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CAMPAIGN ’88 : Robertson on Missiles

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<i> From Associated Press</i>

Robertson again raised the issue of missiles in Cuba on Tuesday by citing second-hand testimony from a Senate subcommittee hearing 21 years ago as documentation that Soviet intermediate-range missiles are based in Cuba.

Robertson, who concentrated heavily on the Cuban-American vote for the Super Tuesday primary during a two-day swing through South Florida, said the information indicates a “loophole” in the U.S.-Soviet arms control treaty awaiting ratification in the Senate.

Robertson quoted 1967 testimony by Paul Bethel, a State Department official from Miami who said Cuban refugees had told him of seeing missiles. But none had personally seen the missiles, the transcript indicates.

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The testimony was given to the Judiciary subcommittee to investigate the administration of the Internal Security Act and other internal security laws.

Robertson read portions of it to supporters at a breakfast in Ft. Lauderdale and during a rally the night before in Miami.

“I’ve been accused of bringing funny facts,” Robertson told the Ft. Lauderdale gathering. “Ladies and gentlemen, the clear eyewitness, sworn testimony of witnesses before a Senate Judiciary Committee is not funny facts. . . . This is documented evidence.”

Robertson’s assertion that there are missiles based in Cuba has been denied by the White House, congressional defense experts and Cuban President Fidel Castro.

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