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Topic - cuban intelligence

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  • ** FILE ** Judy Gross, wife of U.S. government contractor Alan Gross, and U.S. lawyer Peter J. Kahn arrive at the courthouse where Mr. Gross is on a trial accused of "acts against the integrity and independence" of Cuba, in Havana on Friday, March 4, 2011. (AP Photo/Javier Galeano)

    CARDENAS: U.S. must pressure Cuba for release of Alan Gross

    Last week marked the third anniversary of Cuba's arrest of USAID subcontractor Alan Gross for the "crime" of delivering Internet equipment to a Jewish group in Havana.

  • BOOK REVIEW: 'Castro's Secrets'

    Britan Latell, for four decades the CIA's ranking authority on all matters Castro and Cuban, has ripped the shroud off the circumstances behind one of the more flagrant instances of journalistic malpractice ever in the Washington media.

  • Embassy Row

    Mari Carmen Aponte will be cleaning out her desk and preparing to return to the United States by the end of the month because Senate Republicans - suspicious of her past ties to a suspected Cuban spy and angered by her support for gay issues - stopped her from continuing to serve as the U.S. ambassador to El Salvador.

  • Embassy Row

    The U.S. ambassador to El Salvador stirred up ghosts from her past when she wrote a newspaper article praising the president of the Central American nation for supporting the homosexual agenda.

  • LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Cuba's conviction of U.S. citizen likely a ploy

    Earlier this month, U.S. Agency for International Development subcontractor Alan Gross was sentenced by a Cuban court to 15 years in prison for "crimes against the state." Mr. Gross' attorney, Peter J. Kahn, concluded in February that his client was caught in the middle of a long-standing political dispute between Cuba and the United States. I agree.

  • In this file courtroom drawing from 2009, Assistant US Attorney Gordon Michael Harvey (c) argues against the release of Kendall and Gwendolyn Myers (R seated) at a detention hearing before Judge John Facciola (L). Walter Kendall Myers and his wife, Gwendolyn Steingraber Myers, were later charged with conspiracy to hand over classified information to Cuba, serving as an illegal agent for a foreign government and wire fraud.   (ILLUSTRATION BY ART LIEN/AFP/Getty Images)

    Couple sentenced for spying for Cuba

    The 73-year-old great grandson of Alexander Graham Bell was sentenced Friday to life in prison without parole for quietly spying for Cuba for nearly a third of a century from inside the State Department.

  • Iraq backlash

    Military officials in Baghdad say Iraqi insurgents have had limited success in stepped up attacks since the U.S.-led efforts to stabilize the Iraqi capital.

  • DIA official warns about Cuban spies

    Cuban intelligence agents are working inside the U.S. government and one mole uncovered in the Defense Intelligence Agency caused the death of a U.S. special operations soldier in Central America, a senior DIA counterintelligence official says in a new book.

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