Tad Szulc, Times Correspondent Who Uncovered Bay of Pigs Imbroglio, Dies at 74
By DANIEL LEWIS
Tad Szulc, a former foreign correspondent for The New York Times whose
reports of an imminent assault on Cuba by anti-Castro Cubans in
1961 came to reality in the disastrous Bay of Pigs invasion, died of
cancer yesterday at his home in Washington. He was 74.
In postings to Rio de Janeiro, Spain, Portugal and Eastern Europe, Mr.
Szulc (pronounced Shultz) covered revolutions and cold war intrigue for
The Times and wrote a shelf of books, including biographies of Pope
John Paul II and Fidel Castro. His background — he was born in Poland and
educated in Switzerland and Brazil — was reflected in his restless
fascination with international politics. As a Times correspondent from
1953 to
1972, he had a world in which to pursue those interests — and a charmed
way of being in the right part of it just as the plot thickened.
Reporting from Venezuela on the overthrow of the dictator Marco Pérez
Jiménez in 1959, he outwitted censors in two of his six languages
and
became the first journalist to get out news of the coup.
In Prague, he watched as the Czech Communist liberalization movement was crushed on Aug. 20- 21, 1968.
"Czechoslovakia was occupied early today by troops of the Soviet Union
and four of its Warsaw Pact allies in a series of swift land and air
movements," he wrote then. He was himself thrown out of the country
four months later on vague charges that included taking "an interest in
secret
military questions."
It was typical of Mr. Szulc's fortunes that he was only stopping over
in Miami between assignments when he picked up the trail of a news story
that
would come to rivet the world's attention and create seismic and long-lasting
consequences for American foreign policy.
Anti-Castro partisans who had been training in Florida and Guatemala
planned to invade Cuba in mid- April 1961, with direction and financing
from the Central Intelligence Agency. In a decision much debated afterward,
The Times withheld parts of one of Mr. Szulc's more crucial articles
about those preparations because of concerns about national security.
The article was published on the front page of April 7, 1961, minus the
news
that a Cuba attack was indeed imminent, and with specific references
to the C.I.A. deleted.
The next day, on Page 2, under the headline, "Cuban Intrigue Boiling
in Miami as Castro Foes Step Up Efforts," Mr. Szulc described the situation
this way:
"This is a city of open secrets and rampaging rumors for the legions
of exiled Cubans who plot the downfall of Premier Fidel Castro and his
regime.
Men come and go quietly on their secret missions of sabotage and gun-running
into Cuba, while others assemble at staging points here to be flown
at night to military camps in Guatemala and Louisiana."
He went on to write that the exiles intended "to gain a beachhead in
Cuba to set up a `Government in Arms' and then request diplomatic recognition
by foreign nations."
Ten days later , about 1,500 fighters landed on Cuba's southern coast,
at a swampy place called Bahía de Cochinos, the Bay of Pigs. Not
only did
they fail to ignite a dreamed-of mass uprising against Mr. Castro,
but within a few days 114 had been killed and more than 1,100 others captured
and imprisoned.
Later, President John F. Kennedy, who had been publicly furious about
disclosure of preparations for the raid, confided to the Times's managing
editor, Turner Catledge: "If you had printed more about the operation,
you would have saved us from a colossal mistake." (James Reston, for one,
the paper's Washington correspondent then, did not think so. "I am
quite sure the operation would have gone forward," he said. "The thing
had
been cranked up too far.")
Mr. Szulc's follow-up articles on the raid, and his book "The Cuban
Invasion: The Chronicle of a Disaster," written with Karl E. Meyer, did
not sit
very well with the Central Intelligence Agency. But long before then,
according to the C.I.A.'s files, Mr. Szulc had already been characterized
as
"anti-agency" and "under suspicion as a hostile foreign agent."
Declassified C.I.A. papers reviewed by The New York Times in 1997 showed
that intelligence officials acknowledged that they had no case
against Mr. Szulc. Yet the culture of the agency appeared to be such
that innuendo about his dealings with Communist leaders and American
officials ricocheted around C.I.A. offices throughout his years at
The Times, and well into his later career as an author and commentator
on foreign
policy.
At one point, in any case, a C.I.A. dossier paused to observe: "It is
important to note that Szulc's activities can be explained by the combination
of
his personality, ambition, and the demands on an investigative reporter
for the NYT. He is an aggressive, insensitive and persistent journalist
with
the family connections (Ambassador Wiley) and ability to develop the
kinds of contacts appropriate to a successful correspondent for a paper
like
the NYT." "Ambassador Wiley" was a reference to the American diplomat
John C. Wiley, who was married to Mr. Szulc's aunt and sponsored his
emigration from Brazil to the United States in 1947.
"Aggressive" and "persistent" actually may have understated the case.
Possessing nerve, the obligatory trench coat and a supply of cigarettes,
Mr.
Szulc traveled around pulling off one feat after another. Bursting
with energy, he would sometimes follow up a stream of important newspaper
articles with a more personal account for Times Talk, the in-house
newssheet — some tale of complication and derring-do meant for the eyes
of
fellow workers.
There was the day in September 1955, for instance, when the long- expected
Peronist coup in Argentina caught the young reporter on the wrong
side of a closed border, attending a fisheries meeting in Chile.
"But it turned out that fish can have a silver lining," he wrote. While
the regular Times correspondent in Buenos Aires was hampered by censorship,
Mr. Szulc found that he could monitor rebel broadcasts in the comfort
of a Santiago hotel and file reports to New York. And by the third day,
"with complete censorship in Buenos Aires, our ad hoc and ad lib bureau
took over the lead story in the paper."
Still, it was necessary to get back into Argentina. And to leave out
a few details of his short-lived plan to commandeer a locomotive to the
Argentine border, high in the Andes, and from there "to make my way
to rebel headquarters in Mendoza on skis, foot, truck or whatever," he
ended up crossing to Argentina with three other correspondents in a
two- engine Chilean airliner: "The little plane barely cleared the snow-
capped
Andes. We were short on oxygen, and my lighter would not light, thus
depriving me of the reassurance of chain-smoking."
Mr. Szulc was not known to suffer from writer's block. In his two decades
at The Times he wrote 10 books — most of them, like "Twilight of the
Tyrants," published in 1959, having to do with countries and events
he had covered. After leaving the newspaper, he wrote 10 more books,
including an indictment of Henry A. Kissinger's policies, "The Illusion
of Peace: Foreign Policy in the Nixon Years," in 1978; and the 1986 "Fidel:
A
Critical Portrait," which cast the Cuban leader as a Latin caudillo
"wrapped in a Marxist-Leninist mantle of convenience."
His last two books drew upon his Polish roots. "Pope John Paul II: The
Biography," published in 1995, explored the role of Polish intellectual
life
and political activism in the pope's development. "Chopin in Paris:
The Life and Times of the Romantic Composer" came out in 1998. It was "an
appealing, gossipy chronicle," The New York Times Book Review said.
Mr. Szulc, who turned to freelance writing of books and news articles
after leaving The Times in 1972, is survived by his wife, Marianne; a
daughter, Nicole Szulc Ginn of Britain; a son, Anthony, of Washington,
and a grandson.
Tadeusz Witold Szulc was born in Warsaw on July 25, 1926, the son of
Seweryn and Janina Baruch Szulc. His parents left Poland for Brazil in
the
mid-1930's, but kept Tadeusz in the Swiss boarding school Le Rosey.
He rejoined his family in 1941 and studied at the University of Brazil
from
1943 to 1945.
Right out of the university Mr. Szulc found work as a reporter for The
Associated Press in Rio. He came to New York in 1949, covering the
United Nations for United Press International until 1953. Then he was
hired by The New York Times and assigned to the night rewrite desk.
There he stood out, according to Arthur Gelb, a contemporary who later
became managing editor, "by wearing custom-made shirts and
expensively tailored suits with a plethora of pockets" He also promoted
the cause of tolerable food by co-founding a Tuesday gastronomical club,
La Société Secrète des Mangeurs de Mardi.
Although he pursued foreign intrigue assiduously, Mr. Szulc often took
time out to file for Times Talk an occasional musings about life on the
go.
This one, from Rio in 1957, concerned sartorial preparations:
"On every trip I'm certain to run into both winter and summer, to say
nothing of spring and fall . . . A reporter in South America who wants
to be
both comfortable at work and appropriately dressed for most occasions
is wise to carry a dinner jacket (or tails and white tie if he really wants
to
look well), business suits appropriate for different climates and for
calls on presidents as well as underground opposition leaders."