HAVANA -- (EFE) -- Cuban military interventions in countries from Angola to Venezuela are described in a collection of memoirs published this week.
Unclassified: Secrets of the Generals, a 546-page book written by Luis Baez, a reporter for the official news agency Prensa Latina, is based on interviews with 41 senior Cuban army leaders.
The book was published with the armed forces' permission and carries a foreword by Defense Minister Raul Castro. Included in the book:
Peasants apparently reported Massetti's role to authorities, however, and he is believed to have been killed as a result.
``Everything seems to indicate he attempted to flee,'' Baez told the interviewer. ``He went into the jungle and died there, although we really never found out what happened.''
``While trying to show that enemy attacks could be repulsed, we four Cubans found ourselves all alone on several occasions,'' Rosales recalled.
But Lopez's ``most difficult, complex, dangerous and risky'' mission was in Nicaragua in the 1980s, in support of the Sandinista government's fight against U.S.-backed contra rebels.
``We risked our lives on a daily basis,'' Lopez said, describing ambushes, minefields and other characteristics of an unorthodox war, where no one knows where the enemy will pop up next.
Victor Schueg Colas recalled that he and Guevara were nearly killed in Zaire -- then known as the Congo -- when government troops surrounded their guerrilla camp and pinned them down for five days. The guerrillas and their Cuban advisers eventually slipped away.
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