Please register to access this content.
To continue viewing the content you love, please sign in or create a new account
Dismiss
This content is for our paying subscribers only

World Americas

Ex-Pentagon intelligence analyst who spied for Cuba freed

Ana Belen Montes was arrested in September 2001



Ana Belen Montes
Image Credit: FBI

Forth Worth: A former US defence intelligence analyst who was convicted of spying for Cuba more than 20 years ago has been released from a federal prison in Fort Worth, Texas.

Ana Beelen Monts, 65, was released Friday, Federal Bureau of Prisons spokesman Scott Taylor said Saturday.

Montes, an analyst for the US Defence Intelligence Agency, was arrested in September 2001 and charged with spying for Cuba.

Montes pleaded guilty in 2002 to conspiring to commit espionage as part of a plea deal with federal prosecutors and was sentenced to 25 years in prison.

She acknowledged revealing the identities of four undercover agents for the US to Cuban authorities and had faced a possible death sentence if convicted.

Advertisement

Federal prosecutors at the time said the four agents whose identities she revealed were not harmed.

US prosecutors also accused Montes of disclosing to Cuba secrets so sensitive they could not be described publicly. Court records said she provided documents that revealed details about US surveillance of Cuban weapons.

Officials at the time said Montes was believed to have been recruited by Cuban intelligence when she worked in the Freedom of Information office at the Justice Department between 1979 and 1985, and was asked to seek work at an agency that would provide more useful information to Cuba.

She began working for the Defence Intelligence Agency starting in 1985, and was considered a top analyst on the Cuban military.

Advertisement