The AP has this update today on the man who allegedly blew up a Cuban airliner in 1976 killing 73 people, tried to kill Castro and then went to work for the CIA helping Oliver North provide aid to the Contras.
In 1985, Posada was deeply involved in the Reagan administration's attempt to topple the Soviet Union-leaning Sandinistas by selling weapons to Iran and using the money for the Contra rebels, according to the final Iran-Contra report issued by independent counsel Lawrence E. Walsh.
...According to the Walsh report, Posada helped ensure proper distribution of some of the $6 million collected for the Contras by Lt. Col. Oliver North, a White House National Security Council aide who spearheaded the operation. The cash was brought to El Salvador from Miami by Southern Air Transport, an air cargo company that was actually a CIA front.
....After his Iran-Contra duties in 1990, Posada was shot and wounded by unknown gunmen in Guatemala. Cuba blames him for a string of 1997 bombings in Cuba, one of which killed an Italian tourist. Posada was jailed in Panama in 2000 for an alleged plot to assassinate Castro during a conference, but he was pardoned last August by Panama's outgoing president. Then in March, Posada surfaced in Miami after crossing the U.S. border with Mexico to seek asylum in the United States.
Both Cuba and Venezuela are seeking his extradition. Posada escaped from a Venezuelan jail while awaiting retrial on charges relating to the blowing up of the Cuban airliner. He has not been convicted of that crime. The conservative, Miami Cuban-American community is backing Posada and Cuba is attempting to enlist the Phillipines in its extradition request.
Posada was arrested in Texas on May 17 after he crossed the border from Mexico. He is being held on immigration charges and has requested asylum.
Posada Carriles, 77, has been under arrest in the United States since May 17 on immigration charges after requesting US political asylum. He is also wanted in Cuba for the bombings of two Havana tourist hotels in 2000, in which an Italian businessman died. He was found guilty in Panama of attempting to assassinate Castro at a summit in Panama City, but he was pardoned in 2004 by Panama's then president Mireya Moscoso.
A hearing is scheduled for June 13, when government lawyers are expected to ask for deportation and when Posada's attorneys plan to renew his asylum request.
This case is going to be a big deal for Bush, who is now being accused by Venezuelan officials of having a double standard in the war on terror.
If it came to that, it's not clear where Posada would be deported to. U.S. officials have already indicated they would not deport him to Venezuela, an ally of Cuba. On Friday, the U.S. Department of Justice denied a request from Venezuela, where Posada had lived for several years, to detain Posada on charges related to the 1976 Cuban jetliner bombing.
Venezuelan officials said they intend to renew that request later -- and Venezuelan Vice President Jose Vicente Rangel on Saturday blasted U.S. officials as ``hypocritical.'' ''They condemn terrorism on the one hand, and on the other they protect terrorists,'' Rangel said in a veiled reference to Posada as he led a protest demanding Posada's extradition.