- 2 days ago
Dollan Cannell's documentary on the hundreds of alleged plots to assassinate Fidel Castro, and a look at the evolution of Cuban politics.
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00:00:00The eyes of the world were focused on this little island in the Caribbean Sea.
00:00:15Fidel Castro, the bearded opportunist, has betrayed his own country.
00:00:33For America, there is danger on the doorstep.
00:00:45This is a murder story.
00:01:05The victim, Fidel Castro, the president of Cuba.
00:01:15Castro never was assassinated.
00:01:40This time, he just tripped over a step.
00:01:44But more people have tried to murder the world's most famous socialist than any man alive.
00:01:51Governments and gunmen have been trying to get Castro for 50 long years.
00:01:57But time is nearly up.
00:01:59The men who tried to kill Castro have spent decades in the shadows.
00:02:14Now they've come forward to reveal their secrets.
00:02:21Who are these men? Heroes or villains?
00:02:27What made them hate Castro enough to want him dead?
00:02:40On a trip to New York in 1959, even the cops fell in love with him.
00:02:44And he didn't just hand out Cuban cigars.
00:02:47He promised his own people free health and education and the dream of equality.
00:02:52You'd think people would want to copy him, not kill him.
00:02:57You'd think people would want him dead.
00:02:59Hello, everyone.
00:03:00We'd like to share our crypts with you.
00:03:02And tonight, we'll all be going to Cuba.
00:03:05Cuba lies just off the coast of Florida.
00:03:10Most, for many, American political leaders still have this idea that Cuba rightfully should almost be a part of our dominion.
00:03:24They should do what we want them to do.
00:03:27And that if it weren't for Castro, they probably would.
00:03:31So Castro has come to be seen as this nettlesome figure that we simply can't deal with,
00:03:41who has defied us and jeered at us for almost 50 years and got away with it.
00:03:48Nothing could drive a superpower up the wall faster than that.
00:03:55When Fidel Castro seized power in 1959, ordinary Cubans were ecstatic.
00:04:00He'd seen of a corrupt regime which had bled the country dry,
00:04:04for the benefit of American business and a rich, ruling elite.
00:04:09When a dove landed on his shoulder, it looked like divine approval.
00:04:14But not everyone felt blessed.
00:04:19Most of my family were elated when Castro took over.
00:04:22Asked whether most of the Cuban people.
00:04:25Now, I remember I was not ten years old when I saw on television a trial.
00:04:35One of the first early trials of the revolution.
00:04:38And as the trial was going on, as they were going to process this man for an execution against a firing squad,
00:04:47which was later televised,
00:04:49there were vendors walking around in the audience selling candy and soft drinks.
00:04:56And I was nine years old and I said, wow, this is not right.
00:05:00Like hundreds of thousands of middle-class Cubans, Enrique and Cenosa's family fled Castro's revolution for the safety of Miami.
00:05:15Still they come.
00:05:16Nearly 200 Cuban refugees a day, five days a week, they arrive with little more than the clothes on their back.
00:05:23Their cash, houses, land, furniture have long since been signed over to the Cuban government.
00:05:39Castro's exiles are now pillars of Miami society.
00:05:42Their bitterness has grown with every year Castro has stayed in power.
00:05:47The majority of the Cuban exile community supports any kind of strategy that will overthrow Castro.
00:06:02If you're eliminating a head of state, you know, who is a dictator, who has been oppressing his people,
00:06:10I don't think, I think that's totally justified.
00:06:13I, you know, I myself support anybody who tries to kill Fidel Castro,
00:06:18because I think it would do humanity a favor.
00:06:30If the opportunity comes to harm him through violent means, I will gladly do so.
00:06:36I will consider it my duty.
00:06:42Castro's would-be assassins are ready to confess.
00:06:46Step forward, suspect one.
00:06:48Name, Enrique Ovarez.
00:06:51Occupation, architect.
00:06:53Motivation, betrayal.
00:06:55Fidel's student friend and one of the first to try to take his life.
00:07:00That's me and that's Fidel.
00:07:01Here, that's Fidel and that's me.
00:07:07Fidel and that's me.
00:07:10I realized in the years that we got together, that we stayed together, that he is not a good person.
00:07:19He always has in his mind only one point, the total power.
00:07:24He doesn't have family, he doesn't have friends, he doesn't have nothing.
00:07:29I heard that people said, no, Fidel is communist.
00:07:33Fidel is nothing, Fidel is fidelist.
00:07:36It's for him and that's it.
00:07:37Ovares became so disillusioned with Castro, that he felt compelled to act.
00:07:48Just after the revolution, Castro could still be seen on Havana's streets, unconcerned and unprotected.
00:08:02Ovares was going to gun him down in broad daylight.
00:08:05Ovares was going to gun him down in broad daylight.
00:08:09Con personas que fueran en una mĂĄquina con ametralladoras o con pistolas,
00:08:14y en un lugar donde estuviera, que no hubiera un total riesgo de tratar de matarlo.
00:08:21Cosa que se podĂa hacer al principio.
00:08:24Ya después mås adelante ha sido imposible.
00:08:26TĂș tienes que haber visto miles de pelĂculas, cĂłmo hacen eso.
00:08:34El dĂa que yo me lo encontrĂ© en ese lugar,
00:08:37que estaba en las afueras de un restaurante que se llama Casalta, conversando allĂ.
00:08:43TĂș vienes en la mĂĄquina, para, lo matas y te vas en la mĂĄquina, tan sencillo como eso.
00:08:50It sounded simple, but killing a man for the first time is never simple.
00:08:59I don't pretend to know what goes through a man's mind in a situation like this,
00:09:06you know, because I think we're all different.
00:09:08I think we're all different.
00:09:09And a man might do something today that he might not have the mentality to do six months from now,
00:09:16because human beings are psychologically fragile.
00:09:21But I would say that a man who puts himself in a situation where he actually goes out on the field
00:09:28and actually puts himself within grasp, he should be committed to do, you know, what he set out to do.
00:09:41I don't think it's being, from my own perspective, I wouldn't see any excuse for that.
00:09:47You know, you're there and nobody hired you to do this.
00:09:54This is something that you volunteer to do.
00:09:58When you went into, you were totally aware of the circumstances.
00:10:02So, you should be willing to take it to the last level.
00:10:10And if you don't, then you failed.
00:10:15It would be very hard for a man to live with himself after that.
00:10:18Of war is hesitated and it cost him his one shot.
00:10:31Castro's agents were onto him and he was thrown in jail.
00:10:34thrown in jail.
00:11:04This was our first suspect's final confession.
00:11:12Two months later, Enrique Alvarez, who was ill with cancer, did take a life.
00:11:17His own.
00:11:18Now, back to Edward R. Murrow.
00:11:23Just 30 days ago, Fidel Castro entered Havana to be greeted by cheering mobs as one of the
00:11:28greatest heroes in Cuba's history.
00:11:31A few hours ago, he returned to his apartment on the 23rd floor of the Havana Hilton Hotel
00:11:36in the center of the city.
00:11:38Good evening, Fidel Castro.
00:11:41You must have had a very busy week.
00:11:43How do you feel?
00:11:44Well, I feel really, I feel well, something tired.
00:11:50We have to work very much, work very much.
00:11:53What about your personal safety?
00:11:56This is something you must think about, or doesn't that worry you?
00:12:00Really, what I think is that I have no time to think in my personal safety.
00:12:09Is it true that you go wandering about the streets occasionally all by yourself?
00:12:13Yes, of course.
00:12:14I like to be alone most of the time.
00:12:17My friends don't like, and sometimes they come with me.
00:12:21But really, I don't like to be with personal guard.
00:12:26Wasn't Fidelito supposed to be with us tonight?
00:12:29Fidelito.
00:12:34Good-bye.
00:12:35Good-bye.
00:12:36Good-bye.
00:12:37Good-bye.
00:12:38Hello, Fidel Junior.
00:12:39Hi.
00:12:40That's a very good-looking puppy you have there.
00:12:41Is he yours?
00:12:42No.
00:12:43Somebody gave it to my father for a present.
00:12:46But America's curiosity with Castro's revolution couldn't last.
00:12:59When Castro seized US-owned businesses for the Cuban people, he revealed his true color, red.
00:13:06And in 50s America, what could be worse than a communist takeover on the doorstep?
00:13:14Castro is a convinced, dedicated egalitarian.
00:13:19He hates any system that provides a class society where one group of people live much
00:13:26better than others.
00:13:29He didn't expect that the United States would sit on its hands and watch him do that.
00:13:34Some conflict was inevitable.
00:13:36And so began America's secret war against Cuba.
00:13:52Covert operations fought by nameless men, sometimes on the order of presidents, never with the knowledge
00:13:59of the American people.
00:14:00Get him.
00:14:04Christmas 1959.
00:14:06The CIA gets the go-ahead for the big hit on the beard.
00:14:11The problem is that upright countries like the United States are not meant to murder foreign
00:14:16leaders.
00:14:17It is, after all, illegal.
00:14:19So the agency's great challenge is to dream up plans that could never be traced to the
00:14:26White House.
00:14:30They devise ingenious plots to destroy Castro's charisma.
00:14:36Seizing on the potent symbolism of his rebel beard, they plot to make it fall out.
00:14:43The plan is to steal into Castro's hotel and put a special powder into his boots.
00:14:50The trial run is successful, but at the last minute, their agents get cold feet.
00:14:56I am not thinking now to cut my beard, because I am accustomed to my beard.
00:15:05And my beard means many things to my country.
00:15:12They plot to spray a TV station with an LSD-type drug to make Castro freak out on air.
00:15:19There is no shortage of LSD at the CIA, but they decide the plan is just too far out.
00:15:32If America's favourite astronaut John Glenn gets lost in space, they plan to blame Castro
00:15:38for zapping his module with magnetic rays.
00:15:45The plan fails when a rocket man lands safely back on planet Earth.
00:15:53Then, brilliant minds are turned to murder.
00:15:57Castro is a keen diver, so the CIA wraps him a special gift, a poisoned diving suit.
00:16:03But Castro doesn't want a new suit. He's just been given one.
00:16:10So, they try to booby trap a colourful seashell with dynamite and place it where Castro likes to dive.
00:16:18The CIA acquire two books on Caribbean mollusks, but they just can't find a shell big enough to do the job.
00:16:25Next, they rig a poisoned syringe inside a fountain pen, but they decide they just won't get away with scratching the beard.
00:16:43Most famously, they really do plot to kill Castro by doctoring his favourite cigars.
00:16:53Plan A is poison. Plan B, explosives.
00:16:58Plan B, explosives.
00:17:05All these assassination attempts, we're not supposed to be involved in assassination attempts against foreign leaders.
00:17:14I know we have been, but we shouldn't be. This is a mistake. It's a mistake.
00:17:20Over in Cuba, Castro's secret agents were just as dedicated to keeping him alive.
00:17:29One of the finest was Fabian Escalante. His exploits were even turned into a hit thriller on Cuban TV.
00:17:36As one assassination attempt after another was foiled, Escalante rose to become head of Cuban intelligence.
00:17:55He's retired now and has time to reflect on all the plots ever discovered by his agents.
00:18:0126, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28.
00:18:10Who is that?
00:18:1177.
00:18:1228, 77.
00:18:141, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19.
00:18:25What's the count?
00:18:261, 1, 1, 1, 1, and 1.
00:18:35How much are you?
00:18:369.
00:18:379.
00:18:389.
00:18:39So it's important to reiterate this.
00:18:40Because it's a very high number, 634 conspiracies and conclusions.
00:18:41That's right.
00:18:427.
00:18:437.
00:18:44One further adjustment makes it 632.
00:18:54at 638. Escalante has even calculated just how many plots fell under each United States
00:19:01presidency.
00:19:24Escalante was keen to substantiate each and every one of the plots he's counted. He had eyes
00:19:48everywhere and men on the inside of the conspiracies that threatened Castro's revolution. In Havana
00:19:59itself you couldn't light a cigar without him knowing. There was a grenade attack planned
00:20:05at a baseball game. Snipers zeroed in on the university steps. He knew their plans down
00:20:17to the last detail. There was a radio controlled plane packed with explosives to be launched
00:20:23in the National Library. Assassins tried to serve Castro a poisoned milkshake at Havana Hilton.
00:20:32They planned to ambush the presidential convoy on its way to the airport. But Fabian and
00:20:43his spies stopped all of them. For many years there was one hated adversary who for Fabian
00:20:51Escalante stood above anyone else. He considered him the greatest threat to Fidel Castro. In real
00:21:05life Escalante never did get his man. Step forward suspect number two, Antonio Vecchiano. Qualified
00:21:18in accountancy, recruited by the CIA. Now gone fishing just off Miami Beach.
00:21:26And it's a nice sport. It's a nice sport. It's a sport that you have to have patience. Because
00:21:33sometimes you spend a few hours and you can't engage in a fish. Depends. I have
00:21:42patience because life gave me a lesson that you had to have patience. The patience for the people
00:21:49that we work on the underground. The former CIA man, who once ran guns to Cuba, now runs nothing
00:22:02more than a chain of marine stores in Miami. This is my grandson. This is my grandson. This
00:22:14is the president of the corporation. We have four stores. We sell all the items that needs people
00:22:24for a boat. For example, this is a gun to use in case of they are in danger. Inflatables,
00:22:35the people, the people, for example, they can enjoy this. He is like a soccer player with cold
00:22:46blood shooting a penalty shot. I mean, he can stand there and he won't budge and he will
00:22:51do whatever it, what he thinks is right. He's a very determined man. Yes, he sure is. I'm
00:22:57very proud of being his son, actually.
00:22:59Mira, yo tengo casi la misma edad que Castro. Castro tiene dos años y un mes mås que yo.
00:23:10Entonces, yo conocĂ a Castro en la universidad. Algunas personas que lo conocĂamos, que estĂĄbamos
00:23:17la misma generaciĂłn y en la universidad, tenĂamos alguna duda sobre las verdaderas intenciones
00:23:23de Ă©l. Ăl nunca dijo que era comunista en la sierra. Empezamos los profesionales, los abogados,
00:23:30arquitectos y contadores a reunirnos y decir a dĂłnde lleva este hombre al paĂs. HablĂł
00:23:39de elecciones, ya no quiere hacer elecciones. Y entonces nos decidimos por tratar de matar
00:23:45al tirano Castro, que creĂamos que con la muerte de Ă©l podrĂa terminarse aquel rĂ©gimen.
00:23:58Este es el edificio de cuyo apartamento 8A, es decir, en el piso 8, el grupo, el comando
00:24:05de Antonio Bessiano, pretendĂa disparar una bazooka contra esta tribuna.
00:24:16Pero daba de frente al palacio presidencial. De allĂ se podĂa ver casi la cara de Castro.
00:24:24la bazooka estaba preparada para el fuego. Castro era un solito, esta vez, los espios
00:24:33no sabĂan nada.
00:24:34Y allĂ dejamos acuartelados a las cuatro personas que iban a hacer el atentado. Pero, de acuerdo
00:24:50a la explicaciĂłn que dio el jefe del grupo, era imposible sacar la bazooka y hacer el atentado.
00:24:57Nadie suicida. Yo no soy un suicida. Yo no quiero morir. Tengo familia, tengo hijos, quiero entender.
00:25:05Quiero tener una posibilidad de vivir.
00:25:09Tengo, quiero tener una posibilidad de vivir.
00:25:23Stung by failure, the CIA gambled on an astonishing new partner in crime, the mafia.
00:25:31Before the revolution, organised crime ran Havana, and they made millions.
00:25:36Castro ruined their party and threw them out.
00:25:41So, they had a motive, and they had the means.
00:25:45Murder being all in a day's work for a mobster.
00:25:52The agency had to keep their distance from the mob.
00:25:55Step forward to suspect number three, the go-between.
00:26:01Bob Mayhew, ex-FBI, a man with the mafia's number.
00:26:06The mafia had a plausible reason for wanting to get back in Cuba.
00:26:11Which gives the United States government a possibility of denying it, whatever happens.
00:26:17You know, there are those who will disbelieve what I'm about to say.
00:26:30But my immediate problem was that I happen to be a Roman Catholic.
00:26:36As I say, I don't profess to be the Pope.
00:26:39I don't profess that I have a free trip to Heaven.
00:26:42But I'm a reasonably good Catholic and believe in it.
00:26:46I'm Jesuit-trained.
00:26:48And I had a morality problem with the murder of any person, which included, of course, a leader of a foreign country.
00:26:58I remember very, very vividly what I did.
00:27:04I mean, I went down to my recreation room.
00:27:08I put on some Strauss on a very low sound, and I just sat there, and I tried to experience what would happen if something went wrong.
00:27:19But I was asked to do it by my government.
00:27:25And that, I guess, was the prevailing thing.
00:27:28I mean, I figured, well, who the hell am I to worry about me?
00:27:32You have to understand that espionage is a very dirty business.
00:27:51It's a dirty business.
00:27:54If this was the way to save one American life, it was a good way to go.
00:28:02It's a dirty business.
00:28:03It's a dirty business.
00:28:04It's a dirty business.
00:28:05It's a dirty business.
00:28:10Bob Mayhew meets Mafia bosses to hammer out the details.
00:28:15The CIA want the mob to march up to Castro and just mow him down.
00:28:21But even gangsters aren't that crazy.
00:28:24So it's the Mafia who come up with an alternative, poison pills.
00:28:29Agency scientists decide deadly botulinum is the perfect poison for the beard.
00:28:36They're plastic.
00:28:38It's a little bitty capsule.
00:28:41Very small.
00:28:42You could not taste it.
00:28:43You could not smell it.
00:28:45If that pill was dropped in liquid, hot or cold, then it would instantaneously dissolve
00:28:52and leave no after effect as to smell or taste or anything.
00:28:57Having invented a lethal pill, the CIA now has to get Castro to swallow it.
00:29:11Someone has to get close to him.
00:29:13This hideaway at the Hilton Hotel is heavily guarded.
00:29:17But maybe the beard does have a weakness after all.
00:29:20This city is always noisy, loquacious and snipe.
00:29:25And so it sometimes appears a little frivolous and carefree.
00:29:29Like a pretty girl.
00:29:31But that is only at first glance.
00:29:37It's a city that can show Spartan courage.
00:29:41And the pretty girls, it seems, aren't really so frivolous at all.
00:29:45Castro is divorced and has been having an affair with a young German girl.
00:29:52Marita Lorenz had loved Castro and his revolution.
00:29:57But their relationship has gone sour.
00:30:01The CIA persuades her to try and kill her ex-lover.
00:30:05She hasn't seen Castro for months, but she's kept her old room key
00:30:10and steals into his suite with the poison pills hidden in a jar of face cream.
00:30:17As Marita told me the story, the first time I heard it was from her.
00:30:22She had put the pills in her cold cream jar.
00:30:25And when she went to get them out, they had somehow melted.
00:30:30And so she, well, okay, it won't work and forget it.
00:30:34Castro had asked her when she came back if she'd come back to kill him.
00:30:38And she said, yes, Fidel, she had.
00:30:42What I remember is that she began to cry at the beginning.
00:30:48And that in several minutes, she could not tell any word to me.
00:30:55And so he handed her his pistol.
00:30:58He was stretched out on the bed, fully clothed as dungarees,
00:31:01and handed her the pistol and said, well, then do it.
00:31:03And she said she held the pistol, pointed at him for a minute,
00:31:09and then she put it down and said, I can't, Fidel.
00:31:12And he said, of course you can't. No one can.
00:31:15Now desperate to dislodge Castro, the CIA hatched its most brazen scheme.
00:31:25It all began here.
00:31:28On President Eisenhower's order, they planned not only to kill Castro,
00:31:34but mount an invasion of Cuba.
00:31:36In 1960, Miami Zoo was a secret training camp.
00:31:41The world could never know that the American government
00:31:45was turning thousands of Cuban exiles into a fighting force
00:31:48capable of deposing Castro's regime.
00:31:54When they landed on Cuban soil at the Bay of Pigs,
00:31:57it was meant to look like they planned the invasion all by themselves.
00:32:03Howard Hunt was one of the CIA's top men.
00:32:07We were heavily involved in the recruitment and the infiltration.
00:32:13Now the people that we recruited wanted to go in by parachute or by sea
00:32:23and get rid of the devil, Mr. Castro.
00:32:28Castro was such a charismatic leader
00:32:32that there was just no possible antidote to him
00:32:36that would not have meant U.S. overt involvement.
00:32:43And that, of course, was what the United States government wanted to avoid.
00:32:48And, of course, Eisenhower wanted the American hand totally concealed.
00:32:55And I think the agency learned a big lesson from that,
00:32:59that you can't do both.
00:33:04You can't succeed and you can't keep the American hand invisible.
00:33:10Was part of the plan to kill Fidel Castro...
00:33:15To do what?
00:33:16To kill Fidel Castro.
00:33:18Well, that word kill, the verb kill,
00:33:22is not easily used in government communications.
00:33:26I myself felt that that was the ultimate solution.
00:33:32Because you had him, you had a caged tiger.
00:33:36And...
00:33:38But we never got that far.
00:33:41These are anxious days for Cuba.
00:33:44The threat of armed aggression hangs over the little island.
00:33:46At any minute, the order may be given from there,
00:34:02and hordes of mercenaries, trained by the imperialists,
00:34:05will move on the island.
00:34:06The big day came in April 1961.
00:34:21Castro crushed the invasion in hours.
00:34:24Despite their efforts, the role of America was plain for all to see.
00:34:28The plan had been hatched by Eisenhower,
00:34:31but it was executed by Kennedy.
00:34:33For America's idealistic young president,
00:34:36it was all very embarrassing.
00:34:38But even that didn't deter JFK.
00:34:41He kept on pushing the CIA to get rid of Castro.
00:34:44Until, in an irony lost on many,
00:34:47he got assassinated himself.
00:34:48Fidel Castro and his right-hand man Che Guevara
00:35:05might have thought they would finally be left in peace,
00:35:08free to cut cane and build the Cuban socialist dream,
00:35:12without having to worry quite so much
00:35:14about being assassinated the whole time.
00:35:18But Che, the revolutionary pin-up, was soon off around Latin America,
00:35:28preaching communism Cuban style, until his luck ran out.
00:35:35Step forward suspect number four, Felix Rodriguez.
00:35:38A born fighter, he fled Cuba and signed up as a CIA sniper.
00:35:42One thing made him a big hit with America's first family.
00:35:47He tried to kill Fidel three times.
00:35:51President Bush, my father.
00:35:54That was when he was vice president at the White House.
00:35:58To Felix Rodriguez with high esteem and admiration, George Bush.
00:36:02George Bush.
00:36:12Let's see.
00:36:14This is from President Bush.
00:36:15And this time, this is with his brother, Jeb, now governor of Florida.
00:36:28And is that another photo of you and President Bush behind him?
00:36:32Yes.
00:36:33We were talking at the time about the Che Guevara story.
00:36:36So I told them, you know, the last moment of Che Guevara.
00:36:39And everybody that I go to, it's always very interesting,
00:36:42knowing the character of Che Guevara, what he had to say at the last minute,
00:36:46and, you know, what was the conversation between the two of us.
00:36:49So we did talk a lot about that.
00:36:52This is the one with Che Guevara in Bolivia.
00:36:53Are you in that photo, Phoenix?
00:36:56Yeah, this is me right here.
00:36:58And that's Che here.
00:37:00And that's actually the last picture of Che alive.
00:37:03There seems absolutely no doubt at all that this is Che Guevara.
00:37:08Yes, they're now sitting Che Guevara up, actually sitting him up.
00:37:13His dead body is now being sat up.
00:37:16It's the most fantastic sight.
00:37:18He's a very pale, ghastly, ghostly yellow color.
00:37:21His head is rolled back onto the stretcher which he was brought in.
00:37:26His eyes are still open.
00:37:28Balls of his eyes sticking out at you.
00:37:31And now they're lifting his head up by his long hair again.
00:37:35Rodriguez personally gave the order to execute Che Guevara.
00:37:40He says, anything I can say to your family.
00:37:44And then he exchanged and said,
00:37:45if you can tell my wife to remarry and try to be happy.
00:37:49And that was his last word.
00:37:50Then he came to me.
00:37:51He approached me.
00:37:52He shook my hand.
00:37:53I shook his hand.
00:37:54He embraced me.
00:37:55I embraced him.
00:37:56And then he stood back in attention thinking I was going to be the one to shoot him.
00:37:59So I left the room.
00:38:01And there was a sergeant Tehran who was taking care of those matters and told him,
00:38:04it's order from your command to eliminate the prisoner.
00:38:07Don't shoot him from here up.
00:38:08Shoot from here down.
00:38:09Because this man is supposed to die from combat.
00:38:12We say, see me, Capitan.
00:38:13See me, Capitan.
00:38:14So I left the room.
00:38:15I went to an advance post that I had.
00:38:17And I was taking note.
00:38:18It was one o'clock when I left the room there.
00:38:21Bolivian time.
00:38:22About 1.10.
00:38:23That's when we heard the burst.
00:38:24The CIA's achievement was to make Che Guevara a martyr for his cause.
00:38:31Celebrated by millions to this day.
00:38:33By the late 60s, Castro was not only still alive.
00:38:51He was thriving, still popular and managing Cuban socialism virtually single-handed.
00:38:59Castro insists on becoming an expert in every agricultural science.
00:39:03At this cattle insemination ranch, he personally instructs a man on how to test a bull.
00:39:12I pay a great deal of attention to agriculture.
00:39:15And in order to be able to direct activity in agriculture, I've had to bring together much information about it.
00:39:22And that information can only be got by going out into the countryside.
00:39:28At home, Castro's spies kept him safe.
00:39:32Whenever he left the country, he was a much easier target.
00:39:35In 1971, the CIA teamed up once more with the accountant Antonio Vecchiana.
00:39:46They planned to kill Castro on a visit to Chile.
00:39:49My father was stationed at the United States Embassy in La Paz, Bolivia.
00:39:58And we decided to go on a vacation.
00:40:01The journey to adventure is so simple now.
00:40:05We went from La Paz, Bolivia, and through the Lake Titicaca, which is the highest lake in the world.
00:40:10And then we went and we traveled all the way to Santiago, Chile.
00:40:14And during that trip that I thought was a vacation, my father did just something that was phenomenal.
00:40:28I'm sure that my mom knew, because my father didn't keep anything away from my mom.
00:40:32And a friend that came with us that I later found out was the fellow who was supposed to have done the shooting.
00:40:40Antonio Vecchiana devises a new way to kill Castro.
00:40:47Conceal a gun inside a film camera and obtain fake press passes for his two gunmen.
00:40:52The service of the Cuban security service to all the press, I asked the cameras to review them.
00:41:02But someone who knew, told us how it could be done without them to discover them.
00:41:10And the idea was, in a press conference, to move on to Castro and kill him.
00:41:17There were two people, disposed to the greatest sacrifice of their lives.
00:41:23And I prepared them.
00:41:26His intelligence is spot on. Castro arrives to face the press.
00:41:31Vecchiana thinks his men are right there, just feet away from a beard, guns loaded.
00:41:40It was a specific day, he was just sitting there and he kept pacing back and forth in front of the phone.
00:41:47So I, nonchalant, just walked up to him and said, Dad, what's the matter?
00:41:50He goes, no, no, son, I'm just waiting for an important phone call.
00:41:52What was really interesting was that my father was very upset when he got that phone call.
00:42:02And I've never seen him that, that upset and stuff.
00:42:05And I didn't know that obviously it's because the guy canceled the assassination attempt.
00:42:11They failed because, in my opinion, the value was missing.
00:42:27They started looking for excuses saying that it was very difficult to do the job and they left.
00:42:34I later found out that he said something, that he got an appendicitis.
00:42:37I don't believe that. I think he got a little scared under the hood, you know, and stuff.
00:42:43I told something to my dad now that things have fallen.
00:42:46I told my dad, you should have hired an Arab.
00:42:49Those guys are not scared of anything.
00:42:51They're willing to give their life away if they have to.
00:43:02In the 1970s, events took a darker turn.
00:43:07Frustrated by their failure to eliminate Castro, hardliners sought new targets for their venom.
00:43:14They turned on their own community, ruthlessly silencing Miami Cubans who dared to talk of peace.
00:43:22There were efforts against the lives of people, Cubans especially,
00:43:28who thought it was time to begin a dialogue with Cuba.
00:43:34The hardliners didn't like that and so their reaction was to try to blow them up or shoot them.
00:43:40And I suppose you could say, no wonder, given that these hardline exiles had been trained by the CIA,
00:43:47they had been involved in sabotage raids against Cuba, some of them in assassination attempts and so forth,
00:43:56this was the way they operated.
00:43:58Step forward suspect number five, Dr Orlando Bosch.
00:44:02A reckless hardliner who hated Castro so much, he abandoned his career in paediatric medicine for terrorism.
00:44:11He's linked to at least 50 bombings.
00:44:14In 1967, he fired a bazooka at a ship in Miami Harbor simply because it was on its way to Havana.
00:44:20He even threatened the British Prime Minister because he was too soft on Cuba.
00:44:27One woman's followed his tracks, writer and journalist Anne Barda.
00:44:32Orlando Bosch is a convicted terrorist.
00:44:36If for nothing else, the shooting here in the Miami Harbor of the Polish ship, which he admits to.
00:44:43But he also talks about dozens and dozens of other militant strikes and his lifetime quest to kill Fidel Castro.
00:44:51What happened next will never be forgotten or forgiven by Cuban people.
00:45:03In October 1976, Orlando Bosch became Cuba's most wanted man.
00:45:08Well, there were 73 passengers on the plane. It picked up passengers in Guyana, then it stopped in Barbados and they had to refuel.
00:45:22And then apparently at that time, two of the men boarded the plane.
00:45:25They went into the toilets of the plane and planted the bombs in there, in the plane.
00:45:35And as soon as the plane, the jet took off, I think it was, what, 11 minutes or something?
00:45:4211 seconds?
00:45:44Six minutes later. I mean, a few minutes later, it just blew up over the Barbadian Ocean.
00:45:49So, I'm right.
00:45:53Civil, Cubana 455.
00:45:56Cubana 455, cool.
00:45:58We had an explosion and we were descending immediately.
00:46:02We had fire on board.
00:46:04Cubana 455, return into the field.
00:46:10The fire is 172.
00:46:12At the time, we had a cousin, she woke us up, and she kept saying to all of us, sit down,
00:46:41you need to sit down. I remember her saying to my mother, you know, please sit down, sit down.
00:46:47And she said the plane that Raymond was on, I remember she kept saying, I think,
00:46:53I think the plane that Raymond was on went down, and my mother screamed.
00:47:02Because we can assume what happens next, that there will be no survivors.
00:47:11The wreckage fell near Barbados. There were no survivors.
00:47:21There had been 73 passengers and crew on board, amongst them the 24 members of the Cuban National Fencing Team.
00:47:29Many were teenagers.
00:47:33Two men were convicted in Venezuela of placing the bombs.
00:47:38But the suspected masterminds remained elusive.
00:47:43CIA documents reveal that days before the bombing, an associate of Orlando boss was overheard saying,
00:47:49we're going to hit a Cuban airplane. Orlando has the details.
00:47:56Boss was detained for the crime in Venezuela, but was never convicted.
00:48:01In 1989, boss emerged back in the United States.
00:48:06He was arrested, but only for a parole violation.
00:48:09The anti-Castro cause meant votes, and Miami Republicans campaigned for his freedom.
00:48:15He became the cornerstone of the campaign by Ileana Ross Lehtonen for her run for the U.S. Congress.
00:48:28The campaign became for Orlando boss.
00:48:31Her campaign manager was a young, ambitious politician named Jeb Bush.
00:48:37And Jeb Bush's father was the vice president of the United States, and then was the president of the United States.
00:48:46Mr. President, it is an honor and a thrill that you have come to Miami on behalf of my campaign.
00:48:54I'm extremely grateful for all of your support and encouragement in the past weeks.
00:48:59And despite protests from the U.S. Justice Department, particularly from Bush's own attorney general,
00:49:13saying that this is one of the worst terrorists operating in our hemisphere,
00:49:18that we under no circumstances should allow him to remain here,
00:49:22President George Bush overruled them all at the request of his son
00:49:30and granted residency to Orlando Bosh.
00:49:36He had spent the past 13 years in Venezuelan and American prisons.
00:49:40Bosh's relatives say he is in poor health and just wants to spend time with his family.
00:49:44The Justice Department has tried to deport Bosh as a terrorist, but 31 countries refuse to take him.
00:49:49Orlando Bosh settled down with his family in Miami.
00:49:56He's a keen landscape painter who depicts Cuban scenes remembered from his youth.
00:50:07Can I ask her what's her favorite painting?
00:50:12Yes, that one of her.
00:50:141977.
00:50:16When she was killed?
00:50:17Yes.
00:50:18Yes.
00:50:18Yes.
00:50:21Back in the middle.
00:50:22Yes.
00:50:23Back in the middle.
00:50:23Take it away.
00:50:24You guys are still looking for.
00:50:24Yes.
00:50:24You guys are coming.
00:50:25No.
00:50:25You're always looking for.
00:50:26Hold on.
00:50:27You're looking for me, right?
00:50:28Yes.
00:50:30Look at me.
00:50:31Do you look at all of your children together?
00:50:31It's been a big one of your children.
00:50:33He's a big one of his children.
00:50:34You're looking for us.
00:50:35He's a big one.
00:50:36He wants very much.
00:50:38He who wants a lot of people.
00:50:39He wants a lot of people.
00:50:43He wants a lot of people.
00:50:44He wants them to make love for me.
00:50:45Orlando Bosh, the man I know.
00:50:47Orlando Bosch, the good, Orlando Bosch, the good man.
00:50:54Why do you mention Castro so many times? Every time he has to accuse someone, Dr. Orlando Bosch?
00:51:02No, I think it's a bad thing he has done.
00:51:04The truth is, we...
00:51:08Why do you mention Castro so many times?
00:51:10Well, he has been sentenced to three times to death.
00:51:16Doctor, I have a question to you right now.
00:51:21You refer to the aircraft plane in Barbados, did you have to do that?
00:51:27With the aircraft?
00:51:29No, I don't know, I don't know.
00:51:32And not only that, the aircraft plane,
00:51:38and the aircraft plane,
00:51:42They had to carry out the bags of Cuba, and they had to fly them.
00:51:49So, I'm going to take care of the three and four.
00:51:55I'm going to take care of them.
00:52:00In a war, in this country, and everyone, in a war,
00:52:04you have to kill the enemy,
00:52:06you have to destroy the enemy,
00:52:09everything that you can.
00:52:11Because it's like that.
00:52:12I don't consider that we are in war with cases.
00:52:17And in the war, everything is worth it.
00:52:23This really upset a lot of people.
00:52:40Because it turned out that most of the people on this plane were civilians.
00:52:45There really is no evidence that these were very, very important
00:52:51high-level Cuban officials on the plane, or military officials, etc.
00:52:57The CIA had a direct participation in the destruction of the Cubana plane in Barbados.
00:53:16The recruitment of citizens and the employment of the territory of other countries
00:53:23to perform acts of that nature
00:53:27are typical methods of the CIA.
00:53:33Castro plays David to our Goliath beautifully,
00:53:37and we give him an opportunity almost on a weekly basis.
00:53:41We do something which allows him to put the blame on us.
00:53:46We're unable to deal rationally with Cuba.
00:53:57After the plane bomb, America and Cuba did, for once, get talking.
00:54:02In 1979, President Jimmy Carter even invited Castro to visit the States.
00:54:08The last time Fidel Castro made this journey,
00:54:11it was shortly after the revolution that brought him to power.
00:54:14Nothing that's happened since has made the visit less of a security risk for him,
00:54:18and on the plane coming over, he was asked if he was wearing a bulletproof vest.
00:54:22What?
00:54:23What's that?
00:54:24Is everyone saying that everyone has a bulletproof vest?
00:54:25No.
00:54:32But there was a plot to kill Castro just after he touched down on American soil.
00:54:43A bulletproof vest?
00:54:44A bulletproof vest.
00:54:46tomorrow when he makes his speech the United Nations itself will allow no
00:54:51visitors and instead of the usual sequence of national leaders coming to
00:54:55the podium Fidel Castro will have the session all to himself a sensible
00:54:59precaution since last time he was here in 1960 he went on for four hours and
00:55:0529 minutes
00:55:09the hatred still burned in one of Castro's oldest enemies Antonio Vecchiana
00:55:15plotted to hide plastic explosives inside softball and throw it at Castro's car
00:55:23you know the thing it gets a una bomba de contacto cuando eso se lanzara al tocar
00:55:28el carro explotado y eso es una cosa de mucho riego y tiene que saber muy bien
00:55:34de hecho un experto y el señor Edel Montiel habĂa sido preparado por la CIA
00:55:39en exclusivo y sabĂa perfectamente lo que podĂa hacer
00:55:45pero Fabian Escalante's undercover agents were already on the case
00:55:55tenĂamos un dispositivo en ese momento habĂa personas cerca de Antonio Vecchiana y bueno finalmente le
00:56:06suministramos al FBI la informaciĂłn mire el dĂa tal a tal hora se planea este
00:56:12atentado contra el compañero Fidel y pudimos desarticular es decir fue un año
00:56:19muy interesante fueron años muy interesantes y yo creo que en ese combate
00:56:24nosotros salimos victorioso
00:56:31y es que usted era terrorista en aquel tiempo sà en aquel tiempo pero desde hace mucho tiempo que dejé terror
00:56:40el mĂ©rito no era mĂo el mĂ©rito era de mi esposa y de mis hijos que me veĂan de tarde en tarde y
00:56:50cuando uno tiene la victoria todavĂa hay una recompensa pero aquĂ no hubo recompensa
00:57:05there was another man accused of the cuban airline bombing in 1976 though he denies it
00:57:23step forward suspect number six Luis Posada carriles his life's ambition to kill the communist Castro
00:57:33in the fifties havana university train Posada in chemistry and engineering in the sixties america
00:57:44trained him in sabotage and explosives writer and bardak met him when he was on the run
00:57:51Posada came out an elderly man kind of silver gray hair real gentleman took my bags he had a van
00:58:02waiting outside he had the gravelly crushed voice a lot of charm a lot of self-confidence big big ladies me
00:58:11he gets involved from Bay of Pigs Bay of Pigs is the jumping off point for Luis Posada
00:58:18Bay of Pigs is the jumping off point for Luis Posada and he had a lot of advantages because he had previously
00:58:24worked as an exterminator that was the first career of Luis Posada something that I find that
00:58:30curious about Luis Posada is he did his degrees in chemical engineering so he was the one with the real
00:58:37background in explosives
00:58:40and he was the one with the real
00:58:46during his many years behind bars he discovered a talent for acrylics
00:58:51Posada's paintings sell like hot cakes in Miami and the proceeds fund his struggle against Castro
00:58:57his friend Enrique Encinosa and his wife help out with the sales
00:59:02What I love about this is you can see the little moss growing from the walls and again the shadows coming off from the insides of the castle
00:59:12Luis is very good at shadows
00:59:14This painting is of a street in Oriente province and to me it's one of the best works done by Luis Posada Carrillo
00:59:24If you will observe he has excellent depth in the street tremendous use of shadows
00:59:30You know I think you're dealing here with a sensitive man and I know it might be hard for some people in your audience to understand that a guy who spent all his life doing war and that has been accused of almost everything by one government or the other and who has lived in hiding for so many years would be sensitive but he is
00:59:49In 1997 seven bombs tore apart Havana's hotels
01:00:05The aim to warn European tourists away from Cuba and bring Castro's economy to its knees
01:00:12One young Italian traveler named Fabian de Salmo was killed in the blasts
01:00:18Cuba's security men did catch the bomber but it was clear he wasn't the man in charge
01:00:24A year later Posada spoke to the press and couldn't help letting slip that he was the mastermind
01:00:32Another thing that goes on the charge sheet is the bombings in Havana in 1997
01:00:45Okay since in okay
01:00:49The fact of it is is that it has never been proven he did it he has never been indicted for it so from a strictly legal viewpoint
01:00:59I personally think it's an acceptable method it's a way of damaging the tourist economy
01:01:06The message that one tries to get across is that Cuba is not a healthy place for tourists
01:01:14So if Cuba is not a healthy place for tourists because there's a few windows being blown out of hotels that's fine
01:01:21It's the year 2000 Cuban agents are in Panama to protect Castro on a visit
01:01:36Under close surveillance is a group of Castro's oldest adversaries
01:01:40Luis Posada was there with Gaspar Jimenez, Pedro RamĂłn and Guillermo Novo and they were there to try to assassinate Fidel Castro
01:01:52There can be no doubt about that
01:01:54They also had been infiltrated probably by one of their own probably by one of their confidence
01:02:00And Cuban intelligence certainly knew what they were up to
01:02:03They are exceptionally good
01:02:06Remember that I am a professional
01:02:10And when I saw the images on the television
01:02:14Of the work that my colleagues had done
01:02:18I felt wonderful
01:02:21What an excellent work
01:02:23It's an art work
01:02:26It's a very well done
01:02:28The plot
01:02:29The plot
01:02:30The 638th and last in Escalante's list
01:02:33Was to take Castro out with a bang
01:02:35By putting a huge bomb underneath his podium
01:02:38When it was foiled, Castro revelled in the victory
01:02:43The extremist right of that country
01:02:45The extremist right of that country
01:02:47They have been sent to Panama
01:02:50With the purpose of eliminating me physically
01:02:55They are already in this city
01:02:59And they have introduced weapons and explosives
01:03:05A copy of the caballero
01:03:13Prosecutors amassed a compelling case against Posada
01:03:18Finally, in April 2004
01:03:21Panama's Supreme Court sentenced him and his associates to prison
01:03:27But four months later, he was out again
01:03:30Mysteriously, Posada received a pardon from Panama's outgoing president
01:03:38A year later, in 2005
01:03:40Luis Posada slipped undetected into Miami itself
01:03:44For months, he lived a normal life
01:03:47The authorities let him be
01:03:50Posada was so relaxed, he even held a press conference
01:03:53To tell his side of the plane bomb story
01:03:56He slurs his words a little
01:03:58Because he was shot in the mouth while he was on the run
01:04:00While he was on the run
01:04:04It's an abominable act
01:04:10Like a case
01:04:14Of terrorism
01:04:17It has been used
01:04:20For Castro all these years
01:04:23To try to
01:04:24fear
01:04:34I was shocked sure
01:04:38I mean shocked, yeah
01:04:40Yeah
01:04:42But here he is
01:04:44Now hanging out in Miami
01:04:46Asking for political asylum
01:04:48Shocked, yeah
01:04:49It's just like
01:04:50A terrorist
01:04:51terrorist George Bush says that anyone who gives refuge or shelters a terrorist
01:04:56is a terrorist well then that makes George Bush himself a terrorist he
01:05:03certainly is sheltering at this point Luis Posada Cadillac and his father
01:05:08allowed Orlando Bush a safe conduct so that he could remain and live in Miami
01:05:14if anybody harbors a terrorist or a terrorist if they fund a terrorist their
01:05:19terrorist if they house terrorists or terrorists I mean I can't make it any
01:05:22more clearly to other nations around the world and that's what they are I mean
01:05:26Orlando Bosch and Luis Posada Cadillac are terrorists I mean there's no other
01:05:32definition fits all this might not matter too much if all Miami's assorted
01:05:39terrorists and assassins were in retirement but they aren't we went to see a man who
01:05:45got arrested for possessing a stinger missile he wanted to use to kill Fidel
01:05:49Castro step forward our final suspect Rodolfo Fremetta electrician and guerrilla
01:05:57Hi ĐœĐžĐșаĐș
01:05:59com and that one
01:06:00com
01:06:02Qué
01:06:04com and then
01:06:04comăŁăŠ
01:06:06c
01:06:07un
01:06:08ac
01:06:08con
01:06:08Si
01:06:10t
01:06:12recording
01:06:12Cant
01:06:13ac
01:06:18Gold
01:06:19ver
01:06:27This is the brother of the president, Jim Bush,
01:06:32governor of Florida, who is my friend.
01:06:35We have very good relations.
01:06:37This is Luis Manuel Frometa,
01:06:39the child who killed Fidel Castro
01:06:41with only 19 years of age.
01:06:43But if you want to eliminate Fidel Castro,
01:06:45tell him if you want to eliminate Fidel Castro or not.
01:06:47Yeah, she died.
01:06:49He's a old man,
01:06:51pardoning the phrase, as we say in Cuba,
01:06:53so, as he is so annoying,
01:06:55we have to break his life and fuck him.
01:06:58So, we don't understand why he is old,
01:07:00but he is still the same old assassin
01:07:03that when he was a young assassin.
01:07:09Frometa and his men live out their dream
01:07:11most weekends in the Everglades.
01:07:16They still believe they can get Castro.
01:07:23to defeat the Cuban Revolution.
01:07:25We have to kill them.
01:07:26We have to kill them.
01:07:27Quiet!
01:07:28Quiet!
01:07:29Quiet!
01:07:30Quiet!
01:07:31Quiet!
01:07:32Quiet!
01:07:33Quiet!
01:07:34Quiet!
01:07:35Hey, Jim,
01:07:36let's take a look at the moment
01:07:38that we are here
01:07:39and tell Fidel Castro
01:07:40what is the reason
01:07:42to kill you and kill you so much
01:07:44the people of Cuba?
01:07:46Don't shoot me.
01:07:48I'm sorry.
01:07:49You're sorry.
01:07:50You're sorry.
01:07:51You're sorry.
01:07:52I'm sorry.
01:07:53I'm sorry.
01:07:54You're sorry.
01:07:55I'm sorry.
01:07:56I'm sorry.
01:07:57I'm sorry.
01:07:58I'm sorry, James Baldwin Powell
01:07:59and Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, Mel Martinez.
01:08:05hola the plan for cuba's transition from stalinist rule to a free and open society
01:08:15to identify ways to hasten the arrival of that day
01:08:21no matter what the dictator intends or plans cuba sera pronte libre
01:08:35thank you all cuba seems to have the same effect on american administrations that the full moon once
01:08:52had on werewolves you know we may not sprout hair and howl but we behave in the same way just irrationally
01:09:05whatever became of luis posada carriles the united states could have sent him to join other suspected
01:09:17terrorists in guantanamo bay but they didn't the sada was very publicly arrested and escorted under
01:09:25armed guard but he wasn't charged with blowing up planes or trying to murder fidel castro he was
01:09:33simply detained for visa irregularities okay it's a tenuable posada carriles well he's been detained
01:09:40simply for entry to illegal estados unidos nadie ha dicho que le posada carriles el bin laden
01:09:47latinoamerican and lo absoluto es y todo lo que se dice posada carriles que es un anticastrista no
01:09:54señor posada carriles orlando bosch no son anticastristas son terroristas que son dos cosas
01:10:00the american authorities wouldn't let us visit posada in jail but his friends chat to him almost daily
01:10:11hey there hey come on in thank you very much come right in how are you doing fine good good make
01:10:20yourselves at home and uh how's luis luis is fine expecting your call okay uh where with paintings
01:10:28come we had a painting exhibition and we sold 121 paintings it was very very successful it was like
01:10:39over thirty thousand dollars in uh in painting solo in over the weekend buenos dias campeĂłn
01:10:49posada was on good form but he was perplexed that the american government which he'd served so long
01:10:54had if only for a little while put him behind bars
01:10:57yet
01:10:58people
01:10:59and
01:11:01god
01:11:03e
01:11:03we
01:11:05we
01:11:06we
01:11:08we
01:11:08we
01:11:08we
01:11:10we
01:11:11we
01:11:11we
01:11:12we
01:11:14we
01:11:16we
01:11:18we
01:11:20we
01:11:22we
01:11:23How many times have you tried to kill Fidel Castro?
01:11:32Well, I can't answer this question.
01:11:35I'm in a prison where they're playing for my danger.
01:11:39So I'm going to go.
01:11:42Sometimes I don't want to call Fidel Castro,
01:11:46but I think he feels more safe when I'm arrested, right?
01:11:50Okay, Luis. Te quiero. Ciao.
01:11:56I was very happy to hear him.
01:11:58Yeah, he's kind of grown on us.
01:12:00Yeah, he's quite a character.
01:12:03We're looking forward to having him back.
01:12:05Hopefully soon.
01:12:07Hopefully soon.
01:12:09It would be a shame if he dies in jail.
01:12:12But like he tried to say,
01:12:14I mean, the struggle is going to continue with him or without him.
01:12:18So, because it's a just struggle.
01:12:21We're looking to do something that is important to, what, 12 million people now?
01:12:26So...
01:12:2764, 25, 26, 27, 28.
01:12:38638 plots to kill Castro and a few close saves.
01:12:43Now it looks like the beard can die a natural death.
01:12:47Castro is probably, of all the heads of government,
01:12:53the one with the tightest security.
01:12:55When he flies, he uses three airplanes,
01:12:58and you don't know which one he's riding in.
01:13:00When he goes to a foreign country to visit,
01:13:03he carries everything,
01:13:05so nobody will try to poison his drinks.
01:13:07He takes his own food, his own water, his own ice.
01:13:09He has a number of doubles,
01:13:11one of which is his older brother Ramon,
01:13:15who looks very much like him.
01:13:17And they even have a waxed dummy in Cuba
01:13:20that they sit in a car and drive around town.
01:13:23He has at least 50 or 60 houses that he resides in
01:13:27and changes them constantly.
01:13:29You know, and a Praetorian Guard of several hundred.
01:13:32With such tight security,
01:13:34it's very, very difficult
01:13:36to carry out a successful operation against him.
01:13:39But again, we only have to be successful once.
01:13:44But you haven't been...
01:13:46It's all right.
01:13:47You know, we only have to be successful once.
01:13:511
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