Alan Gross, a soldier left behind in Cuba

By Tracey Eaton*

Alan Gross
Alan Gross

HAVANA TIMES — During talks with Cuba earlier this year, the United States reiterated its call for the release of Alan Gross, insisting yet again that the American development worker was jailed solely for trying to help Cubans communicate with the outside world.

At the same time, the U.S. Agency for International Development was busy fielding questions from contractors interested in the latest Cuba-related opportunity: up to $6 million for companies interested in shuttling Cuban democracy activists to third countries for hands-on human rights and democracy training.

One potential contractor asked: “Would USAID require that Cuba participants in the program be notified of the source of funds for the program?”

USAID didn’t have a yes or no answer to that question. The agency replied: “Implementing partners would be expected to take the in-country environment into account to minimize risks, keeping in mind that this is a transparent program…”

Four years after Cuban authorities arrested Alan Gross, pro-democracy work in Cuba remains perilous and the U.S. goal is much the same: To help Cuba’s democracy activists push the socialist government from power.

Cuban officials are just as resolute and vow to undermine USAID’s democracy programs in any way they can.

Josefina Vidal
Josefina Vidal

“The programs…have an interventionist, hostile and destabilizing nature,” said Josefina Vidal, a senior official at Cuba’s Foreign Ministry in Havana. “They are founded on the principles of the Helms-Burton Act, which aims to achieve ‘regime change’ in Cuba, completely dismantle the economic, political and social system, and impose a government, against the will of Cubans, which serves the interests of the United States.”

“These programs are semi-clandestine and semi-undercover by their nature and by the way in which they are implemented, behind the back of Cuban authorities and surrounded by secrecy about their true intentions,” said Vidal.

As Cuban officials see it, Alan Gross is living proof of the U.S. government’s persistent regime-change campaign.

Gross was a soldier, albeit of a different sort. Instead of the usual M9 pistol, he carried a Samsonite briefcase, plenty of cash and 15 credit cards. In place of a combat uniform and boots, he wore beige Land’s End pants and brown Rockport shoes.

He spoke no Spanish, but was an experienced international development worker and had worked in such hotspots as Afghanistan and the Middle East.

His weapon was technology. He traveled to Havana in 2009 with satellite communication gear, wireless transmitters, routers, cables and switches – enough to set up Internet connections and Wi-Fi hotspots that the socialist government would not be able to detect or control.

He worked for Development Alternatives Inc., a Maryland contractor that USAID had hired to carry out a democracy-promotion program.

Such programs were authorized under the Helms-Burton Act. In response, Cuban authorities in 1999 passed Law 88, which prohibited “acts aimed at supporting, facilitating or collaborating with the goals of the Helms-Burton law.”

So it should have been clear to Gross that what he was doing was illegal under Cuban law. And by all appearances, Cuban agents were ready for him. They monitored his activities at first, then arrested him after his fifth trip to the island.

The U.S. government had trumpeted its attack strategy in advance, depriving Gross of the element of surprise. As far back as 2006, the State Department had said it was looking for contractors who could provide “creative and innovative” ways to “break the information blockade” in Cuba using “high-tech communication devices.”

Disclosing such opportunities is a hallmark of competitive bidding, but it also alerts Cuban authorities, putting someone like Gross at a severe disadvantage.

Phil Peters
Phil Peters

“It’s kind of naive, very naive really, to think that you can go into Cuba and operate a program like that,” Cuba expert Phil Peters said. “It was the most predictable catastrophe that one could imagine. I mean, Cuban state security is not a casual 9-to-5 organization. They don’t have a lackadaisical attitude about things like this. The idea of the U.S. government setting up a bunch of Wi-Fi hotspots throughout the capital and other places in the country is not something that they’re going to take lightly.”

Peters, a former State Department official, has studied Cuba for more than 20 years and travels to the island frequently. He said trying to set up satellite Internet connections in an authoritarian nation like Cuba “makes no sense at all even if you love the purposes of it.”

“I don’t think it’s really possible to explain logically how it’s all supposed to work at the operational level. And then, of course, Mr. Gross was a little bit naive to think that he could do what he was doing as if he was in Hartford, Connecticut, instead of Havana, Cuba.”

After Cubans threw Gross in jail, he lost:

His 2,693-square-foot four-bedroom home worth $838,000 along tree-lined Pebble Brook Lane in Potomac, Md.

His company, the Joint Business Development Center, Inc.

A lucrative contract with Development Alternatives Inc., of Bethesda, Md.

Gross, now 64, gave up something even more valuable: His freedom.

A Cuban court sentenced him to 15 years in jail. If he serves the full sentence – and survives prison – he won’t be out until 2024 when he is 75.

Lawyers for Gross say DAI and USAID refused to accept any responsibility for his troubles after his arrest. In November 2012, Gross and his wife Judy sued the contractor and the government for $60 million.

“Alan is a pawn from a failed policy between the two governments… two countries that don’t have diplomatic relations,” Judy Gross told a reporter after her husband’s conviction. “The trial wasn’t about him. It was about USAID and U.S. policy towards Cuba.”

DAI settled for an undisclosed amount on May 16, 2013. Twelve days later, U.S. District Court Judge James Boasberg threw out the family’s claim against the government, saying it was immune from prosecution. The family appealed the ruling.

DAI chief executive James Boomgard said Gross was simply providing humanitarian aid to Jews in Cuba. “It’s such an innocuous, innocent thing,” he told a reporter after Gross’s arrest. “I’m not a Cuba expert, but other people who understand the politics of this are puzzled as well.”

Judy Gross outside Cuban Interests Section. Photo: AP
Judy Gross outside Cuban Interests Section. Photo: AP

U.S. officials have expressed similar amazement and have dismissed notions of a “regime-change” strategy:

On July 13, 2010, State Department spokesman Philip J. Crowley said Gross “was in Cuba to help the Jewish community better communicate with one another and the world through the use of internet technology.”

On July 13, 2010, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Gross “did not commit any crime. He was in Cuba as a humanitarian and development worker and, in fact, was assisting the small Jewish community in Havana that feels very cut off from the world…”

On Oct. 25, 2011, Ambassador Ronald Godard said Gross was “sentenced to 15 years in prison for the crime of trying to connect Cuba’s Jewish communities to the Internet.”

On Dec. 2, 2011, State Department spokesman Mark Toner said Gross was sentenced “for simply facilitating connectivity between Havana’s Jewish community and the rest of the world.”

On Nov. 2, 2012, State Department Victoria Nuland said, “Alan Gross is guilty of nothing and he should be released.”

The tune was much the same after the July 17, 2013 U.S.-Cuba talks. The State Department reiterated its call for the Gross’s release, saying he’d been imprisoned “solely for trying to facilitate communications between Cuba’s citizens and the rest of the world.”

Court documents filed in the Gross lawsuit revealed there was much more to the story. His memos to DAI showed he envisioned setting up satellite Internet connections for Jews in seven Cuban provinces, then expanding his effort to include as many as 30,000 Masons at more than 300 lodges across the country.

Cuban Jews had “strategic value” because of their religious, financial and humanitarian ties to the United States, Gross wrote. Jewish synagogues were a “secure springboard through which information dissemination will be expanded.”

An infographic Gross submitted to DAI cited additional targets: “Youth, women and Afro-Cubans.”

DAI had been working toward setting up operations that would have allowed the federal government to establish a USAID base in Cuba, court records show. The agency had promised DAI $28 million for its work, but the plan had to be abandoned after Cuban authorities jailed Gross.

Cuban authorities accused Gross of working to “design and implement a program to destroy or overthrow the economic, political and social order established by the Cuban people…”

They said Gross unlawfully imported wireless satellite communication equipment “for the purpose of creating clandestine networks” that would give Cuban people “access to distorted news reports aimed at causing confusion and discontent against the legitimately established political and revolutionary power in Cuba.”

Gross denied the accusations. He said in a statement:

“I do deeply regret that my actions have been misinterpreted as harmful and a threat against the security and independence of Cuba. Surely, this runs counter to what I had intended.

“….I did nothing in Cuba that is not done on a daily basis in millions of homes and offices around the world. I have an immense fondness for the people of Cuba, and I am deeply sorry . . . my family and I have paid dearly for this.”

The Cuban court said the subcontractor’s “recognition of his actions did not reflect any spontaneous or effective repentance.”

“The defendant did not acknowledge the politically destructive intent of his actions.”

José Manuel Collera
José Manuel Collera

“Well, these programs have a goal. The goal is the destruction of the Cuban revolution and they have not had any results,” said José Manuel Collera, a Cuban state security agent who was a witness in the Gross trial.

“We need to get Alan Gross home,” said Sarah Stephens, director of the Center for Democracy in the Americas. “And that really falls obviously to both governments, but the United States needs to understand that he broke the law in Cuba and has to sit down and talk to the Cuban government about some kind of arrangement to get him home.

“Alan Gross is sitting in a Cuban prison because of our USAID-funded democracy promotion program in Cuba. I think it’s very important to stop and understand why. I mean, the objective of these programs is essentially to replace the existing government. It’s regime change.”

Peter Kornbluh, a Cuba specialist at the National Security Archive at Georgetown University, said Cuban authorities worried that USAID was setting up “secret communications systems” on the island as part of a plan to promote an Arab Spring-like uprising.

U.S.-Cuba relations “have been poisoned by the continuing effort to basically take a program that is supposed to be above board and overt and transform it into a surreptitious semi-covert operation with people who are really not trained and supervised to undertake these kinds of operations,” Kornbluh said.

“You can imagine if you’re a Cuban watching this, how concerned, annoyed, insulted, and angry you would be.”

Harold Cárdenas Lema
Harold Cárdenas Lema

Harold Cárdenas Lema, a Cuban blogger and philosophy professor, said he considers it legitimate that the U.S. help a country “improve its technology” to help improve Internet access.

But such efforts shouldn’t come with “hidden political intentions and hidden agendas,” he said.

“The explicit intention is to change the regime,” he said.

After Cuban authorities arrested Gross, they seized his high-tech gear, including BGAN satellite terminals, which allows users to connect to the Internet and make phone calls.

Authorities kept that equipment, but eventually returned the American’s other belongings, which included:

A black Eagle Creek bag, eight shirts, nine pairs of socks, six pairs of underwear, a well-worn blue raincoat, a hair brush, dental floss, a sewing kit, a nail clipper, two Gillette razors, two bags of paper napkins, Listerine, a silver chain made in Israel, a black change purse, five keys, eyeglasses, a Suunto compass, four candles, two guitar picks, a Radio Shack alarm clock, a Canon PowerShot camera and six $100 bills.

Gross is being held in a high-security military hospital in Havana. Kornbluh met with him for four hours on Nov. 28.

Peter Kornbluh
Peter Kornbluh

“I actually said, ‘You know, Alan, your case is standing in the way of improving U.S.-Cuban relations’ and he was so crystal clear on this. He said, ‘No, you’re wrong about that. The lack of better U.S.-Cuban relations is standing in the way of resolving my case. I think the United States and Cuba should sit down and have a dialogue. They should sign a non-aggression pact right away to kind of improve the basic foundation of their relationship, and then in a second or third series of talks, as they go through their agenda, they should get to the issue of me and my getting out of here.’”

Kornbluh said he has tried to get that message across to the Obama administration. He asked:

“What is the problem with simply sitting down and having a dialogue with Cuba? The fact that the Obama administration won’t even sit down and talk to Cuba about a wide variety of things, not just Alan Gross, tells you how timid” the government is.

“If you’re Alan Gross, you can only be extremely discouraged and extremely angry that you don’t have the government at your back in a situation like this. Alan Gross certainly feels that he has been abandoned by his own government,” said Kornbluh.

Gross now resides with two other inmates in a 10-by-12 foot room. He has health trouble, including chronic arthritis, and has lost more than 100 pounds since 2009.

Scott Gilbert
Scott Gilbert

His wife, Judy, a psychiatric social worker, had to move into a Washington, D.C., apartment after his arrest and now works more than 50 hours per week to pay the bills.

The case destroyed her husband’s career and livelihood and he’s been unable to see his mother, who has terminal lung cancer, and his oldest daughter, who has been fighting breast cancer.

“The tragedy faced by the Gross family is horrific. What is mind-boggling is that this never should have come to pass,” his lawyer, Scott Gilbert, said in a statement. “The destruction of this family is the direct result of a project approved, overseen and administered by DAI and our government that was flawed from conception and pursued with complete disregard for Mr. Gross’ safety and well-being. It is an utter disgrace.”

(*) Visit Tracey Eaton’s blog Along the Malecon.

17 thoughts on “Alan Gross, a soldier left behind in Cuba

  • Talk about your fools. The man was old enough to know what he was doing was wrong. I feel terrible that he is in jail and in pain but Jesus Christ! What was he thinking?
    Cuba has been a communist regime and hostile to America since our poor try at regime change at The Bay of Pigs. This was in 1962. Mr. Gross was 20 years old. They had Russians pointing missiles at us. Our relations have remained in the permafrost. Didn’t he ever read the new? Was the Russian Missile Crisis unknown to him?
    He was doing something wrong. His personal safety was at risk. He knew it. It sucks for him because he was caught. None of this diminishes his continued suffering; but he should have known better. A college freshman in an Intro to Political Science class could have warned him of the danger. What the hell was he thinking?
    I daresay he was thinking about the money and
    If you play with fire, you are going to get burned.

    And that malarkey about bringing the Internet to the Jews of Cuba. This would be a hard sell for most Americans let alone the communist regime in Cuba. It just doesn’t pass the smell test.

    And again. WHAT the hell was he thinking? And did he ever ponder the consequences of his foolish actions? Poor old fool.

  • While I don’t agree with you, I understand why you interpret the facts this way. Keep in mind this was Gross’ fourth or fifth trip to Cuba. He had done exactly the same things on previous trips without problems. I am given to suspect that Cuban State Security saw the “trade option” and decided to take a hostage and he was the best choice at that time. With regards to the lack of finesse involved in our relations to Cuba, I would suggest that tyrants like the Castros do not respond well to the soft touch. On the contrary they see it as a weakness. The best way to deal with Cuba is with brute force. They will resist either way. With force, however, they will suffer consequences for their resistance and change their behavior in future exchanges.

  • Whether you think a law is stupid or not if you break the law of another country you have to take the consequences. If you took alcohol into Saudi Arabia you would face the same thing. Whether Cuba could have confisgated the equipment or not is irrelevant. It might have been down to incompetency or that they wanted to find out who he was dealing with and who his contacts were. After all he might have been heading a terrorist cell. That is perfectly acceptable police practice in any country. On these facts alone he could not be considered innocent. But if we dig a little deeper – he was a contractor for USAID who on their webside claim to promote US government policy. Also its important to note they don’t officially have programs in Cuba, so defacto this was a covert operation. He wasn’t a spy but was almost certainly trying to build up political opposition within the country. To claim that he was just some helpful charity worker is ridiculous. Another claim that doesn’t hold water. If he simply wanted to help the Jewish community get connected he could easily go and buy them normal mobile phones and a couple of cubacell cards. However I do agree with you that the sentence was too harsh and they should let him go. He would probably have gone already, but as always the US handles these situations really badly. They make statements that say he needs to be freed immediately / unconditionally even before he had faced trial and make it a precondition before they will talk. They have made it difficult for Cuba to release him without it appearing that the trial was illegitimate and that they have bowed to US pressure. Instead the US should have accepted the sentence and quietly pushed for him to be released on humanitarian grounds.

  • Once again for the geniuses. Assuming you did not smuggle it in, US Customs would confiscate your load of C4 at the airport. It is a controlled substance. Cuban Customs inspected the equipment and let Gross leave the airport with it. Do you understand so far? If, after inspecting it at the airport, the US let you in the country with C4, you would have one helluva lawsuit if you were arrested later because you gave it away. Yes, I would defend you.

  • You don’t seem to understand the difference between an attempt to overthrow a government and buying Cuban cigars .
    Capitalism is the most potent form of totalitarianism in existence and the richest capitalists in the USA own the government .
    That you think it is apolitical is stunning.
    The U.S. has made well over 50 interventions in order to enforce capitalism and you can’t get much more political than that.
    As a communist I fully understand what capitalism is and isn’t .

  • R.M. Schneiderman obviously has no knowledge of the 100 year foreign policy history of the USA in which well over 50 interventions were made to prevent economic democracy and preserve totalitarian capitalism in the world..
    Alan Gross WAS working for USAID which is a subdivision of the U.S. State Department which leads the War On The People Of Cuba and has done so for over 50 years..
    Were Gross to be released by Cuba, the U.S War On The People Of Cuba would continue and I have a few thousand dollars to bet that I am correct in this.
    Any takers ?

  • Exactly. It is therefore in Cuba’s best interest to unilaterally release Gross and call his bluff. If Obama spends the next 3 years without relations with Cuba, nothing changes for him. He certainly has bigger problems facing his presidency. On the other hand, Cuba needs a thaw in relations with the US like yesterday. Venezuela is imploding and along with it the 100,000 barrels of oil per day that they practically give to Cuba. The Port of Mariel only begins to make sense when there is no embargo to prevent the big ships from calling on port in Cuba. Then there is the hope for more tourism. Where will it come from, if not the US? CNN’s Wolf Blitzer reported today that US Secretary of State Kerry says that the US is in “quiet diplomacy” for his release.

  • If a member of Al Qaeda who was legally allowed to enter the US with high-tech equipment and then decided to give away that equipment to Muslims in mosques around the country, he might very well be watched closely by the FBI but he would not be imprisoned. For what crime? If the equipment was illegal, it would and should be confiscated by Customs. Gross is innocent!

  • R.M. Schneiderman, editor and writer for Newsweek and the Daily Beast, wrote in the Foreign Affairs Magazine (December 21, 2012) that the single biggest reason Barack Obama cannot make peace with Cuba – is Alan Gross, US Jewish citizen serving out 15-year prison sentence in Havana. Cuban officials claim that Alan Gross was working for the US government and trying to subvert the state while working as a contractor in Cuba.

    http://rehmat1.com/2013/01/20/obamas-jewish-issue-with-cuba/

  • Were Gross in the U.S. trying to do to the U.S. system what he was trying to do to the Cuban system, he would also be imprisoned.
    The fact that the U.S. at war with Cuba and Gross was working for a U.S. government agency does not seem to enter into your deficient thinking on the Gross matter.

  • John, read my comments to SharkRider7 above. GROSS WAS
    GIVING THE EQUIPMENT AWAY!!! So what? Castros’ goons could have simply confiscated it at the airport. Why arrest him? If I return to the US with prohibited boxes of Cuban cigars, US Customs takes them away from me. I don’t go to jail for 15 years. Capitalism is apolitical. It does not purport to be either fair or impartial. The government which thrives best under capitalism is
    likely to be the most democratic one. As this government works to ensure fairness and impartiality for its citizens, the capitalist system is more likely to succeed for more people. Your problem seems to be rooted in a misunderstanding of what capitalism offers and does not offer.

  • Giving away computer and telecommunications equipment should not be illegal anywhere. Keep in mind, he was not using the equipment, only giving it away. Castros agents could have simply confiscated this ‘fearful’ technology. Its a stupid law and it was even more stupid to arrest and imprison Gross.

  • “blackmail tactics”
    “tin-pot dictatorship”
    “victimizing the innocent”
    “gulag”
    There’s nothing like an objective post to enlighten the conversation.
    Shame on the Cuban government for defending their revolution eh? .
    Maybe the Ladies in White will get out in the streets demonstrating on behalf of Gross who ,after all, was trying to establish democracy in Cuba in your twisted way of thinking that capitalism is democratic.
    .

  • He committed a crime in Cuba, therefore he is Guilty under Cuban law.

  • Giving away high-tech equipment is not a crime in the US. The equipment that Gross was hoping to distribute in Cuba is available to purchase in the US.

  • Gross should have been Executed! Google “Crimes against the State, USA.. Sedition”..

    Had he done the same crime in the USA, he would be eligible for Execution.

  • Despite exacerbating the suffering of Mr. Gross and his family, the US must not capitulate to the blackmail tactics of Cuba’s tin-pot dictatorship. Like the recent arrest of an 85 year-old American in North Korea and the jailing of an American pastor in Iran, Cuba believes they can force the US to the negotiating table by victimizing the innocent. Given the future aims of the Castros to revitalize their failed economy with micro-capitalist projects such as the Port of Mariel and the surrounding Enterprise Zone, it is clear that they need seek the lifting of the embargo. The US should not negotiate with Cuba except to arrange the unilateral release of Mr. Gross from his Cuban gulag. After which, Cuba should be required to show good faith efforts to implement the requirements set forth under Helms-Burton.

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