Manuel Ray person
also: Manolo Ray, Manuel Rey, Manuel R. Times MRR, Ray
Explore in graph → Export claims (CSV) ↓
Related entities (most co-mentioned)
CIAintelligence service · 9Cubacountry · 7Floridacountry · 2United Statescountry · 2Uruguaycountry · 2E. Howard Huntperson · 1William Cantrellperson · 1Operation Plutooperation · 1John McMahonperson · 1Senesperson · 1Jim Noelperson · 1Manuel Artimeperson · 1MRRorganization · 1Peter Wydenperson · 1Francisco Francoperson · 1Richard M. Bissell Jr.person · 1Miamiplace · 1Francois Mitterrandperson · 1
Claims (3)
Manuel Ray member_of
CIA host_asserted
“oftentimes questioned who this Manuel was because he never talked positively about, he was passed off as a Cuban, but he showed no signs of actually being from Cuba because he was actually, like I said, a CIA operative under the Cuban exile…”
▶ The Colonels Corner Hidden Terrors AJ Langguth Part 10 @ 6:59
Jim Noel covered_up
Manuel Ray book_quoted
“An American diplomat in Havana embassy recalls Jim Noel as keeping silent about Manuel Ray at meetings while in the corridors of the CIA station. He repeatedly tarred the man as a socialist, insisting the United States wouldn't work with hi…”
▶ The Colonel's Corner Safe for Democracy Part 19 (20) @ 17:29
Jim Noel recruited
Manuel Ray book_quoted
“of the fondness for Ray, claiming to have helped smuggle him out of Cuba and to have engineered the compromise that brought Ray into the Cuban exile community. An anti-Castro opposition certainly existed, but the Cubans themselves, both the…”
▶ The Colonel's Corner Safe for Democracy Part 19 (20) @ 18:00
Mentions (12)
▶ 6:24
He was protected. Manuel was a guy that he was oftentimes seen with. And Manuel ends up being one of the Cuban exiles. But most Uruguayans who was not familiar with what the CIA was doing.…
▶ 6:59
oftentimes questioned who this Manuel was because he never talked positively about, he was passed off as a Cuban, but he showed no signs of actually being from Cuba because he was actually, like I said, a CIA operative under the Cuban exile…
▶ 16:18
Horton's dismissive laugh suggested that he was not going to be one of the ones that was interested in researching the torture. Not long before Mitterrand's arrival in Uruguay, Cantrell's position within the U.S. Embassy began to erode. He …
▶ 12:35
Always was complaining about the shortage of recruits. Soon turned up in Miami to make cause with the exiles. Our Times Underground dissipated after his letter of resignation appeared on the front page of the Havana newspaper. Our Time went…
▶ 16:34
Manuel R. Time threw some of that fodder up. Conversely, others rejected figures they say was too close to Castro or socialism. Manuel Ray, a former member of the MRR, was especially controversial in that way. As a result of these fractions…
▶ 17:01
Only in the very last days before the CIA's invasion did the agency's political action people succeed in inducing the Cubans to widen their political council to include Ray. Typically, by that time, agency analyst Glitchkoff at the Miami fi…
▶ 17:29
An American diplomat in Havana embassy recalls Jim Noel as keeping silent about Manuel Ray at meetings while in the corridors of the CIA station. He repeatedly tarred the man as a socialist, insisting the United States wouldn't work with hi…
▶ 18:00
of the fondness for Ray, claiming to have helped smuggle him out of Cuba and to have engineered the compromise that brought Ray into the Cuban exile community. An anti-Castro opposition certainly existed, but the Cubans themselves, both the…
▶ 13:19
point out that the selection of the FRD excluded more than 100 other factions. Even so, they were basically backbiting each other, the different factions of Cuba. So the leadership's fractioned, the people involved in it is fractioned. When…
▶ 13:53
The group split fiercely over whether Ray should be included in the operation being ran out of Miami. The FRD leadership also wanted huge amounts of money. Their budget was demanding $740,000 a month. Political action people at the agency g…
▶ 14:25
leading to a very divisive situation. Howard Hunt despised Manolo Ray, that was his nickname, and tried to minimize CIA support for Ray's political group. Washington had to knock heads, both to bring the Cubans together and to get Hunt out …
▶ 29:57
between the CIA political action officers and the Cuban exile leaders. While exile politicians argued the Cuban resistance struggled on, at least Ray and a real group in the MRR had forged a working relationship. Failure to work more closel…