Research Blog by Jorge L. García Vázquez.How East Germany exported its repressive Stasi security system to Cuba. "Havana-Berlin Connection: State Secrets and Notes on the Collaboration between the Stasi and MININT" (East Germany had a major role in building up Cuban counterintelligence as well as its foreign intelligence services, providing training for decades ... right up to the final days of East Germany,” Chris Simmon, U.S. counterintelligence officer and expert on Cuban intelligence)
Saturday, September 1, 2012
The training ofCuban intelligence and counterintelligence officers in the techniques of theEast German “counterintelligence state:
"It is well known
and documented that Soviet and East European com-munist intelligence
services played key roles in training guerrilla cadres ofall types,
including those engaged in insurgent intelligence and CI work.These
complex, multifaceted support efforts—carried out clandestinely
ininsurgent host countries and in the USSR, Eastern Europe, and third
coun-try camps and facilities as well—trained several generations of
insurgentsand terrorists in pertinent skills including those of
intelligence and coun-terintelligence. This history is too extensive to
be addressed here but needsto be considered as a backdrop in more
focused assessments of currentapproaches. One example is worth noting,
however, since it contributed somuch to guerrilla approaches in a
region of the world. The example is the role of the East German
Ministry for State Security(Ministerium fur Staatssicherheit—MfR), more
commonly known as theStasi. Stasi training and support efforts covered a
number of areas of theworld. Its influence, however, was particularly
strong in Cuba, where theCuban Ministry of the Interior (MINIT) was
charged with a broad spectrumof internal and external security functions
and became in many respectsa close Stasi analog. The nature of the
close relationship had been assertedand partially documented for years
in Western assessments. The training ofCuban intelligence and
counterintelligence officers in the techniques of theEast German
“counterintelligence state” was evident in many ways. The demise of
the German Democratic Republic in 1990 and conse-quent access to Stasi
files confirmed and expanded the understanding ofthe relationship.
Regarding guerrilla CI, this relationship is important because
Cubantrainers played substantial roles in passing on their knowledge to
LatinAmerican and other insurgent groups. Cuban researcher Jorge Luís
Vázquez,
33 ..."
http://www.slideshare.net/CIARO/jsou-guerrilla-counterintelligence
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