US says Cuban spies directly advise Chavez -leak

CARACAS, (Reuters) – Cuban intelligence services  directly advise Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez in what a U.S.  diplomat called the “Axis of Mischief,” according to a U.S.  State Department cable released by the WikiLeaks website.

The 2006 diplomatic message expressed concern about Cuba’s  influence in one of the United State’s top oil suppliers.
“While the economic impact of Cubans working in Venezuela  may be limited, Cuban intelligence has much to offer to  Venezuela’s anti-U.S. intelligence services,” said the cable  posted on WikiLeaks website (wikileaks.org) yesterday.

During 12 years on office, the socialist Chavez has forged  close ties with Cuba’s Castro brothers, subsidizing the  communist island’s economy with cheap oil in return for  thousands of doctors and advisers who operate in the country.

Chavez, a former soldier, has incorporated Cuban-style  militias in the armed forces and experts on Venezuela have long  said the Cuban intelligence services train Chavez’s personal  security detail.

However, the leaked document implied Chavez trusts Cuban  information almost more than his own intelligence services.
“Cuban intelligence officers have direct access to Chavez  and frequently provide him with intelligence reporting unvetted  by Venezuelan officers,” the report said.

“Sensitive reports indicate Cuban and Venezuelan  intelligence ties are so advanced that the two countries’  agencies appear to be competing with each other for the BRV’s  (Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela’s) attention.”

The cable was part of a cache of more than 250,000 State  Department documents WikiLeaks released either to media outlets  or on its website this week. It did not reveal the sources  behind the “sensitive reports.” The document was classified by  U.S. diplomat Robert Downes, the U.S. Embassy’s political  counselor in Caracas at the time.

It was titled “Cuba/Venezuela Axis of Mischief: The view  from Caracas,” in an apparent reference to former U.S.  President George W. Bush’s “axis of evil” — a term for three  countries he accused of supporting terrorism.