
detail back to Moscow Center. Kronthal was the first mole in the
CIA. He served the Soviets for more than five years.
(2)
Robert
Maheu,
Next to Hughes (1992)
In the
winter of 1959-60, however, the CIA still thought it could pull
off the invasion (of Cuba). But it thought the odds might be better
if the plan went one step further - the murder of Fidel Castro.
All the Company needed was someone to do the dirty work for it.
Professional killers. A gangland-style hit.
It was
then that the CIA conceived the notion to let the mobsters do
it themselves. They'd had a grudge against Castro ever since he'd
forced them out of the Havana casinos. It was even rumored that
Meyer Lansky had put a million-dollar bounty on Castro's head.
CIA Director Alien Dulles passed the ball to his deputy director,
Richard Bissell. Bissell handed off to the CIA security chief.
Colonel Sheffield Edwards. And then I received the call...
Though
I'm no saint, I am a religious man, and I knew that the CIA was
talking about murder. O'Connell and Edwards contended that it
was a war - a just war. They said it was necessary to protect
the country. They used the analogy of World War II: if we had
known the exact bunker that Hitler was in during the war, we wouldn't
have hesitated to kill the bastard. The CIA felt exactly the same
way about Castro. If Fidel, his brother Raul, and Che Guevara
were assassinated, thousands of lives might be saved.
But in
my mind, justified or not, I would still have blood on my hands.
I had to think about it. The deal carried a pretty big price tag.
I kept thinking about my family. What kind of danger would it
put them in? If anything went wrong, I was the fall guy, caught
between protecting the government and protecting the mob, two
armed camps that could crush me like a bug....
Rosselli's
first response was laughter. "Me? You want me to get involved
with Uncle Sam? The Feds are tailing me wherever I go. They go
to my shirtmaker to see if I'm buying things with cash. They go
to my tailor to see if I'm using cash there. They're always trying
to get something on me. Bob, are you sure you're talking to the
right guy?"
When
I finally convinced Rosselli that I was serious, very serious,
he sat staring at me, tapping his fingers nervously on the table.
I didn't want to pull any punches with the man, so I was totally
up-front about the conditions of the deal.
"It's
up to you to pick whom you want, but it's got to be set up so
that Uncle Sam isn't involved - ever. If anyone connects you with
the U.S. government, I will deny it," I told him. "If
you say Bob Maheu brought you into this, that I was your contact
man, I'll say you're off your rocker, you're lying, you're trying
to save your hide. I'll swear by everything holy that I don't
know what in hell you're talking about."
Rosselli
hesitated at first, but then agreed. Many people have speculated
that Johnny was looking for an eventual deal with the government,
or some sort of big payoff. The truth, as corny as it may sound,
is that down deep he thought it was his "patriotic"
duty.
Understand
that the world was quite different then. The Cold War was raging.
Only months before, Francis Gary Powers had been shot down while
flying his U-2 reconnaissance plane over the Soviet Union. The
relationship between Washington and Moscow was at an all-time
low, with Soviet Premier Khrushchev going so far as to openly
call President Eisenhower a liar on several occasions.
Once
the decision was made, it didn't take Rosselli long to put his
plan into motion. On October 11, 1960, we took off for what would
be the first of many trips to Miami. We booked ourselves into
the Kenilworth Hotel, selected because Arthur Godfrey did his
TV show from there. In Miami, Johnny introduced me to two men
who would help us - "Sam Gold" and "Joe."
Sam was Johnny's backup man; Joe would be our direct contact in
Cuba. These weren't ordinary mob lackeys. Johnny didn't bother
to tell me that "Sam" was Sam Giancana, his boss within
the Mafia and the chief of its gigantic Chicago operation. Or
that "Joe" was Santos Trafficante, former syndicate
chief in Havana, and the most powerful Mafia man in the South.
I later
learned that Johnny didn't just need a little help from these
men, he needed their okay. Trafficante was necessary to get Castro
because he had the connections inside Cuba, and Giancana was necessary
to get Trafficante, because Trafficante had the stature of a "Godfather,"
and only a man of equal stature - like Giancana - could approach
him for help. Johnny couldn't do it on his own. Both were among
the ten most powerful Mafia members - a fact I learned only after
seeing their pictures in a magazine soon after meeting them.
(3)
Jack
Anderson, Peace,
War and Politics: An Eyewitness Account (1999)
The CIA's Sheffield
Edwards was supposed to make the contact with the underworld.
He approached a former FBI agent and CIA operative, Robert
Maheu, who moved at the subterranean level of politics. Maheu
knew his way around the shady side of Las Vegas; he had been recruited
by billionaire Howard Hughes to oversee his Las Vegas casinos.
Happily, Hughes was a friend who owed me a favor. Intermediaries
persuaded Maheu to confide in me. He confirmed that the CIA had
asked him to sound out the Mafia, strictly off the record, about
a contract to hit Fidel Castro. Maheu had taken the request straight
to Johnny Rosselli.
Rosselli
had a reputation inside the mob as a patriot; he was quite willing
to kill for his country. But as he told me, there was an etiquette
to be followed in these matters. Santo Trafficante was the godfather-in-exile
of Cuba after Castro chased out the mob. Rosselli couldn't even
tiptoe through Trafficante's territory without permission, and
he couldn't approach Trafficante without a proper introduction.
So Rosselli prevailed upon his boss in Chicago, Sam "Momo"
Giancana, to attend to the protocol. Since Giancana had godfather
status, he could solicit Trafficante's help to eliminate Castro.
The project appealed to Giancana who had commiserated with other
dons over the loss of casino revenues in Havana. Killing Castro
for the government would settle some old scores for the mob, and
it would put Uncle Sam in the debt of the Mafia.
Maheu
had been ordered to keep a tight lid on the involvement of the
US government. The CIA was ready with a cover story that the Castro
hit had been arranged by disgruntled American businessmen who
had been bounced out of their Cuban enterprises by Castro.
On September
25, I960, Maheu brought two CIA agents to a suite at the Fountainebleau
Hotel on Miami Beach. Rosselli delivered two sinister mystery
men whom he introduced only as Sicilians named "Sam"
and "Joe." In fact, they were two of the Mafia's most
notorious godfathers, Sam Giancana and Santo Trafficante, both
on the FBI's ten-most-wanted list. They discussed the terms of
Castro's demise, with Giancana suggesting that the usual mob method
of a quick bullet to the head be eschewed in favor of something
more delicate, like poison.
The wily
Giancana was less interested in bumping off Castro than in scoring
points with the federal government, and he intended to call in
as many chips as he could before the game was over.
(4)
Evan
Thomas, The Very Best Men:
The Early Days of the CIA (1995)
Sheff Edwards told Bissell that he knew just the man for the job.
Along with James P. O'Connell, a former FBI agent who was Edwards's
operations chief, Edwards had met a mobster, Johnny Rosselli,
at a clambake given by Robert Maheu in the summer of 1959. Rosselli
was a medium-level hood (he had the concession for the ice-making
machines on the Strip in Las Vegas, as well as a number of less
legitimate interests in the gambling world). Maheu was a former
FBI agent who had done contract work for the CIA (most notably
in 1958 arranging for the production of the blue movie of Sukarno
and the Russian airline stewardess). Edwards asked Maheu to approach
Rosselli about eliminating Castro. The chain of "cut-outs"
was intended to distance the CIA: Maheu's cover story was supposed
to be that he represented some rich businessmen who saw killing
Castro as a first step toward recovering their investments in
Cuba.
At lunch
with Rosselli at the Brown Derby in Hollywood, Maheu promptly
shed his cover and told the gangster that he was working for the
CIA. At first Rosselli expressed shock. He couldn't understand
why the U. S. government would want him to help. "Me?"
he asked. "You want me to get involved with Uncle Sam? The
Feds are tailing me wherever I go." Rosselli at the time
was under investigation for income tax evasion.
Maheu
later wrote that Rosselli agreed to help for "patriotic reasons."
Rosselli himself testified before the Church Committee in 1975
that he had "felt an obligation to my government." A
more plausible explanation is that Rosselli saw an opportunity
to collect a marker. If he was being tailed by the Feds, what
could be more useful than to be able to throw his patriotic duty
right back at the prosecutor? Maheu told Rosselli that the CIA
would pay $150,000 for the job. Rosselli graciously offered to
do it for free.

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