Dastardly Plot

North American B-25J FAB-5054
North American B-25J of the Brazilian Air Force. (Photo credit: Mario R. Vaz Carneiro.)
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Airplanes have been used during formal peacetime in terrorist attacks. Even if the scale was small, some dramatic incident had the potential to be the catalyst for a revolutionary movement. Various aircraft at Miami are alleged to have been involved in plots, usually not carried out. The presidential palace at Port-au-Prince, Haiti was targeted by a North American B-25 “Mitchell” and also by a Lockheed Constellation acting as a bomber! Less known is a scheme revealed in the book “Breve Resumo de Aerovias Brasil e outras Historias”  authored by Carlos Affonso Migliora (Rio de Janeiro, 1996.)

A pilot for Aerovias Brasil, an airline which in the 1940s made stops at the Dominican Republic on flights to Miami, married the daughter of dictator Rafael Trujillo’s chief of police. Years later, in 1959, an intense rivalry had developed between the Dominican leader and Rómulo Betancourt, the newly-elected democratic President of Venezuela. Money from Ciudad Trujillo supported a conspiracy designed to trigger a coup in Caracas.

North American B-25J FAB-5070
North American B-25J, FAB-70, of the Brazilian Air Force. (Photo credit: Action Editora Collection.)

Six North American B-25 bombers, newly acquired by the Brazilian government, were to “disappear” from Belem in Northern Brazil, and flown to a secret airstrip being built in the extreme Northwest of the country (near Pico da Neblina, nearly 10,000 ft. elevation), directly South of Venezuela. There the B-25s would be painted in the colors of the Fuerza Aérea Venezolana. The supposed defecting rebel aircraft were to fly North to bomb the Aeronautical School in Caracas! The hope was to trigger a retaking of power by the recently displaced Venezuelan Armed Forces. There would not be enough fuel in the heavily-loaded bombers to return South, nor North to the Dominican Republic. In fact, their desperate plan hoped them to reach the island of Trinidad. Shades of Jimmy Doolittle!

The Brazilian pilots, supported by Dominican funds, held many planning meetings. The scheme was only abandoned when its leader became involved with an attractive Brazilian stewardess. His wife returned to her father in Ciudad Trujillo, the money stopped coming, and the amorous instigator had to avoid hitmen sent his way. If only all terrorist schemes likewise failed!

 

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2 Comments

  1. says: ed brouwer

    The CIA supplied B-26s for the Bay of Pigs invasion used a false flag by using Cuban insignia (FAR) but they had different nose configuration from the Fuerza Aerea Revolucionaria B-26 aircraft. As a 12 year old child I watched the raiding planes on their return from raiding Camp Libertad and possibly San Antonio de Los Banos air bases.

  2. says: ed brouwer

    Cuban exiles used a B-25 to attack Haiti in order to topple Duvalier and make Haiti a haven from which to attack the Castro regime in Cuba. The attack failed and the leader, a friend of our family was later killed by a car bomb in South Florida. He was a veteran of the Spanish Civil War and prominent Cuban politician who was the head of a private army called Los Tigres.

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