Deutsch, 42, a longtime supporter of the U.S. embargo against Cuba,
used
his name and U.S. passport to check into the Nacional Hotel but said he
believed his presence was never detected by Cuban security authorities.
At the Nacional, he bumped into a Washington-based U.S. journalist and,
separately, an anti-embargo colleague from Congress, Rep. Maurice
Hinchley,
D-N.Y. The journalist and Hinchley were on officially sanctioned trips.
``It was incredibly interesting and useful. I have a much better
perspective, it's a bizarre place,'' Deutsch said in a telephone interview
on his return to Washington. ``I don't think there's a person there that
wants to be there, except for maybe high government officials.''
Deutsch said his trip violated Cuban laws because he was not really a
tourist and sought out dissidents. But it was legal from a U.S. standpoint
because he obtained a Treasury Department permit.
Deutsch, whose congressional district includes portions of Miami-Dade,
Broward and Monroe counties, arrived on a package tour from Cancun at
about
11 p.m. Tuesday and left Friday morning.
``It's an evil empire,'' he said. ``People hold hands in the street and
have wonderful families and everything else. But the government is a
repressive entity in every aspect of their life.''
Deutsch decided to take the trip as a tourist, he said, after being
refused a formal visa to go by the Cuban government several years ago. His
visit was sponsored by The Center for a Free Cuba, a pro-democracy group
that encourages Cuban dissidents.
MEDICAL SUPPLIES
A colleague also brought along leaflets portraying a smiling Elian
Gonzalez, the 6-year-old child at the center of a custody dispute, he
said,
because he had heard that Cubans see only unhappy pictures of the child in
Miami.
Center for a Free Cuba Director Frank Calzon said none of his
nonprofit's $500,000 U.S. Agency for International Development grant was
used for the Deutsch trip. Rather, Calzon paid for the trip with donations
from Cuban-American supporters and others.
The Cuba package tour cost about $700, Deutsch said. Calzon also picked
up the tab for a round-trip ticket between Washington and Cancun, which
Deutsch said he would report under Capitol Hill disclosure rules.
Rep. Lincoln Diaz-Balart, R-Fla., was surprised Friday to learn of the
secret mission but said his South Florida colleague had told him ``for a
couple of years now that he planned to go to Cuba to meet with dissidents
and see how he can help the internal opposition.''
OPTIMISTIC
OUTLOOK
Trips by members of Congress to Cuba have become more frequent in
recent
years, but most have been either part of official congressional
delegations
or as guests of the Cuban government. Most Congress members come back
opposing the embargo as counterproductive.
Rather than make appointments in advance, Deutsch said he used
freelance
taxis and had drivers drop him off a block or more from the dissidents'
homes. Then he would arrive, unannounced, after walking the wrong way up a
one-way street.
Among those he met -- and videotaped for possible future broadcast --
were dissidents Gustavo Arcos, Raul Ribero and Elizardo Sanchez. He also
met a physician named Hilda Molina, who repeatedly has been denied a
permit
to visit a daughter and granddaughter in Argentina. ``Obviously, the issue
of family reunification is very topical now,'' he said.I secretly visited Cuba, Broward's Deutsch says