MIAMI, FL - MARCH 2: A man waves a Cuban flag and a poster 02 March as Cuban-Americans gathered at the Orange Bowl in Miami, Florida, to commemorate the four "Brothers to the Rescue" pilots, an anti-Castro organisation based in Miami, who were shot down by Cuban Mig-29 24 February. Exiles on Saturday had planned an at-sea memorial to honor the pilots shot at about 21 nautical miles north of Havana, when bad weather forced them back. (Photo credit should read CHRIS BERNACCHI/AFP via Getty Images)

Miami’s Anti-Communist Insider Turns Convicted Foreign Agent

A retired CIA station chief was sentenced to a year and a day in federal prison on November 20 for selling classified information he combed from top secret US government databases to Angola’s ruling elite.

In the 1980s, Dale Bendler was sent by the CIA to Angola to undermine Soviet and Cuban support of its Marxist national liberation movement. Four decades later, Bendler was convicted for failing to register as a foreign agent while peddling his security access to prominent People’s Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA) politicians following the party’s right-wing shift. Bendler’s conviction has made headlines, but most reporting about his murky dealings has failed to reveal his close ties to South Florida’s hardline Cuban American exile community.

Bendler was “beloved by Cuban anti-communist exiles in Miami,” once aiding the defection of Cuba’s top diplomat in Iran. He maintained a friendship with the infamous CIA agent who orchestrated the killing of Che Guevara and argued for tougher Cuba sanctions in op-eds and on TV. Bendler also held events featuring Cuban American lawmakers, former Trump administration officials, and GOP operatives tied to Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s 2016 presidential campaign.

He’s far from the first US official with Cuban American exile affiliations to be convicted for failing to register as a foreign agent or accused of maintaining shady ties with foreign governments. Former senator Bob Menendez (D-NJ) was found guilty in July 2024 for accepting bribes on behalf of the Qatari and Egyptian governments. Less than six months later, another Cuban American hard-liner, former representative David Rivera (R-FL) — a former housemate, friend, and political ally of Marco Rubio — was indicted for lobbying on behalf of sanctioned Venezuelan businessman Raul Gorrín without registering his activities with the Department of Justice.

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