Raúl Capote, a writer and Cuban History professor of Havana´s University of Pedagogical Sciences
A new chapter of the series “Cuba’s reasons” denounced the actions of U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), to create fake social leaders that abide by Washington’s rule and support its destructive policy against the Caribbean nation.
The documentary, “Making a Leader”, focuses on the testimony of Raul Capote, agent "Daniel" of Cuban State Security Department, a writer and professor of history at the University of Educational Sciences of Havana, who was recruited by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) of the United States in 2006.
Officials of the Interests section of the United States in Havana contacted Capote during social encounters, and later recruited him as agent Paul.
The CIA instructed him with collecting several types of information and with promoting, encouraging and inciting groups of right-wing intellectuals through different subversive projects, among them the creation of a literary agency and a virtual library.
In a short time, Capote, who was also a leader in the Hermanos Saíz Association in the province of Cienfuegos, was able to establish relations with the majority of the American diplomats that passed through Havana.
But as the tasks became ever more complex, he received instructions not to make contacts through the Interests Section.
Then he began to receive direct instructions from two U.S. nationals living abroad: Rene Greenwald, a CIA officer who in the 1960s organized terrorist plans against the Cuban revolution and Marc Wachtenheim, a CIA collaborator.
Wachtenheim held, among other titles that of director of the Cuban Development Initiative of the Pan American Foundation (PADF), based in Washington.
That organization issues the substantial funds made available by the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) to carry out its plans of subversion against Cuba.
Marc Wachtenheim himself, sent Capote an urgent notice to get rid of an appliance that could complicate things for him and someone else in jail, in apparent reference to U.S. contractor Allan Gross, weeks before he beginning of the Gross trial in Havana.
In almost 40 minutes, the documentary sets out irrefutable facts concerning the priority that U.S. intelligence services give to the creation of alleged "social leaders" who would respond to Washington’s objective of subverting Cuban population particularly the intellectual and youth sectors.
Historically, the CIA has sought to recruit Cuban citizens on and off the island for its work of espionage and subversion.
The documentary emphasizes that as part of this policy, which has greatly intensified during the past few years, intellectuals have become a special.
In the following two Mondays, Cuban TV will air the last two testimonial programs of the "Reasons of Cuba" series.




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