Latin America
Showing Original Post only (View all)The Death of Che Guevara Declassified [View all]
A top-secret CIA memo shows that US officials considered his execution a crucial victorybut they were mistaken in believing Ches ideas could be buried along with his body.
By Peter Kornbluh
TODAY 1:32 PM

Che Guevara after the battle of Santa Clara during the Cuban revolution in 1958.
(Wikimedia Commons / Oficina de Asuntos Históricos de Cuba)
About 10 years ago, I traveled with the producers of the Hollywood film on Che Guevarastarring the actor Benicio del Toro and directed by Steven Soderberghto Miami to obtain further information for the movie about the circumstances of Ches execution. At a restaurant in Little Havana, the stronghold of the anti-Castro exile community in the United States, we met with Gustavo Villoldo, who had been the senior Cuban-American CIA operative assigned to Bolivia in 1967 to assist in tracking down and capturing the iconic revolutionary. Villoldo arrived carrying a thick white binder, filled with memorabilia of Ches execution on October 9, 1967original photographs, secret telexes, news clips, and even the official fingerprints taken from Ches dead hands. The scrapbook recorded the historic results of the CIAs covert efforts to train and assist the Bolivian special forces in eliminating Che and his small band of guerrilla fighters.
In macabre detail, the retired covert agent described his discussions with Bolivian military officers when Guevaras body arrived, via helicopter, from the pueblo of La Higuera, where he had been captured and shot, to the Bolivian town of Villegrande. The Bolivians wanted to cut off Ches head, he said, and preserve it as proof that Guevara was dead and gone. According to Villoldo, he convinced them instead that they could create a death mask of plaster, and that cutting off and preserving Ches hands would be sufficient evidence. Villoldo explained how he arranged to secretly bury the body where it would never be found. Indeed, for 30 years Ches remains were disappeared; in July 1997, his bones, minus hands, were located in a makeshift grave alongside an airstrip on the outskirts of Villegrande.
A version of this article appeared in Spanish in Proceso magazine in Mexico.
At one point during the conversation, Villoldo opened the binder and pulled out a white envelope. Inside was a clump of brown hair. As the ultimate souvenir of this Cold War victory, Villoldo proudly stated, he had cut off strands of Ches hair before disposing of his body. I basically took it because the symbol of the revolution was this bearded, long-haired guy coming down the mountain, Villoldo later explained. To me, I was cutting off the very symbol of the Cuban revolution.
Fifty years ago, US officials shared that sentiment. They considered the capture and execution of Che Guevara as arguably the most important victory of the United States over Cuba and Latin Americas militant left during the era of US intervention and counterinsurgency warfare in the 1960s. Top CIA and White House officials drafted numerous secret documents analyzing the significance of Ches demisefor Fidel Castro and Cuba, and for US interests in blocking the spread of revolution in Latin America.
More:
https://www.thenation.com/article/the-death-of-che-guevara-declassified/
Editorials and other articles:
https://www.democraticunderground.com/1016194340