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Sunday, December 23, 2018

"THESE MEN FOUGHT WELL, THE DISASTER WAS NO FAULT OF THEIRS"


CASTRO RELEASES BAY OF PIGS POWS 

Havana, Cuba (JFK+50) On December 23, 1962,  just two days before Christmas DayFidel Castro released prisoners captured during the ill-fated invasion at the Bay of Pigs.

According to Jim Rasenberger, Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy met on June 20, 1962 with members of the Cuban Families Committee in New York City where he discussed the problem of raising money to pay Castro's ransom.

The following month, RFK met with James B. Donovan*, a New York attorney who had negotiated the release of captured U-2 pilot Francis Gary Powers. Donovan was sent to Cuba where he met with Castro on August 31, 1962.

Donovan explained that $62 million in cash was impossible, but offered food and medicine instead.  Castro accepted the offer in the value amount equaling $52 million in addition to $2.9 million in cash for sixty POWS that had already been released.

The October 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis delayed the deal, but after the crisis was over negotiations were quickly back on track.  In a speech to win support from the American Pharmaceutical Association on December 7, RFK said...

"My brother made a mistake.  These men fought well, the disaster was no fault of theirs.  They are our responsibility."

The Attorney General raised the $2.9 million paid to Castro, one-third coming as a result of "a single phone call" to Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston.
The Royal Bank of Canada issued a check for the total amount to its branch in Havana and the check was quickly in Castro's hands.  The planes bearing the POWS landed at Miami International Airport on Christmas Eve.

1,163 members of the Exile Brigade had been released and Jim Donovan also "secured the departure of some 3500 of their relatives."

*James B. Donovan (1916-1970) was a graduate of Harvard.  He served as legal council for the Office of Strategic Services during WWII.  He was assistant trial counsel in the Nuremberg War Crimes Trial and presented the filmed evidence of Nazi atrocities against the Jews.  JBD ran unsuccessfully for the US Senate in 1962 and became president of Pratt Institute.

SOURCES

"Brilliant Disaster:  JFK, Castro and America's Doomed Invasion of Cuba's Bay of Pigs," by Jim Rasenberger, Scribner (Simon and Schuster, Inc), New York, 2011.

"US-Cuban Diplomacy, 'Nation' Style," by Peter Kornbluh, The Nation, April 29, 2013. 


Negotiator: The Life and Career
of James B. Donovan
by Philip J. Bigger (2006)