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COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN AFFAIRS

THOMAS E. MORGAN, Pennsylvania, Chairman

CLEMENT J. ZABLOCKI, Wisconsin
WAYNE L. HAYS, Ohio

L. H. FOUNTAIN, North Carolina
DANTE B. FASCELL, Florida
LEONARD FARBSTEIN, New York
CHARLES C. DIGGS, JR., Michigan
WILLIAM T. MURPHY, Illinois
CORNELIUS E. GALLAGHER, New Jersey
ROBERT N. C. NIX, Pennsylvania
JOHN S. MONAGAN, Connecticut
DONALD M. FRASER, Minnesota
BENJAMIN S. ROSENTHAL, New York
EDWARD R. ROYBAL, California
JOHN C. CULVER, Iowa
LEE H. HAMILTON, Indiana
JOHN V. TUNNEY, California
ABRAHAM KAZEN, JR., Texas
LESTER L. WOLFF, New York
JONATHAN B. BINGHAM, New York
GUS YATRON, Pennsylvania

E. ROSS ADAIR, Indiana

WILLIAM S. MAILLIARD, California
PETER H. B. FRÉLINGHUYSEN, New Jersey
WILLIAM S. BROOMFIELD, Michigan

J. IRVING WHALLEY, Pennsylvania
H. R. GROSS, Iowa

E. Y. BERRY, South Dakota
EDWARD J. DERWINSKI, Illinois
F. BRADFORD MORSE, Massachusetts
VERNON W. THOMSON, Wisconsin
JAMES G. FULTON, Pennsylvania
PAUL FINDLEY, Illinois
JOHN BUCHANAN, Alabama
ROBERT TAFT, JR., Ohio
SHERMAN P. LLOYD, Utah
J. HERBERT BURKE, Florida
WILLIAM V. ROTH, JR., Delaware

BOYD CRAWFORD, Staff Administrator
ROY J. BULLOCK, Senior Staff Consultant
ALBERT C. F. WESTPHAL, Staff Consultant
FRANKLIN J. SCHUPP, Staff Consultant
HARRY C. CROMER, Staff Consultant
PHILIP B. BILLINGS, Staff Consultant
MARIAN A. CZARNECKI, Staff Consultant
MELVIN O. BENSON, Staff Consultant
EVERETT E. BIERMAN, Staff Consultant
JOHN J. BRADY, Jr., Staff Consultant
JOHN H. SULLIVAN, Staff Consultant
JUNE NIGH, Senior Staff Assistant
HELEN C. MATTAS, Staff Assistant
HELEN L. HASHAGEN, Staff Assistant

LOUISE O'BRIEN, Staff Assistant

DORA B. MCCRACKEN, Staff Assistant
JEAN E. SMITH, Staff Assistant

NANCY PEDEN, Staff Assistant

PAULA L. PEAK, Staff Assistant
DIANE GALLAGHER, Staff Assistant

SUBCOMMITTEE ON INTER-AMERICAN AFFAIRS
DANTE B. FASCELL, Florida, Chairman

JOHN S. MONAGAN, Connecticut
EDWARD R. ROYBAL, California
LEE H. HAMILTON, Indiana
ABRAHAM KAZEN, JR., Texas
BENJAMIN S. ROSENTHAL, New York
JOHN C. CULVER, Iowa

WILLIAM S. MAILLIARD, California
J. IRVING WHALLEY, Pennsylvania
H. R. GROSS, Iowa

F. BRADFORD MORSE, Massachusetts
JAMES G. FULTON, Pennsylvania

MARIAN A. CZARNECKI, Staff Consultant
HELEN L. HASHAGEN, Staff Assistant

(II)

KF27
F646
1970d

CONTENTS

[WITNESSES

13

14

Cuban refugee airlift arrivals: Percent distribution by age and year of
arrival; tabulation___.

14

Cuban refugee airlift arrivals: Percent distribution by occupation and year
of arrival; tabulation..

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"Battle of the Levels-A Succession of Bugbears," additional statement
of Hon. Daniel J. Flood, August 3, 1970____

Statement of Hon. Durward G. Hall, a Representative in Congress from

the State of Missouri..

CUBA AND THE CARIBBEAN

WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 1970

HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES,

COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN AFFAIRS,

SUBCOMMITTEE ON INTER-AMERICAN AFFAIRS,

Washington, D.C. The Subcommittee on Inter-American Affairs met at 10 a.m. in room 2200, Rayburn House Office Building, Hon. Dante B. Fascell (chairman of the subcommittee) presiding.

Mr. FASCELL. The subcommittee will please come to order.

We meet this morning to begin a series of hearings on Cuba and the Caribbean. The subcommittee has invited high officials of the Department of State, our key military and naval commanders responsible for our security posture in the Caribbean region, and officials of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, to discuss these subjects with us.

This morning, we are pleased to welcome Hon. Robert A. Hurwitch, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs; Mr. Robert L. Funseth, Coordinator of Cuban Affairs in the Department of State; Mr. Howard H. Palmatier, Director of Cuban Refugee Program in the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare; and Mr. Glynn W. Baker, Finance Management Officer, Cuban Refugee Program, HEW.

Today's and tomorrow's hearings will be held in open session. Beginning Friday morning, however, the subcommittee will go into executive session to receive the testimony of Gen. George R. Mather, Commander in Chief, U.S. Southern Command; Maj. Gen. Walter P. Leber, Governor, Panama Canal Zone; Adm. Ephraim P. Holmes, Commander in Chief, Atlantic; and Hon. G. Warren Nutter, Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs.

The subcommittee wants to cover all aspects of the U.S. policy toward Cuba; issues affecting our security posture in the Caribbean; as well as the broader question of Cuba's present and foreseeable status in the inter-American community.

We have many subjects to cover in these next 4 days. If necessary we will extend the hearings.

Nearly 8 years have passed since the crisis of 1962, when the basic issues of our national security and the prospect of a nuclear exchange with the Soviet Union hung in the balance as the late President John F. Kennedy moved to deal with the threat of offensive Soviet missiles being implanted on Cuban soil.

The whole civilized world was involved in that crisis. One misstep, one miscalculation, could have led to a disaster of global proportions. Today, 8 years later, that grim possibility is still with us. But in the

meantime, the framework in which a nuclear crisis could develop in the Caribbean has changed drastically.

The new presence of Soviet warships in the Caribbean, it seems to me, limits the U.S. capacity to deal with any security crisis in that area and instantly raises the stakes of a U.S. military response to a renewed threat of offensive missiles being stationed a few miles off our shores.

This concerns me greatly. I am raising this issue today because I want to find out from our policymakers in the Department of State, and from our military leaders, whether, given the presence of Soviet naval units in the Caribbean-or any other Soviet action-the United States would be able to deal effectively with the repetition of the 1962 crisis or with Cuban, or Soviet, military intervention in some other country of the Caribbean.

In short, do we still retain the flexibility which we once possessedor is the United States being checkmated in an area in which our vital national security interests are involved? Are our naval and military facilities in the vicinity of the Caribbean region—in Florida, in Key West, in Puerto Rico, at Guantanamo Bay, and in the Canal Zoneadequate to enable us to cope with any serious threat to our country?

We will pursue these questions during the next 4 days. But to begin, we will ask Assistant Secretary Hurwitch to outline for us the present U.S. policy toward Cuba-the factors which may cause it to change-and the prospects of any such development in the foreseeable

future.

At this point in the record, without objection, I shall insert a brief biographical sketch of each of the witnesses testifying today. (The biographical sketches follow:)

ROBERT A. HURWITCH

Robert A. Hurwitch, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs, was born in Worcester, Mass. and received his A.B. degree from the University of Chicago. Mr. Hurwitch joined the Foreign Service in 1950 after seven years in the U.S. Army. In 1956 he was assigned to Bogota as Labor Attaché and in 1960 he was transfered to Washington where he served as Deputy Director of the Office of Caribbean-Mexican Affairs and then Special Assistant for Cuban Affairs in the Bureau of Inter-American Affairs. In 1963 Mr. Hurwitch was selected to attend the Senior Seminar in Foreign Policy at the State Department's Foreign Service Institute; in the same year he received the Department's Distinguished Service Award. In 1964 Mr. Hurwitch became first secretary and served in Santiago, Chile and as Consul General and Counselor in La Paz, Bolivia for several years. In 1967 he was appointed Deputy Chief of Mission in Vientaine, Laos, which was his last post prior to his present post which includes responsibilities for Central America (including Panama), Mexico and the Caribbean area.

HOWARD H. PALMATIER

Howard H. Palmatier was appointed Director, Cuban Refugee Program of the Social and Rehabilitation Service, Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, by Secretary Finch in May 1969. Born in Maybrook, New York, Mr. Palmatier was educated in the United States and Europe. After wartime service in Africa and Italy he was assigned to refugee operations in Trieste. Sworn in as a career Foreign Service Officer in the Department of State in 1952 he was assigned to refugee operations in Germany, Italy, Turkey, Greece and other countries of the Middle East, becoming Director of Escapee Activities for all Middle East nations in 1959. In 1961 Mr. Palmatier was appointed Operations Officer of the Refugee and Migration Affairs Section of the U.S. Mission to the U.N. in Geneva. Reassigned to Washington in 1963 he was detailed to the Cuban Refugee Program, HEW. In 1966 he became a career employee of HEW

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