By using this website you consent to our use of cookies For more information visit our Pri LATIN AMERICA CUBA COUNTERINSURGENCY The Death of Che Guevara Declassified A top-secret CIA memo shows that US officials considered his execution a crucial victory—but they were mistaken in believing Che’s ideas could be buried along with his body By Peter Kornbluh OCTOBER 10 2017 A lock of Ernesto “Che” Guevara’s hair sits next to photos of Guevara’s dead body and fingerprints taken after his death Reuters Jessica Rinaldi A bout 10 years ago I traveled with the producers of the Hollywood film on Che Guevara— starring the actor Benicio del Toro and directed by Steven Soderbergh—to Miami to obtain further information for the movie about the circumstances of Che’s 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 Che’s execution on October 9 1967—original photographs secret telexes news clips and even the official fingerprints taken from Che’s dead hands The scrapbook recorded the historic results of the CIA’s 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 Guevara’s 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 Che’s 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 Che’s 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 Che’s remains were “disappeared” in July 1997 his bones minus hands were located in a makeshift grave alongside an airstrip on the outskirts of Villegrande 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 Che’s 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 ” Top Articles READ MORE Across the Country Faculty Fight to Defend Academic Freedom F ifty 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 America’s 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 Che’s demise—for Fidel Castro and Cuba and for US interests in blocking the spread of revolution in Latin America This memorandum—classified SECRET-SENSITIVE Eyes Only—was prepared for President Lyndon Johnson five days after Che’s death It transmitted a short summary from CIA director Richard Helms confirming the details of Che’s final hours Helms’s attached report “Capture and Execution of Ernesto ‘Che’ Guevara ” confirmed that Guevara had not died from “battle wounds” during a clash with the Bolivian army as the press had reported from Bolivia but rather had been executed “at 1315 hours…with a burst of fire from an M-2 automatic rifle ” The White House memo also confirmed that the Bolivian government was covering up its role in Che’s execution by claiming his body had been cremated and could not be repatriated to his homeland of Argentina or to Cuba Che’s brother Roberto had traveled to Bolivia to ask that his corpse be turned over to the family the socialist senator from Chile Salvador Allende had formally requested that the body be turned over to Chile which Washington interpreted as an effort by Fidel Castro to recover Che’s remains “The Bolivians do not want an independent autopsy to show that they executed ‘Che’ and they are intent on not permitting the remains to be exploited by the communist movement ” President Johnson was informed The October 14 1967 Che Memorandum National Security Archive Guevara’s death “represents a serious blow to Castro ” according to the report to President Johnson The CIA had intercepted clandestine messages from Havana to Bolivia that revealed that Fidel had intended the insurrection in Bolivia to be “a Cuban show designed to spark a movement of ‘continental magnitude ’” Castro had even summoned ranking members of the Bolivian Communist Party to Havana to advise them not to present the insurrection as a nationalist movement according to these intercepted messages Rather he referred to it as an “internationalist movement ” “The death of Guevara carries these significant implications ” White House aide Walt Rostow reported to Johnson in a separate memo to reinforce this point • It marks the passing of another of the aggressive romantic revolutionaries like Sukarno Nkrumah Ben Bella—and reinforces this trend • In the Latin American context it will have a strong impact in discouraging would-be guerrillas • It shows the soundness of our ‘preventative medicine’ assistance to countries facing incipient insurgency—it was the Bolivian 2nd Ranger Battalion trained by our Green Berets from June-September of this year that cornered Guevara and got him How would Fidel react US officials worried that “he might try to recoup lost prestige” by undertaking a dramatic act against the United States—“such as bombing one of our Embassies or kidnapping of diplomatic personnel ” The State Department sent a precautionary security alert to US ambassadors in the region The Cuban revolution however was not known to engage in international terrorism no bombs were detonated at US embassies and no diplomats were targeted Fidel’s initial reaction was to give a fiery solemn and poignant speech during a memorial rally for Guevara on October 18 speaking directly to some of the points raised in the classified reports circulating at the highest levels of the US government Che’s death Fidel declared was “a hard blow a tremendous blow for the revolutionary movement ” But he added “those who boast of victory are mistaken They are mistaken when they think that his death is the end of his ideas the end of his tactics the end of his guerrilla concepts the end of his theory ” Insurgencies continued as did US-led counterinsurgency operations particularly in Central American countries like Guatemala El Salvador and Nicaragua Indeed with Cuban logistical and training support within a decade of Che’s execution the Sandinista National Liberation Front had become a formidable movement and would eventually overthrow the Somoza dynasty Officials in Washington were mistaken if they believed Guevara’s ideas concepts and committed resistance would be buried along with his body His failed guerrilla-warfare tactics may not have been inspirational but his martyrdom at the hands of the CIA certainly came to be I n Cuba the commemoration of the 50th anniversary of Che’s death underscored a continuing effort to energize the revolution and its commitment to stand up to the United States At a rally in Santa Clara where Guevara is buried Cuban Vice President Miguel DíazCanel quoted the revolutionary’s admonition that “imperialism can never be trusted not even a tiny bit never ” In the face of Trump’s bullying rhetoric and punitive policies against Cuba Díaz-Canel reiterated that “Cuba will not make concessions to its sovereignty and independence nor negotiate its principles ” The fate of Gustavo Villoldo’s memorabilia also illustrates Guevara’s iconic and romanticized legacy Villoldo eventually decided to auction off his scrapbook on the execution of Che the auction was conducted on October 25 2007 by Heritage Auction Galleries of Dallas Initially the minimum required bid was $50 000 But after the auction company received an inquiry of interest from the government of the late Hugo Chávez in Venezuela—Chávez presumably intended to acquire the hair and return it to Che’s family in Santa Clara Cuba—the minimum bid was doubled to $100 000 When the scrapbook went on the auction block however there was only one bidder—a Texas bookstore owner named Bill Butler who agreed to pay the $100 000 plus a $19 500 sales commission Butler said he intended to display the binder in his Houston bookstore He had made this unique and expensive purchase he told reporters because Che Guevara was “one of the greatest revolutionaries in the 20th century ” Peter Kornbluh TPeter Kornbluh a longtime contributor to The Nation on Cuba is co-author with William M LeoGrande of Back Channel to Cuba The Hidden History of Negotiations Between Washington and Havana Kornbluh is also the author of The Pinochet File A Declassified Dossier on Atrocity and Accountability To submit a correction for our consideration click here For Reprints and Permissions click here COMMENT 1